I have just gotten hold of an 1892 Philadelphia "Driving map" and I am having a good time looking at it. Top of the map stops at a line east-west through Bustleton and also cuts off the top of Chestnut Hill. South the line goes through the Navy Yard. Map includes large parts of Burlington, Camden, and Delaware Counties. Frankford Avenue was still the Bristol Turnpike for a good deal of its length, and Roosevelt Boulevard seems to follow a good chunk of the Smithfield Turnpike. Mount Moriah Cemetery is on it, but Fair Hill is not (Germantown and Cambria) although it was an active Quaker Burial Ground at the time. The Forest Home on Bristol Pike is on it (the elementary school I went to was later built on the site), House of Correction is there, but Holmesburg Prison is not, and I would have thought it would be. The Poor House that existed where Lincoln High now is was called the "Oxford and Lower Dublin Poor House" (so the same survived in some forms after city-county consolidation). City Hall (which I thought had been built by then) is called "Municipal Buildings", and Independence Hall is called "State House." A fascinating document. Elizabeth C