Map of the Country Around Sydney (1881)
A strategic reconnaissance map of Sydney and its surrounding landscape
This substantial government reconnaissance map, compiled in 1881, presents a detailed view of the country surrounding Sydney at a moment when defence, transport, and land administration were increasingly intertwined. The survey was undertaken by Thomas Samuel Parrott, Lieutenant of the Volunteer Engineers, under the direction of Sir Peter Scratchley, R.E., C.M.G., and issued by authority of P. F. Adams, Surveyor General of New South Wales.
Extending from Broken Bay in the north to Botany Bay in the south, the map combines military reconnaissance objectives with civil survey precision. Roads, railways, property boundaries, vegetation notes, and topographic detail are carefully recorded, with selected features hand-coloured to improve clarity. Printed by the Surveyor General’s Office and photo-lithographed at the Government Printing Office in 1882, this is an authoritative snapshot of Sydney’s hinterland as the city expanded beyond its colonial core.
This is not a decorative city map—it is a working strategic survey of late-19th-century Sydney.
🧭 What This Map Shows
-
The wider Sydney region, from Broken Bay to Botany Bay
-
Roads, railways, and transport corridors
-
Property boundaries and land divisions
-
Topography and vegetation notes recorded from reconnaissance
-
Relief shown by hachures and spot heights
-
Select features hand-coloured for emphasis
🏛️ Why This Map Matters
-
A rare military–civil reconnaissance map of Sydney
-
Produced under the direction of Sir Peter Scratchley, a key figure in colonial defence planning
-
Demonstrates how Sydney’s geography was assessed for movement, access, and security
-
High cartographic quality from the NSW Surveyor General’s Office
-
A large-format, visually compelling document of Sydney before modern suburban sprawl
Historians value this map for showing how Sydney was read and interpreted on the ground, not just how it appeared on paper.
✨ Premium Print & Display Options
Printed in Australia using archival methods to preserve colour, linework, and historical character.
| Finish |
Description |
| 📄 Heavyweight Paper (160 gsm matte)
|
Archival matte surface with excellent line clarity; ideal for framing under glass. |
| 🔒 Laminated (True Encapsulation)
|
Sealed between 2 × 80-micron gloss laminate; tear-resistant and wipe-clean. |
| 🎨 Archival Canvas (395 gsm HP Professional Matte)
|
Pigment-based, fade-resistant inks with a refined, gallery presence. |
| 🪵 Laminated + Timber Hang Rails
|
Natural lacquered timber rails, ready to hang (allow up to 10 working days). |
| 🪵 Canvas + Timber Hang Rails
|
Elegant, frameless presentation (allow up to 10 working days). |
📐 Size (W × H)
720 mm × 1000 mm
Orientation: Portrait
Aspect ratio: ~1 : 1.39
Framing tips:
-
Allow a 2–3 mm mat overlap for traditional framing.
-
For contemporary interiors, a float-mount with a ~3 mm reveal highlights the hand-coloured features beautifully.
Custom sizing: Available on request.
🎯 Ideal For
-
Sydney and NSW history enthusiasts
-
Defence, planning, and infrastructure historians
-
Libraries, councils, and archives
-
Heritage homes and professional offices
-
Collectors of official Australian government maps
🤝 Our Commitment
Printed locally in Australia with archival pigment inks, careful colour management, and hand-checked finishing—packed securely and ready to display.
Choose your finish and own a remarkable 1881 reconnaissance view of the country around Sydney.