The Wonderground Map was a 1914 London Underground map designed by MacDonald Gill and commissioned for the underground by Frank Pick, Commercial Manager of the then-Underground Electric Railways Company of London. It is known today as the map which "saved" the network (described in 2016 as at that time being a "service on its knees"),[1] by encouraging travel outside the rush hour; this was at a time when the underground was almost solely used by commuters in the mornings and evenings. Pick deliberately decided to commission a map which gave the company, as the BBC put it, a "stronger brand" as part of a simultaneous exercise in improving hygiene, punctuality,[2] and image (if only, it has been suggested, by distracting the commuters from their travelling conditions).[1] As part of the latter, he also commissioned the "iconic" Johnston typeface for signs and lettering at the same time.[2] Indeed, MacDonald's older brother, Eric Gill, worked with Johnston in creating his typeface.[2]
MacDonald was already a renowned decorative map-maker at the time of his commission.[3] His Wonderland map has been described as a "mixture of cartoon, fantasy, and topological accuracy" and became "an instant hit with the travelling public"; using solely primary colours, London appears as a medieval town in a medieval map (for instance, using a "decorative cursive script and dotting chivalric shields" around the edge),[1] with contemporary aspects interspersed, combined with satirical commentary on "accent, class and social mobility [that] were major preoccupations of 1914 London".[2] MacDonald also inserted cameos of both his brother and Frank Pick; for the latter, a figure near Victoria is depicted as saying "my Pick cannot be surpassed".[4] It has been described as a precursor to TFL's later Art on the Underground campaign and various spin-off tube maps.[2]