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Geographers' A–Z Street Atlas

London Geographers' A–Z Street Atlas
Cover of 2004 edition
Author Geographers' A-Z Map Company
Country United Kingdom
Subject Street map
Publisher Geographers' A-Z Map Company Ltd.
Publication date
1936 (first edition)
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 430 pp (seventh edition)
ISBN
OCLC 80760632

The A–Z (pronounced "A to Zed"), or in full the Geographers' A–Z Street Atlas, is a name given to any one of a range of atlases of streets in the United Kingdom currently produced by Geographers' A–Z Map Company Limited. Its first atlas, of London, was originally compiled in the 1930s by Phyllis Pearsall. The company she founded now publishes street maps of many cities and towns in the UK.

Until quite recently, the maps produced by the Geographers' (A–Z) Map Company did not list their publication date, so dating them can be quite hard. A few things that can help are:

On all their maps, there is a 3 or 4 letter code in one of the corners, often the one containing the key. These letters represent numbers, which are the cartographic date, in the form (M)MYY. There is at least one scheme in use, but possibly also a second.

One scheme is JIHGFEDCBA, for the numbers 1 through 9 and 0, so that HFD would be 357, or March 1957. This seems to be used on all of their maps not in book form (it may be used in the book form ones, but that has not been confirmed).

The Geographer's A–Z Street Atlas and the story of how Phyllis Pearsall came to write the first edition covering London was featured in a 2005 episode of Nicholas Crane's Map Man TV programme. This revealed the interesting fact that on all their maps A–Z print a non-existent trap street so that they can tell if a map has been illegally copied from theirs, a technique used by several publishers of reference works (see fictitious entry).

The story of Pearsall's creation of the A–Z also inspired the musical The A–Z of Mrs P.

The London A–Z is a plot device in "The Blind Banker", the second episode of the first series of the BBC drama Sherlock when the protagonist is attempting to decipher a book code used by an international smuggling ring based on a book "everybody owns". After attempting to decipher the code using a dictionary and the Bible, Sherlock goes out into Baker Street and appropriates a copy of the A–Z after seeing it being used by a couple of tourists.


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