Line-drawn archive illustration showing a windmill, a river and a church tower
Barking, Greater London. A view from the south looking over the River Roding, showing Wellington Windmill and St Margaret's Church. Drawn by C G Harper 1892-1933. Source: Historic England Archive. View image record CGH01/01/0187
Barking, Greater London. A view from the south looking over the River Roding, showing Wellington Windmill and St Margaret's Church. Drawn by C G Harper 1892-1933. Source: Historic England Archive. View image record CGH01/01/0187

Around England by Bicycle: the C G Harper Collection

Charles George Harper travelled the length and breadth of the country, creating an atmospheric picture of England and English life during the early 20th century.

The Historic England Archive completed the cataloguing and digitisation of over 1,100 original drawings from the C G Harper collection, with generous support from TownsWeb Archiving.

View the collection

The drawings provide an artist’s impression of a ‘Lost England’, showing idyllic scenes of towns and villages before the large scale development after the Second World War.

Geographically diverse, the collection covers churches, public houses, bridges, street scenes, country houses, coastal views, road signs and village scenes, providing an atmospheric picture of England and English life during the early 20th century.

Charles George Harper was born in 1863 in London. His professional career began as a printer, but he also began to write articles for periodicals and newspapers about his lifelong passion – the history and topography of England.

In 1892 Harper’s first work, a collection of articles about the Brighton Road, supplemented by his own illustrations, was published. This was to be the start of over 30 years’ worth of travel and research, covering most of the country, and leading to the publication of over 40 volumes.

Harper meticulously researched his books, travelling the length and breadth of the country by bicycle, and producing detailed illustrations along the way. In many of his illustrations he added a self portrait of a moustachioed man with a bicycle.

He covered all the major old coaching roads – the Bath Road, the Dover Road, the Great North Road, the Norwich Road, to name but a few. He also produced volumes documenting the south coast, including Kent, Dorset, Devon and Cornwall. 

Alongside these he published works on the Old Inns of Old England, Thames Valley Villages, and Cycle Rides Round London.

Harper died in 1943, and his collection of drawings seems to have been dispersed. The Historic England Archive’s collection of over 1,100 original drawings is likely to only be a small part of his output.

Please click on the gallery images to enlarge.

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