Hide
--- TEST SYSTEM --- TEST SYSTEM --- TEST SYSTEM ---
Hide
St George the Martyr Queen Square
hide
Hide
hide
Hide
hide
Hide
Hide
Hide
[Description(s) from The National Gazetteer (1868)]
"ST. GEORGE THE MARTYR - QUEEN SQUARE, a parish in the Holborn division of the hundred of Ossulstone, county Middlesex, three-quarters of a mile N.W. of St. Paul's, London, within the borough of Finsbury. See London. [Church near SW corner of Queen Square.]
[Description(s) from "The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland" (1868)
Transcribed by Colin Hinson ©2003]
This description is intended for personal use only, so please respect the conditions of use.
- Ask for a calculation of the distance from St George the Martyr Queen Square to another place.
You can see maps centred on OS grid reference TQ307820 (Lat/Lon: 51.521803, -0.117533), St George the Martyr Queen Square which are provided by:
- OpenStreetMap
- Google Maps
- StreetMap (Current Ordnance Survey maps)
- Bing (was Multimap)
- Old Maps Online
- National Library of Scotland (Old Ordnance Survey maps)
- Vision of Britain (Click "Historical units & statistics" for administrative areas.)
- English Jurisdictions in 1851 (Unfortunately the LDS have removed the facility to enable us to specify a starting location, you will need to search yourself on their map.)
- Magic (Geographic information) (Click + on map if it doesn't show)
- GeoHack (Links to on-line maps and location specific services.)
- All places within the same township/parish shown on an Openstreetmap map.
- Nearby townships/parishes shown on an Openstreetmap map.
- Nearby places shown on an Openstreetmap map.
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children lies in this parish. Records of patients from its foundation in 1852 upto 1914 are available online at the Historic Hospital Admission Records Project website. The records covered are described there as "[t]he Admission Registers of the Hospital for Sick Children at Great Ormond Street, from its opening in February 1852 until December 31st 1914, form the core of the project, and will be complemented at a later date by Registers of Cromwell House, the hospital's convalescent home, from 1869 until December 1910." These records cover children from a wide geographical area.