Road maps from Ireland |
Ireland was wholly within the United Kingdom until 1923, when the Southern 26 counties split to form the Irish Free State.
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As in the rest of the UK, very few maps associated with oil companies were issued in this early period, with the only known example the Pratt's Perfection Motor Spirit atlas of Scotland and Ireland, first issued in 1905 (left), and possibly also sold in separate volumes for the two countries. There were 40 pages of sectional maps of the country at 6 inches to the mile drawn by George Philip & Son, as well at town plans of Dublin, Belfast, Cork, Waterford, Kingstown [Dun Laoghaire] and Wexford. The atlas also included road profiles and a diagrammatic key showing the height above sea level of selected towns and physical features |
No petrol company maps of Ireland are known in the period from partition to the creation of the Irish Republic in 1948.
Despite not having been in the Second World War, the Irish Republic was still largely an agrarian economy with low levels of car ownership in the 1950s compared to much of Europe. This is reflected in a limited supply of maps from petrol companies, with the main firms (Esso and Irish Shell & BP Ltd) participating in the map programmes of the UK. |
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These three maps all come from UK/Irish combined map programmes. The early 1950s Esso map, at 8 miles to the inch, was produced by Edward Stanford Ltd, with a cover drawn by Blofeld and carries the UK sectional number 8. |
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Texaco operated in the UK through Regent; elsewhere in Europe - including Ireland - it had a joint venture with Chevron under the Caltex brand. The first map here dates from 1958 and the next, published in association with the Irish Tourist Board for distribution in the UK, from three years later. Both were created by the Swiss firm of Orell Füssli. After the Chevron-Texaco divide in 1967, Texaco picked up the Irish operations, and used maps with the design shown for several years - this one dates from 1982. Uniquely, Irish Texaco used the star in hexagon logo, identical to that used in the Americas. |
There were two firms indigenous to Ireland, with operations both North and South of the border. Munster Simms & Co were stronger in Ulster, but issued a variant of their map for use in the Republic. An undated Geographia map, it probably dates from the late 1950s and includes a larger scale map of Northern Ireland on its reverse side. In the 1960s they were bought by BP. |
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In the early 1990s the UK's Automobile Association (AA) made a concerted effort to sign up the main petrol companies for its new mapping. Shell and Esso both briefly sold maps from the AA, and their Irish affiliates followed suit, but with noticeably different designs. Shell's map, believed to date from 1990, was specially prepared for them, and included short summaries in the margins highlighting the main tourist attractions by county, as well as photographs of landmarks taken from the Shell Guide to Ireland and a full set of traffic signs (as Ireland uses a different style to the rest of Europe). In contrast Esso simply paid to have a bespoke card cover added to a stock AA map of Ireland in 1993; the Shell and Esso cartography at 1:350,000 was identical. |
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Petrol companies have continued to produce, at least occasional, branded maps of Ireland right up to the present day. Most appear to have been sold only in the Republic; in the North - as in the rest of the UK - branded maps have been withdrawn. The first of the five examples above, from the independent distributor Campus Oil, is the youngest, dated 2002. Printed on a wipe-clean light card, it uses AA cartography in a patent folding system, rather like the Scandinavian QuickMap system. A similar arrangement was also used in the mid-1990s by Esso, but with Bartholomews cartography.
The Maxol map, dated 1997, also used AA cartography (but on a folding map essentially identical to the 1993 Esso version above); more recent Maxol maps have switched to Collins Bartholomew but both use stock maps inside custom card covers.
Shell's 1997 map was specially printed for the and uses a map from the Irish Ordnance Survey. Statoil entered the Irish market by buying BP, and their 1996 map is another Bartholomew stock edition pasted into custom card covers. Both Shell and Statoil sold their chains to the local concern Topaz in the mid-2000s, although Topaz licensed the continuing use of the existing brands on its service stations.
Finally, Texaco's 1997 map is again a special production for them using cartography by the AA; like Maxol, their latest (2002) maps use Bartholomew mapping although looking similar externally.
Jet (which sold out to Statoil and Maxol) issued a Handy Map of Ireland in 1986, but I have never seen a copy. It is thought that maps may have been produced in the colours of Lobitos or Shamrock and their successor company, Burmah, but none are known to collectors. Among more recent brands, Emo (successor to the Burmah chain) may have also published branded maps.
Please send me an e-mail if you can help me with these, or with any other brands of petrol shown on Irish road maps.
There is a page dedicated to maps from Irish brands, which includes additional examples from Mex, Maxol and MS. There are also other examples shown from Esso (including a Guide to Irish Airports), Caltex and Shell (including a dealer advertising issue of Dun Laoghaire) on this website.
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Text and layout © Ian Byrne, 2004-7 |
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