From Jerripedia
Maps of Jersey and the Channel Islands
A 16th century map showing St Aubin's Bay, one of the earliest known maps of the island. The map is orientated east at the top, and the two structures in the bay are
Elizabeth Castle (top) and
St Aubin's Fort
This page contains the largest online collection of maps of Jersey and the other Channel Islands. The maps cover the period from the 16th century to the 20th, and there are links to pages containing detailed images of some of the most important maps. Jersey Heritage has a larger collection of maps but they are not accessible online
|
A map produced around 1758 by the Cassini family, famous French cartographers, showing Jersey and the nearby Normandy coast
Coastal survey
Not maps, but drawings of Jersey's coastline from a 1680 survey by Gomme
St Aubin's Bay from out at sea
La Corbiere from much closer in, long before the lighthouse was built
1785 map of Jersey
A 1783 map of Jersey drawn by an unknown Army officer
Click on any section of the map to see a larger image
Bibliotheque Nationale
These maps from the Bibliotheque Nationale collection in Paris are also included in appropriate sections below. Click on any map to open a zoomable version on the Bibliotheque site, in a new tab, or new window, depending on your browser settings
Dated maps
A map showing coastal areas which were off limits to islanders during the
German Occupation
The 1637 Mercator map of Jersey is in the Bodleian Library. At first glance it appears to resemble Guernsey more than the larger island but if it it rotated slightly clockwise the outline of Jersey's coast becomes more apparent
A modern coloured version of the 1637 Mercator map
And a better quality copy published in Italy in 1696 by Franciscan monk Vincenzo Coronelli from Venice. Quite why he turned his attention away from his trademark globes and atlases to copy a map of Jersey published 59 years earlier is unknown
A 1543 map of St Aubin's Bay known as 'The Haven of Jersey' showing east at the top
Richard Popinjay Map, 1562 or 1563
A map produced for Charles II in 1681 ...
... clearly based on the same map, with with notable differences
A woodcut map published in Paris in 1683. Designed by the French mathematician, engineer and surveyor Allain Manesson-Mallet (1630-1706), it was originally produced for his Description de l’Univers : Contenant les Differents Systemes du Monde.
A map showing the proliferation of apple orchards in the 17th century
A map drawn by John Seller in the late 17th century and published by S Hooper of London in 1787. It first appeared under the title Anglia Contracta in about 1694 and was then included as a revised version with Francis Grose's The Antiquities of England and Wales. The original measured only 120 x 143 mm
A map of the small town of St Helier in the late 17th century ...
This map, which surfaced in a St Helier antique shop in 2021 is something of a mystery. It appears to be based on the John Seller map above, and the association with Sir George Carteret, through the coat of arms and inscription in the top corner would tend to support a late 18th century date. But the map contains so many errors of detail. Trinity Manor is wrongly shown in St John, Belle Hougue point to the wrong side of Bouley Bay. Place names have been anglicised, as they commonly were on maps produced in England, but St Helier should be shown as St Hillary, not St Hrilary. And although Jarsey has been found elsewhere as a mis-spelling of Jersey, it seems unlikely that any map having any official standing would have contained such an error. We suspect that the map is effectively a forgery, drawn and published at a much later date, with details added by someone lacking a knowledge of 18th century Jersey
Normandy and the Channel Islands in 1705
Jersey 'upside down' from the French map
1737 survey of St Aubin's Bay
Jersey appears on the Carte de France, which was published by four generations of the Cassini family from 1750 to 1815. The original carte consists of 182 sheets at the same scale, allowing the sheets to be joined together to form a physical map of nearly 12 metres square. This historical cartographic image is part of the David Rumsey Historical Map Collection
Jersey and the Cotentin coast of Normandy, 1750
Thomas Kitchin in the London Magazine, 1753
A 1755 map by Jacques Nicolas Bellin
A 1772 map by Francis Grose
A map of the Channel Islands by Louis de la Rochette from 1781
A map by Louis Stanislaus de la Rochette, published in Paris in 1781, the year of the Battle of Jersey
Another map of St Helier in 1781
John Cary, 1789, after Dumaresq
Prince Bouillon map, 1799
Duke of Richmond map, 1795
A map by John Pinkerton from 1814
A map in Richard Plees' 1817 guide to Jersey
Map drawn by surveyor Roger Creighton and engraved by admiralty engravers John and Charles Walker. Produced for the Topographical Dictionary published by Samuel Lewis of Aldersgate in 1831
From Mudie's History of Hampshire in 1838
A map by John Creighton from 1848
Godfray, Les Landes, 1849
A map published by John Tallis of London and New York in about 1850. It shows Guernsey above Jersey. It was drawn and engraved by John Rapkin (1813-1899) with additional decorative work by Henry Winkles and Edward Radclyffe.
An 1865 map of Guernsey (above) and Jersey
Map published by Falles, of the Royal Square, in 1868
Godfray's 19th century map of Jersey
Jersey on an updated 1902 Cassini map
From the 1902 Cassini map
A map showing the area used for beach landings in the 1930s
German artillery range map
A map of bus routes in 1957
South-east of the island, 1988
A modern map of Jersey showing the major road network
Some very old maps
St Helier Harbour in 1878
CLose-up of the harbour area
Miscellaneous maps
St Helier's seafront before land was reclaimed to create what is now known as the Weighbridge. In the centre are the
Royal Square, with the
Town Church below. The waterline runs roughly level with what is today called
Mulcaster Street
Hue Street area before a large number of cottages were demolished
Coutances Diocese map of the Channel Islands
A map showing the distance of various points in the island from the Royal Square
Plans for new harbours in Alderney and Jersey
A map produced for visitors in 1899
Tourism promotion maps
Dirouilles
A hand-drawn map of
the Dérouilles (sometimes spelt Dirouilles, and called Le Plateau des Derouilles) which are a mile to the west of
Les Ecréhous. The map was drawn from memory by Angus Faed while working in England during WW2. His son Colin, who sent us the map, says that his father drew it partly so that the knowledge of the rocks and their names would not be lost, and also in case it might be of use to British forces planning a raid on Jersey. It is not known whether any such use was ever made of the map