John Ainslie

Scottish surveyor and cartographer
title: "John Ainslie" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1745-births", "1828-deaths", "people-from-jedburgh", "people-educated-at-jedburgh-grammar-school", "scottish-cartographers", "scottish-surveyors", "18th-century-british-cartographers", "18th-century-scottish-people", "19th-century-scottish-people"] description: "Scottish surveyor and cartographer" topic_path: "people/1740s" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ainslie" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Scottish surveyor and cartographer ::
thumb|A plaque in Castlegate in Jedburgh John Ainslie (22 April 1745 – 29 February 1828) was a Scottish surveyor and cartographer.
Life
Ainslie was born in Jedburgh, the youngest son of John Ainslie, a druggist, Writer to the Signet and burgess of the burgh.{{cite web |title=A Selection Of Famous Jedburgh People |work=Jedburgh Official Website |url=http://www.jedburgh.org.uk/content_people.htm |accessdate=17 May 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722153933/http://www.jedburgh.org.uk/content_people.htm |archivedate=22 July 2011 |title=Famous Sons and Daughters |work=Jedburgh Grammar School |url=http://jedburghgs.co.uk/SandDs.aspx |accessdate=17 May 2011 |url-status=usurped |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110627155003/http://jedburghgs.co.uk/SandDs.aspx |archivedate=27 June 2011
From 1787 to 1789 Ainslie worked on a new nine sheet map of Scotland publishing it in 1789. The map was a landmark in the improvement of the outline of Scotland and for the first time showed the Great Glen as a straight line and Skye, Mull, and Islay shown with more accuracy than had previously been seen.
He worked as a surveyor on several civil engineering projects including the Forth and Clyde canal with Robert Whitworth, Charles Rennie on Saltcoats harbour and the Glasgow to Ardrossan canal.
John was also a book-seller, which helped him in writing and publishing works of his own.
He wrote the standard text for his profession, the "Comprehensive treatise on Land Surveying comprising the Theory and Practice of all its Branches".
On 27 October 1776 he married Christian, the daughter and heiress of Jedburgh merchant Thomas Caverhill. In Edinburgh in the 1780s they lived on Parliament Square on the Royal Mile.
He died at 72 Nicolson Street in Edinburgh on the 29 February 1828 and is buried at Jedburgh Abbey.
Other sources suggest he was married to Mary Lookup and they had two children. No dates provided.
Maps
Many of Ainslie's maps are in the collection of National Library of Scotland including:
- The county of Fife published in 1775
- Scotland, drawn from a series of angles and astronomical observations..., in 9 sheets, published in 1789
- A plan of Jedburgh published in 1780
- City of Edinburgh published in 1780
- The Old and New Town of Edinburgh and Leith, 1804
- Ainslie's Map of the Southern Part of Scotland published in 1821
References
References
- "John Ainslie". The Gazetteer for Scotland.
- Adams, Ian. (2004). "Ainslie, John (1745–1828), cartographer and land surveyor".
- "Cartographers".
- [http://www.fife.50megs.com/scottish-cartographers.htm>]{{Dead link. (August 2023)
- Ainslie, John. (1789). "Scotland, drawn from a series of angles and astronomical observations...". J. & J. Ainslie & W Faden.
- Ainslie, John. (1812). "Comprehensive treatise on land surveying, comprising the theory and practice in all its branches; in which the use of the various instruments employed in surveying, levelling, &c. is clearly elucidated by practical examples ...". Printed for S. Doig & A. Stirling.
- Williamson's Edinburgh Directory 1784
- Edinburgh Post Office Directory 1827
- "Ainslie, John".
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