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Maps information for Whithorn and places above it in the hierarchy

Whithorn

You can see maps centred on OS grid reference NX443401 (Lat/Lon: 54.731281, -4.41951), Whithorn which are provided by:

Wigtownshire

Historic maps:

This Charles Close Society Sheetfinder will provide the sheet numbers for historic Ordnance Survey 1-inch and 6-inch maps for any location.

  • On-line maps:
  • Paper maps:
    • Caledonian Maps publish a map of Wigtownshire (from Black's 1847 County Atlas) which shows the parishes; and reprints of the 1890s one-inch Ordnance Survey maps (Victorian Ordnance Survey Map Series).
    • The National Library of Scotland sells paper and digital copies of their maps (select "Enquiries & copies").
    • Old -maps.co.uk sell paper copies of all their on-line maps.
    • Ordnance Survey one-inch, 7th series (1960s) sheets 79, 80, 73 and 72.
    • The best collection of large scale local and estate maps and plans is held by the National Records of Scotland, Edinburgh. The RCAHMS also has some plans. They are catalogued on the ScotlandsPlaces website. N.B. Only a few maps and plans are available as digital images.
    • The Archives at the Ewart Library also have some plans.

Present-day maps:

  • On-line maps:
  • Paper maps:
    • Wigtownshire is shown on Ordnance Survey Landranger maps (at a scale of 1:50000), sheets 82 (Stranraer & Glen Luce), 83 (Newton Stewart & Kirkcudbright), 76 Ballantrae & Barrhill) and a little on sheet 77 (Dalmellington & New Galloway).
    • Ordnance Survey Explorer maps (at a larger scale of 1:25000) sheets 309 (Stranraer and the Rhins), 310 (Glenluce and Kirkcowan), 311 (Wigtown, Whithorn and the Machars), and 319 (Galloway Forest Park South), cover the county.

Scotland

  • A guide to Scottish maps, their history and so on, was published by the Scottish Library Association in 1991. The Scot and His Maps by Margaret Wilkes is extensively illustrated and includes a further reading list at the back. It is 48 pages long and its ISBN 0 900649 81 X.
  • Both the National Library of Scotland and The National Records of Scotland have large collections of maps and plans. About 800 maps from the period 1560-1928 are available online. Local archive centres and libraries around Scotland will often hold maps for their areas.
  • Scotland under Robert The Bruce is a printed map produced by John Garnons Williams, which maps Scotland with the spellings of place names and clan names as they were at 1314, the year of Robert the Bruce's victory over the English at Bannockburn. The map shows over 600 place-names and 170 clan names in their earliest forms.
    (The former URL is no longer active.)
  • Map of Scotland by S. Lewis & Co., London, circa 1840
  • Betts's New Map Of Scotland, circa 1847
  • The Roy Maps and Gazetteer has a huge variety of maps from different areas and different eras.  A particularly fascinating map is the Roy Military Survey of Scotland 1747-55 which shows Scotland just post Culloden.  You can choose between the Highlands and Lowlands, select by county, place name or geographic location.

UK and Ireland