1925-26 MoT Map - Sheet 39 (Brighton)
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1925-26 MoT Map - Sheet 39 (Brighton)
For those of you that aren't familiar with the OS Ministry of Transport Road Map series; these maps are some of the most important historical documents available to us that show the earliest days of road numbering within Great Britain. They were created literally to show those newfangled road numbers, and annually throughout the 1920s and into the 1930s sheets were re-issued to show the changed that had happened since the previous edition. Whilst the original 1922-23 editions are quite common, later revisions are much rarer and so more difficult to find - indeed, the legal deposit libraries don't have full sets.
So, take a look at it - there are at the time of writing three of the four sheets printed of the Brighton, Sussex and southern Surrey area now available on SABRE Maps. Why don't you see what changes you can find? It can be found on the 1925-27 MoT Map layer.
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From the SABRE Wiki: OS Ministry of Transport Road Map :
The Ministry of Transport Road Map (colloqually known as MoT Maps) series were the official maps to show classified roads, following their publication by the Ministry of Transport on 1st April, 1923. As such, they are possibly the most important resource documenting the early days of road numbering in Great Britain.
The equivalent mapping in Northern Ireland was the Road Map of Northern Ireland
[[File:MoT map key 1922-23.JPG|thumb|right|1922-23 edition
Re: 1925-26 MoT Map - Sheet 39 (Brighton)
Terminally cynical, unimpressed, and nearly Middle Age already.
She said life was like a motorway; dull, grey, and long.
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Re: 1925-26 MoT Map - Sheet 39 (Brighton)
Re: 1925-26 MoT Map - Sheet 39 (Brighton)
Originally roads were only classified if they were maintained by central government or a local authority. Private roads were always therefore unclassified, even if this meant that a specific road number had a gap in it.B1040 wrote:The road between Winchelsea and Rye isn't part of the A259, which takes a little break.
The Winchelsea-Rye road follows part of the Royal Military Road, which would presumably have been owned by the 1920s equivalent of the MoD.
From the SABRE Wiki: Royal Military Road :
The Royal Military Road follows the path of the Royal Military Canal in East Sussex and Kent.
The canal, and its corresponding road were built in the early 19th century as part of a defence against Napoleon, and runs along what was once the coastline in Roman Britain, before the land to the south was reclaimed in the Middle Ages as Romney Marsh.
Today, the road is a combination of trunk road, B road, unclassified road and footpath.
[[File:Appledore Bridge, Royal Military Canal -