Illustration by Stanley Smith from 'The Gilbert Harding Question Book' devised by W. H. Mason, published 1956.
Mark.Weaver, AK●MG, karenjeannette, TOOCO, and 254 other people added this photo to their favorites.
Illustration by Stanley Smith from 'The Gilbert Harding Question Book' devised by W. H. Mason, published 1956.
Mark.Weaver, AK●MG, karenjeannette, TOOCO, and 254 other people added this photo to their favorites.
Frank Synopsis 52 months ago | reply
Hi, I'm an admin for a group called Maps in Signs & Graphics, and we'd love to have this added to the group!
AK●MG 52 months ago | reply
wow!! Love it!!
carlylennox 52 months ago | reply
Fantastic find!
Peter V. Hernandez 52 months ago | reply
This is beautiful, great find.
Library Fashionista 52 months ago | reply
Love it-- one of my favorite shades of blue.
oonat 35 months ago | reply
Geographically incorrect. Ireland is not part of Great Britain, as clearly indicated otherwise by this illustrated map.
Frank Synopsis 35 months ago | reply
Yes, that's confusing to many people. As I understand it:
- Great Britain is the name of the island that has England, Scotland, and Wales.
- British Isles is the term for the pair of islands of Great Britain and Ireland, and many of the lesser islands (I'm sure some have their own designation and might not be considered part of the British Isles).
- United Kingdom is a political entity that includes England, Scotland, and Wales, and formerly included Ireland (before 1922).
Frank Synopsis 35 months ago | reply
Ireland tucks so nicely into the space west of Great Britain that it probably has encouraged grouping them visually and conceptually. That has probably served as a subconscious justification for conquest, too. :-P
designerviolence 35 months ago | reply
Ireland is not part of the UK
Frank Synopsis 35 months ago | reply
Was it considered part of it (by the British) before Irish independence...?
onetruesim 35 months ago | reply
IRELAND is not part of "Great" Britain. Lovely illustration, but the British actually committed mass genocide against the Irish, our "Famine" was actually our version of the Holocaust.
The British killed 7/8 million Irish. Where they show trees, these don't exist, britain destroyed all our forests to build the naval fleet. VENTED
rustlecrow 35 months ago | reply
Don't exaggerate onetrueism. The population over the famine dropped from 8 million to around 4. And much of that was due to migration.
Also - there are a least 2 trees in the waterford/wexford area.
mazurka666 35 months ago | reply
Lovely and interesting design, but a pity about the inaccurate title.
I'm puzzled though by the pig up at the border area. Something to do with a bacon industry, maybe?.
Alec does art 17 months ago | reply
Turns out in my town, there's a giant Ox! Who knew!