These other websites have information about Chelsea:

Website Description
History of the Workhouse www.workhouses.org.uk is dedicated to the workhouse -- its buildings, its inmates, its staff and administrators, and even its poets... This site includes pictures and maps showing the workhouses created by Poor Law units.

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GeoNames The GeoNames geographical database is available for download free of charge under a creative commons attribution license. It contains over 10 million geographical names and consists of over 8 million unique features whereof 2.8 million populated places and 5.5 million alternate names. All features are categorized into one out of nine feature classes and further subcategorized into one out of 645 feature codes.

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GENUKI: UK & Ireland Genealogy UK and Ireland Genealogy:The aim of GENUKI is to serve as a comprehensive "virtual reference library" of genealogical information that is of particular relevance to the UK & Ireland. It is organised so as to make it easy to find what information on what topics is available online related to given geographical localities (even down to parish level). It is a noncommercial service, provided by an ever-growing group of volunteers in cooperation with the Federation of Family History Societies.

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Victoria History of the Counties of England Founded in 1899 and originally dedicated to Queen Victoria, the Victoria County History is an encyclopaedic record of England's places and people from earliest times to the present day. Based at the Institute of Historical Research in the University of London since 1932, the VCH is written by historians working in counties across England.

These pages are available:

The parish of Chelsea - Introduction
The parish of Chelsea - Communications
The parish of Chelsea - Population
Settlement and building - Introduction
Settlement and building - Chelsea up to 1680
Settlement and building - From 1680 to 1865: general introduction
Settlement and building - From 1680 to 1865: Chelsea Village or Great Chelsea
Settlement and building - From 1680 to 1865: south-east Chelsea and the Royal Hospital
Settlement and building - From 1680 to 1865: Hans Town
Settlement and building - From 1680 to 1865: Chelsea Park to Blacklands
Settlement and building - From 1680 to 1865: Little Chelsea, Sandy End and World's End
Settlement and building - From 1865 to 1900
Settlement and building - Twentieth century: introduction
Settlement and building - Twentieth century: up to the second world war
Settlement and building - Twentieth century: after the second world war
Settlement and building - Artists and Chelsea
Landownership - Introduction
Landownership - Chelsea manor
Landownership - More's estate
Landownership - Hungerford estate
Landownership - Other medieval estates and freeholdings
Landownership - Later estates
Economic history - Agriculture
Economic history - Farm-gardening and market gardening
Economic history - Trade and industry
Social history - Social and cultural activites
Social history - Education: introduction
Social history - Education: publicly funded schools
Social history - Education: adult and technical education
Social history - Education: private schools
Social history - Charities for the poor
Local government - Manorial government
Local government - Parish government to 1837
Local government - Poor relief and rates to 1837
Local government - Petty sessions before 1837
Local government - Local government from 1837
Local government - Public services
Local government - Council and parliamentary representation
Religious history - Introduction
Religious history - Religious buildings
Religious history - The parish church
Religious history - Church extension
Religious history - Roman catholicism
Religious history - Protestant nonconformity
Religious history - Foreign churches
Religious history - Non christian faiths
Wikipedia Wikipedia is 'the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit'. Wikipedia contains pages for most towns and vilages in Britain, and our web site tries to link you to them, but you must decide for yourself whether you can rely on the information you find there. Many of the 'village' pages contain only 'stub articles', which you can add to. We suggest that pages which give sources for particular statements are more reliable than pages which simply have a long reference list at the end, or no references to sources at all.

These pages are available:

Chelsea, London

These other websites provide geo-referenced information covering Chelsea:

Geograph georeferenced photos "The Geograph British Isles project aims to collect geographically representative photographs and information for every square kilometre of Great Britain and Ireland."
GeoNames "The GeoNames geographical database covers all countries and contains over eight million placenames that are available for download free of charge."
National Library of Scotland On the National Library of Scotland's Map images website, you can access and view over a quarter of a million maps as high-resolution, colour, zoomable images. They are happy to supply printouts, digital images, and photocopies of their maps.
Open Street Map "OpenStreetMap provides map data for thousands of websites, mobile apps, and hardware devices. OSM is built by a community of mappers that contribute and maintain data about roads, trails, cafes, railway stations, and much more, all over the world."