Old Map of York in 1851 by Tallis & Rapkin - York Minster, River Ouse, City Centre
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This is a striking Victorian-era map of York, created by the mapmakers Tallis and Rapkin and published in 1851. By this period, York remained one of the nation's most historically significant urban centres, a place where Roman legions had marched, where medieval kings were crowned, and where Georgian terraces now stood alongside Norman walls. This mid-nineteenth-century plan captures York at a moment of railway-age transformation.
York itself dominates the map with extraordinary clarity — the medieval city walls form a complete circuit, and within them lies the magnificent York Minster cathedral, the city's spiritual heart. The River Ouse flows through the composition, essential to York's history as a Viking settlement and medieval river port. The famous bar gates — Bootham Bar, Monk Bar, Walmgate Bar, and Micklegate Bar — control access to the walled city, and the newly built railway station appears as a mark of Victorian progress, with streets radiating from the Minster and the marketplace at the city's core.
Perfect as a birthday, Christmas, Father's Day or housewarming gift for York residents, heritage enthusiasts, or genealogists tracing northern English roots.

