Couverture de Fall Asleep with Frank — A Gentle History of Ordnance Survey: Maps, Miles and Triangles

Fall Asleep with Frank — A Gentle History of Ordnance Survey: Maps, Miles and Triangles

Fall Asleep with Frank — A Gentle History of Ordnance Survey: Maps, Miles and Triangles

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Tonight, Frank takes you on a gentle, unhurried journey through the history of Ordnance Survey — one of Britain's most quietly extraordinary institutions. This sleep story begins not with a peaceful walk across open countryside, but with a military problem: in 1745, in the aftermath of the Jacobite rising, the British Army had no reliable map of the Scottish Highlands. From that gap, something remarkable slowly grew.

Frank traces the story from Lieutenant-Colonel David Watson's Highland survey of 1747, through the careful geodetic work of William Roy, all the way to the first published one-inch-to-the-mile map of Kent in 1801. Along the way, you'll hear about the Principal Triangulation of Great Britain, the craftsman-made theodolite that made it possible, and the quiet stretch of Hounslow Heath where the foundational baseline was measured — now buried beneath Heathrow Airport.

There are trig points on hilltops, field boundaries on folded paper, and the slow, patient geometry of stitching a web of known positions across an entire country. All of it told in Frank's calm, unhurried voice — designed to ease your mind, slow your thoughts, and gently carry you into sleep.

This is the first episode of Fall Asleep with Frank — a relaxing sleep podcast where every night, Frank tells calm, soothing sleep stories about history, geography, and quiet things. No drama. No urgency. Just a slow, gentle voice and a story worth drifting off to. A calming episode to help you relax and fall asleep.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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