100-year-old aerial photo archive made available online for first time

Explore striking aerial shots of the south's landmarks and landscapes

The High Street, Southampton, in 1920
Author: Jason BeckPublished 22nd Mar 2022
Last updated 22nd Mar 2022

Aerial photos of landscapes and landmarks across the south taken over the past century have been made available online for the first time.

Historic England has launched an aerial photography tool which allows users to explore over 400,000 aerial photographs of the whole country.

The bird’s eye views range include Pilsdon Pen iron age hillfort in Dorset, Salisbury Cathedral, Southampton's medieval Bargate and Gatwick Airport in West Sussex.

The platform is set to be expanded, as more of the six million aerial images in Historic England's archive are digitised.

An aerial photo of Salisbury in 1963
High West Street, Dorchester in 1925

Around 300,000 of the photographs are the work of Historic England’s aerial investigation and mapping team, which was established in 1967.

The team takes photographs of England from the air to discover new archaeological sites, create archaeological maps and monitor the condition of historic sites.

The remaining 100,000 images come from the Historic England archive aerial photography collection, which includes wartime images from Aerofilms and the RAF.

Bournemouth Square in 1932
Pilsdon Pen iron age hillfort in Dorset
The hot summer of 2018 caused the grass to parch in the grounds of Salisbury Cathedral revealing the foundations of the former belfry
Ashley Walk high explosive range, Godshill, New Forest in 1947. The site was used to test air-dropped ordnance
Portsmouth City Centre in 1951
Chichester Cathedral and the city centre in 1938
This photo shows Gatwick Airport with its Beehive terminal building in 1941 during the Second World War

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