H. a. FORDHAM-HERTFORDSHIRE MAPS. 
195 
and minutes of longitude and latitude, slightly broken by county 
boundary line at bottom (south of Kickmansworth). Above margin, 
at top : “A Map of Hertford Shire.’ ’ In left-hand top corner 
a scale of (10) “English Miles,” and below a circular indicator 
of the north, with a comparatively large cross on the right-hand 
side (east). Below the map, within the plate, are the names of 
the (2) borough and (18) market towns, with the days of markets 
and fairs. 
Erom a small quarto volume, engraved throughout on one side 
of the paper only, containing an ornamental title-page, a preface, 
two whole-page maps of England, and 47 maps of the counties of 
England, etc. 
The title, printed with an ornamental design, is : ‘ The Small 
English Atlas being A New and Accurate Sett of Maps of all the 
Counties in England and Wales.’ There is an imprint below the 
design : “ London, Publish’d according to Act of Parham 1 by Mess rs . 
Kitchin and Jefferys 1749, and sold by M. Payne at the White 
Hart and M. Cooper at the Globe in Paternoster Bow.” London, 
1749, 4to. 
A copy is in the British Museum. 
I have also a copy of this Atlas in my collection, without date, 
containing 52 plates in all, of which 50 are maps. In this copy 
the map of Herts is numbered “ 19 ” in the right-hand top corner. 
This atlas may have been issued prior to 1749. In the title is 
added “By T.Jefferys, Geo: to the King, and 
. . . . Tho s . Kitchin, sen 1 ’.,” and it is sold by Bobert Sayer 
and John Bennett, and John and Carrington Bowles. (Beprinted 
in 1751.) 
* 1751. Kitchin, Thomas, and Thomas Jefferys. 
5| X 5^. Scale, 10 miles = i inch. 
A reprint of the map of Herts in ‘ The Small English Atlas ’ 
of 1749, but with some trifling alterations in the spelling of the 
names (e.g. Hertford, instead of Hartford), and some places added. 
The printed matter at the foot of the map is differently arranged. 
The map is distinguishable from the earlier impression by these 
variations. 
Erom an edition of ‘The Small English Atlas,’ London, 1751, 
4to. There is a copy in the Library of the Boyal Geographical 
Society, which bears at the foot of the title-page, after the date, 
“and sold by Tho s . Jefferys Geographer to his Boyal Highness 
the Prince of Wales at the comer of S t . Martin’s Lane, Charing 
Cross, by M r . George Faulkner in Essex Street, Dublin. A Paris 
che% le S r le Rouge Ingenieur Geographe du Roy de France .” There 
are 52 plates in this collection. 
1751. Universal Magazine of Knowledge and 
Pleasure. 8x7. Scale, 5 miles = 1 inch. 
Map with plain ruled border, with degrees and minutes of 
latitude and longitude, giving main and some cross roads, towns, 
villages, and a few hamlets, with scattered trees and hills very 
