William Yates (cartographer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Yates (1738–1802)[1] was an 18th-century British cartographer. He surveyed land in northern England, mostly in Lancashire.[2]

Yates grew up in the Low Hill parish of Walton, Liverpool.[3]

Career

Early in his career, Yates was an assistant to Peter Perez Burdett.[4]

In 1769, Yates completed a survey for the Map of the Environs of Liverpool.[5]

Yates' survey of Lancashire (1786),[6] at one inch to the mile,[7] was "one of the eleven English county maps which received national recognition in the period 1759–1809". He received a gold medal from the Society of Arts.[8]

His 1775 trigonometrical survey of Staffordshire was described as "the last production of outstanding importance" before the end of the 18th century.[9]

Personal life

Death

References

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