Christopher Board
Christopher Board OBE is a British cartographer and academic. Among his special interests are the histories of cartography and of military mapping in colonial South Africa. CareerBoard was appointed a lecturer in geography at the London School of Economics from 1 October 1963,[1] eventually retiring as a Senior Lecturer. He served as chair of the UK Committee for Cartography, and of the British Cartographic Society.[2] In 1980 he was a founder of the Charles Close Society, for the study of Ordnance Survey maps, and served as its chair for sixteen years to 2012.[3][4] During his chairmanship, he almost doubled the society's membership.[4] He was co-organiser of the International Cartographic Association (ICA) conference in 1991.[5] He edited the ICA Newsletter for several years from the mid-1990s.[5] He chaired the ICA's History of Cartography Commission from 1999 to 2003,[6] having earlier played a key role in its Commission of Cartographic Communication for seven years, after the death of its sitting chair.[5][7] His 1993 book with Peter Barber, head of maps at the British Library, Tales from the map room : fact and fiction about maps and their makers was a tie-in with the BBC television series Tales from the Map Room.[8] He has written text introductions for several reprints of old Ordnance Survey maps, published by Alan Godfrey Maps.[citation needed] HonoursBoard was appointed an Honorary Fellow of the International Cartographic Association in 1999,[5][7] and received the British Cartographic Society Medal in September 2004.[3] He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2005 New Year Honours, for services to cartography.[2] Personal lifeIn 1983, Board was a contestant, partnered with a student, John Edmunds, on an episode of the television game show Treasure Hunt centred on the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire.[9] Selected papers
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