Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 1
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 2
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 3
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 4
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 5
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 6
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 7
Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames - image 8

Old Map of Great Britain and Ireland in 1967 - London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Snowdonia National Park, River Thames

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The mid-1960s were an odd moment to map Great Britain and Ireland, caught between an older county geography and the motorway age that was only just beginning. By 1967 the Beeching cuts had already closed hundreds of branch lines, the M1 and its early extensions were reshaping how people crossed the country, and Snowdonia, designated a national park back in 1951, was drawing walkers in growing numbers even as its Welsh place names sat alongside England's on the same general-purpose sheet.

London anchors the map's south-east corner, the River Thames tracing its familiar course out through the capital toward the estuary, while Glasgow and Edinburgh mark Scotland's industrial west and historic east on either side of the central belt. Snowdonia's mountains rise across the north Welsh interior, one of the few upland regions given the same prominence as a capital city. Ireland appears divided between the Republic, independent since the 1920s, and Northern Ireland to the north-east, a political boundary that general maps of this period were careful to render clearly.

Anyone who grew up with this kind of wall map in a classroom or a family car will likely recognise its style at a glance, making it a nostalgic gift for a birthday or retirement. It comes reproduced at high resolution and unframed, sized to suit anywhere from a study to a hallway.