
A look at how, for over 200 years, Ordnance Survey has mapped every square mile of the British Isles, capturing not just the contours and geography of the nation, but of our lives.
For over 200 years, Ordnance Survey has mapped every square mile of the British Isles, capturing not just the contours and geography of our nation, but of our lives. Originally intended for military use, OS maps were used during wartime to help locate enemy positions. In peacetime, they helped people discover and explore the countryside.
Today, the large fold-out paper maps, used by generations of ramblers, scouts and weekend adventurers, represent just a small part of the OS output. As Ordnance Survey adjusts to the digital age, Timeshift looks back to tell the story of a quintessentially British institution.
Last on
Clips
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The OS map
Duration: 02:30
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Ellis Martin covers
Duration: 02:31
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The stereoplotting machine
Duration: 01:31
Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
00:04Bill Black’s Combo
Smokie (Parts 1 and 2)
00:25Quintette du Hot Club de France
Minor Swing
00:36Sigur Rós
Ba Ba
00:50Four Tet
Circling
00:51Brian Eno
Deep Blue Day
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Narrator | Lesley Manville |
| Producer | Jon Morrice |
| Director | Jon Morrice |
| Series Producer | William Naylor |
Broadcasts
- Wed 9 Sep 201521:00
- Thu 10 Sep 201503:00
- Mon 14 Sep 201500:30
- Boxing Day 201523:30
- Thu 5 May 201621:00
- Tue 10 May 201603:00
- Tue 10 May 201622:05
- Thu 20 Oct 201622:00
- Mon 24 Oct 201620:00
- Thu 6 Apr 201720:00
- Fri 7 Apr 201701:30
- Tue 19 Sep 201702:30
- Tue 13 Nov 201800:00
- Mon 17 Feb 202000:00



