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Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sat 05 Jan, 2019 11:45 pm
by dirkus49
Here is an example of a hand-drawn map from the early days of Tasmanian bushwalking. The map was drawn by Keith Lancaster on the back of an old insurance company calendar. The map was drawn around 1950, as you can see.

Cheers

Dirk

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 8:10 am
by north-north-west
I'm trying to make sense of the position of the names. Coronation south of the Citadel and the Lion? Nope, that's what we now call Frankland, with the BK5 presumably being Secheron - although I thought that name was a lot older than I am - and Eastern Peak being Lloyd Jones. The Dome is obviously what we now call the Cupola, and what he is calling the Throne and Spectacular must be what we now call Tribulation Ridge high point (so glad that isn't on the peakbaggers list) and Coronation. The Bluff is Murphys, although he's marked the slightly lower eastern high point, not what is now recognised as the true summit. Koruna doesn't even get a mention (ditto Greycap, Cleft, Redtop).

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 8:57 am
by bogholesbuckethats
Thanks for sharing. I recently came across similar maps of the Cradle mountain area as well as the entire south west. I will upload a copy of those once I get access to a scanner large enough to scan A0.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 2:55 pm
by Neo
Here is a link to a Budawangs sketch map:

https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-234315790/view

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 2:57 pm
by Neo
Neo wrote:Here is a link to a Budawangs sketch map:

https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-234315790/view


Best viewed in conjunction with a recent topographic map! I need to get back there soon.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 5:02 pm
by tastrax
I also have a Lune River to PB hand drawn (but not an original) - Feb 1962 - Based on a Kameruka Bushwalking Club map and updated by ? Lambert (KBC) and Jim England 1963

http://wyatt-family.com/temp/PB.JPG

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 5:07 pm
by Neo
Cool tastrax, different style again. I like how they show (just) the gullies then river.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 7:07 pm
by CasualNerd
tastrax wrote:I also have a Lune River to PB hand drawn (but not an original) - Feb 1962 - Based on a Kameruka Bushwalking Club map and updated by ? Lambert (KBC) and Jim England 1963

http://wyatt-family.com/temp/PB.JPG

That looks really familiar I think there must be a copy with my parents bushwalking stuff., Is there any more story behind it ?

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 8:09 pm
by tastrax
CasualNerd wrote: Is there any more story behind it ?


No story, just one my father had in his collection. I also worked with Jim England many years ago. Jim was a pilot so I expect he spent a bit of time flying over the area.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Sun 06 Jan, 2019 9:58 pm
by Mark F
The blank areas on the PB map says it all about the level of mapping at that time. I used that long and narrow map to do PB in 1971/2 - summited 1/1/1972. I think I may still have it tucked away in some obscure corner. For the Western Arthurs in the same season I used a Hydro "Arthur D" sheet which we hand coloured to differentiate water courses from the contours etc.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Mon 07 Jan, 2019 11:32 pm
by dirkus49
Here is another hand-drawn map. This one is also a bit of a work of art.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Tue 08 Jan, 2019 12:04 am
by dirkus49
A map drawn by David W Wilson.

"Mt. Anne Massif
Scale 1 inch = 440 yards (1:15,840)
Enlarged from Lnds & Survey Dept
State Aerial Survey Map No 800
Contour intervals of 100 feet are shown by continuous
lines and where practicable intermediatory contour
intervals of 50 feet are shown by broken lines.
Numbers in margin are State grid lines fro Zone 7(Tas)
Drawn by David W Wilson October 1960"

In the bottom margin there is the inscription: "Presented to Keith Lancaster by David Wilson (Not to be sold)"

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Tue 08 Jan, 2019 12:22 am
by dirkus49
Last map for today: Here is a collaboration between two prolific map makers of the 1940s to 1960s, David Wilson and RN Smith. The map is of the Walls of Jerusalem and dates from 1949.

Dirk

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Tue 08 Jan, 2019 6:27 am
by north-north-west
Thanks for these, dirkus. I particularly love the Wellington Park map, with some old tracks I remember walking as a kid which no longer exist.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Tue 08 Jan, 2019 12:10 pm
by peregrinator
north-north-west wrote:Thanks for these, dirkus. I particularly love the Wellington Park map, with some old tracks I remember walking as a kid which no longer exist.


It's gorgeous. And what a wonderful motto: "KNOW YOUR COUNTRY - WALK".

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Wed 09 Jan, 2019 5:55 am
by Huntsman247
Does anyone know of any that are like the budawangs sketch map? In terms of character and size?

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Thu 04 Apr, 2019 1:48 pm
by bogholesbuckethats
I was lucky enough to be given an original copy of a sketch map of the entire SW Tas from ~1935.

Here is a link to a digital copy scanned from the A0 map
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1OO3PhIDViD20go2oE2V7TI062qrqLxyf/view?usp=sharing

Some of the names on there are interesting for example what is now known as Pindars Peak is called Mt Leillateah and Mt Mueller is called High Rocky.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Thu 11 Apr, 2019 11:21 am
by north-north-west
bogholesbuckethats wrote:I was lucky enough to be given an original copy of a sketch map of the entire SW Tas from ~1935.

Here is a link to a digital copy scanned from the A0 map
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1OO3PhIDViD20go2oE2V7TI062qrqLxyf/view?usp=sharing

Some of the names on there are interesting for example what is now known as Pindars Peak is called Mt Leillateah and Mt Mueller is called High Rocky.


That is gorgeous.

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Thu 16 May, 2019 8:14 pm
by taswegian
not sure how 'hand drawn' you are after
AF395_1_43-R.jpg
Cradle Mt & Valley

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Thu 16 May, 2019 8:17 pm
by taswegian
AF395_1_32-R.jpg
rough plan of Florentine Valley (1911)

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Thu 16 May, 2019 8:23 pm
by taswegian
AF395_1_30-R.jpg
Near Mt Humboldt to Gordon River


I think I got these from Library, but may have obtained them from my own search request??
Origins are DPIPWE . Or once Lands Department

Re: Old Hand-drawn Bushwalking Maps

PostPosted: Thu 16 May, 2019 8:25 pm
by taswegian
I had to downsize these to fit here.
The originals are clear and easily readable.