Charles Greenwood’s map, based on an original survey in the year of publication, is the first accurate large-scale map of the county. At a scale of 1:64366 it is slightly smaller than Burdett’s, but the depiction of roads, houses, boundaries, streams and so on is greatly superior to his. The design is very similar to the much later Ordnance Survey one-inch first series.
The Park is shown for the first time, slightly smaller than on later maps. This is largely because the Farndon to Nantwich Turnpike road had not yet been built, and the older road followed a slightly more southerly course. To the south of the Park, the hamlet of Carden Green clusters between what is now Home Farm to the north and Lower Carden Hall to the south. This map is the first evidence for the existence of Carden Park as a landscape unit.
This map, at a scale of 1:84400, shows Carden Hall surrounded by parkland, although the extent is much smaller than that shown on later maps. The southern limit of the park at this date was immediately to the north of Home Farm. The Hall is shown, with approach roads to the north and west, while to the south is an avenue. Along the western side of Carden Brook is a strip of woodland, stretching down to Stretton Mill.
The parish boundary between Farndon and Tilston is shown in a different location from the boundary that exists today. The present boundary runs eastwards towards Carden Brook, turns north along the brook and then resumes an easterly direction through Carden Hall. Swire & Hutchings show it turning to the north somewhat west of Carden Brook and running along the north side of the Farndon-Broxton road before turning north about 200 m east of Clutton Hall Farm. It would be easy to write this off as inaccurate surveying, but the boundaries given are very specific, give indications of small changes and were probably drawn before boundary changes in the late 1820s. They were possibly based on those shown on the larger-scale survey by Greenwood (although a notable error is the contraction of King’s Marsh to an area entirely south of the Turnpike road).