Edward Mogg
Edward Mogg was a publisher in London in the 19th century.[1] He issued maps and travel guides to London and other localities in England and Wales.[2] Mogg's publications appear in works of fiction such as Robert Smith Surtees' Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour and Shirley Brooks' The Naggletons.[3][4]
Further reading
1800s-1810s
- Edward Mogg (1800), Street Directory; Being a List of all the Streets, &c. in London[5]
- London in Miniature (2nd ed.), London: E. Mogg, 1807, OCLC 801549915 (map)
- Edward Mogg (1808), Survey of the Roads from London to Brighton, Southampton, Portsmouth, Hastings, Tunbridge-Wells, Margate, Ramsgate, and Dover[5]
- Survey of the High Roads of England and Wales: Part the First Comprising the Counties of Kent, Surrey, Sussex, Hants, Wilts, Dorset, Somerset, Devon, and Cornwall, London: Edward Mogg, No.51, Charing Cross, 1817
1820s-1830s
- Edward Mogg (1822), Paterson's Roads (16th ed.)
- Edward Mogg (1824), Paterson's Roads (17th ed.), London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green
- Edward Mogg (1826), Paterson's Roads (18th ed.), London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green
- Edward Mogg (1828), Mogg's Table of the New Watermen's Fares, London[8]
- Edward Mogg (1838), Mogg's New Picture of London, London[8]
- Edward Mogg (1848), Mogg's New Picture of London (11th ed.), London: E. Mogg, no.14 Great Russell Street, Covent Garden
1840s-1850s
- Mogg's Handbook for Railway Travellers; Or, Real Iron-road Book (2nd ed.), London: Edward Mogg, 1840 + Index
- Edward Mogg (1841), Mogg's Brighton Railway, and Brighton, Lewes, Shoreham, and Worthing Guide, London[8]
- Mogg's Great Western Railway and Windsor, Bath, and Bristol Guide, London: E. Mogg, 1841
- Edward Mogg (1842), Mogg's Birmingham Railway, and Birmingham, Coventry, Warwick, and Leamington Guide, London[8]
- Edward Mogg (1842), Mogg's Grand Junction Railway and Birmingham, Liverpool, and Manchester Railway Guide, London[8]
- Edward Mogg (1843), Mogg's South-Eastern, or London and Dover Railway, and Tunbridge Wells, Hythe, Folkestone, and Dover Guide, London[8]
- Edward Mogg (1844), Mogg's Omnibus Guide, and Metropolitan Carriage Time Table, London: E. Mogg
- Mogg's Southampton Railway, and Isle of Wight Guide, London: E. Mogg, 1845
- Mogg's Ten Thousand Cab Fares, London: E. Mogg, 1849[9]
- W. Mogg (1859), Mogg's Ten Thousand Cab Fares, London[8]
- Mogg's New London Guide, London: E. Mogg, 1849 (map)
- Mogg's London and Environs, London: E.S. Mogg, 1851 (map)
- Index to the Streets, Squares, and Cab Stands, Comprised in Mogg's New Cab Fare, Distance Map, and Guide to London, Bloomsbury: W. Mogg, 1859, OCLC 533395480
References
- ↑ "Edward Mogg", London Book Trades 1775-1800: a Preliminary Checklist of Members, Exeter Working Papers in British Book Trade History, retrieved 29 August 2013
- ↑ "Guide Books: Road Books, &c.", The Bookseller (London), 3 July 1872,
Edward Mogg, of cab-fare fame
- ↑ Surtees, Robert Smith (1852), Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour, London: Bradbury, Agnew & Co. Ltd., OCLC 2938627
- ↑ Shirley Brooks (1875), The Naggletons, and Miss Violet and her 'offers'
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Robert Watt (1824), Bibliotheca Britannica, Edinburgh
- ↑ Tim Cribb (1996), "Travelling through Time: Transformations of Narrative from Early to Late Dickens", Yearbook of English Studies 26, JSTOR 3508647
- ↑ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Paterson, Daniel". Dictionary of National Biography 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 17.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 John Parker Anderson (1881), Book of British Topography: a classified catalogue of the topographical works in the Library of the British Museum relating to Great Britain and Ireland, London: W. Satchell
- ↑ "Mogg's Ten Thousand Cab Fares (advert)", The Athenaeum, 15 September 1849
External links
- WorldCat. Edward Mogg