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Andrews, John

John Andrews (fl. 1766–1798) was a London-based surveyor, cartographer, mapseller, and engraver. Known for his collaborations with Andrew (or André) Dury on several maps, including A map of the country sixty-five miles round London, published in 1777 with twenty plates of which selected individual sheets were republished later as smaller-scope maps including Twenty-five miles round London, Fifteen miles round Windsor, and Twenty-five miles round Richmond. Andrews also worked with Dury on A topographical map of Hartford-shire (1766), A topographical map of the county of Kent (1769), and A collection of plans of the capital cities of Europe (1771), and with other engravers and cartographers, including Peter Bell, William Haydon, and P. P. Burdett, producing maps of British counties, Europe, and North America. From about 1800, his maps were republished by John Stockdale and others. Possibly of French origin and related to Peter André; who appears to have anglicised his name to Peter Andrews, and who also collaborated with Andrew Dury.