-------- Original Message -------- Subject: 3D relief maps, Henry F Brion and Major R H Mahon (mapmakers) Date: Sun, 10 Aug 2008 23:14:16 +0100 From: Louisa Coles <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] ****Apologies for cross-posting**** Dear all, I am trying to locate further copies of a 3D relief map of Ladysmith, South Africa, made circa 1900 by a Henry F Brion of London. It depicts the town of Ladysmith, the immediate area around it, and the main events of the Siege of Ladysmith (1899-1900) during the second Boer War. It is printed on paper, with a plaster support. Size: 750mm x 750mm (framed) Scale: 2 inches to a mile. It is a reproduction of a wooden map made during the siege by a Major R H Mahon (RA). This was hit by a shell during the siege, but pieced together afterwards and recreated by Henry F Brion. I am aware of the model of Ladysmith and the surrounding area held at the British Library by the same mapmaker (scale: 2 miles to 1 inch). However, I am yet to find another copy of the map I describe, or the original wooden model on which it was based. I am a student on the MA Programme in the Conservation of Fine Art at Northumbria University and I have been carrying out conservation work on a damaged edition of the Brion map, which also forms the basis of my final dissertation. Any information regarding the location of any other editions of the Brion map, or the existence of the wooden model by Mahon would be extremely useful to my work. In addition, although I have some details about Henry F Brion himself, any further pointers towards information about him or his wider work would be much appreciated. Likewise with regard to Major Mahon. I would also be interested to find out more about how this type of 3D relief map fits into the history of 3D mapmaking as a whole. I am working my way through the links from the Map History portal (http://www.maphistory.info), and I am aware of some key mapmakers prior to this period, and the use of three dimensional models during WWII. However, I have not yet discovered any evidence of widespread commercial practice around 1900. Your opinions and advice would be very welcome. With thanks, Louisa Coles Student MA Programme in the Conservation of Fine Art Northumbria University, UK