Author
[Johnston, Alexander Keith, 1804-1871, Rogers, Henry Darwin]
Note
States and counties shown in outline printed color. Bahamas shown off the Florida coast.
Author
Bradford, Thomas G.
Note
Outline color map by administrative boundaries. Shows cities and towns, canals, roads, rivers, mountains, etc. Includes explanation. Relief shown pictorially. Prime meridians are Washington and Greenwich.
Author
Bradford, Thomas G.
Note
Outline color map by administrative boundaries. Shows cities and towns, roads, railroads, rivers, canals, mountains, etc. Includes explanation. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians are Washington and Greenwich.
Author
[Morse, Sidney E. (Sidney Edwards), 1794-1871, Breese, Samuel]
Note
Color wax engraved map. Shows capital, towns, road, railroads, rivers, canals, etc. Includes explanation. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Morse, Sidney E. (Sidney Edwards), 1794-1871, Breese, S.]
Note
Uncolored map. Shows state capital, county, towns, roads, railroads, rivers, canals, etc. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridian is Washington. Includes explanation.
Author
Appleton, D. & Co.
Note
Color map. Shows county boundaries and county seat, capital, railways, roads, etc. "Size of type indicates importance of the places". Includes notes. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Tanner, Henry S.
Note
In full color by county.
Author
Cram, George Franklin
Note
Prime meridians Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Cram, George Franklin
Note
Prime meridians Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Taylor, Frank J., White, Ruth Taylor]
Author
[Rand McNally and Company, State Farm Insurance Companies Travel Bureau]
Note
Color map. U.S. interstate highways shown in red. Shows time zone boundaries, roads, ferries, highways, rivers and streams. Includes population of cities and towns. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
National Map Company
Note
Outline color map. Shows administrative divisions, roads, rivers, etc. Prime meridian is Greenwich.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus Jr.
Note
Full color map by county. Shows settlements, roads, railroads, rivers, etc. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus Jr.
Note
Hand colored map. Shows settlements, railroads, rivers, etc. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Raynal, G.T., Bonne, R.]
Note
Detailed map, uncolored copper engraving. Relief shown by pictorially. Prime meridians are Ferro and Paris.
Author
[Raynal, G.T., Bonne, R.]
Note
Uncolored copper engraving map. Relief shown pictorially. Prime meridians are Ferro and Paris.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus
Note
Full color map. Shows state capital, towns, railroads, canals, etc. With table of steam boat routes. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridian is Washington.
Author
Johnson, A.J.
Note
In full color by county.
Author
Vandermaelen, Philippe, 1795-1869
Note
Hand col. lithographed map. Relief shown by hachures. Covers parts of Russia and Georgia. Prime meridian: Paris.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus Jr.
Note
Color map by county. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington, D.C.
Author
[Carey, Henry Charles, Lea, Isaac]
Note
Uncolored engraved map. The map shows important cities, rivers, and mountains. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
Shubert, Fedor Fedorovich, 1789-1865
Note
Engraved outline color map.
Author
Shubert, Fedor Fedorovich, 1789-1865
Note
Cover title to sheet XVI.
Author
Shubert, Fedor Fedorovich, 1789-1865
Note
Engraved uncolored map.
Author
Shubert, Fedor Fedorovich, 1789-1865
Note
Cover title to sheet XVI.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus
Note
Counties tinted in color. Meridians Washington and Greenwich. Relief shown in hachures.
Author
[Scovel, James L., O'Brien, Emmett J]
Note
Two contour maps on two pages, with text, and location map. Relief shown by contours and spot height.
Author
Bradstreet Company
Note
Full color map. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridian is Washington, D.C.
Author
Merrill, William E.
Note
Important Civil War map created by William Merrill who after the war was an important figure in mapping the west. This map was used by Sherman in his march to Atlanta. Image from Barry Ruderman.
Author
Merrill, William E.
Note
Important Civil War map created by William Merrill who after the war was an important figure in mapping the west. This map was used by Sherman in his march to Atlanta. Image from Barry Ruderman.
Author
[Stieler, Adolf, Petermann, A.]
Author
[Stieler, Adolf, Petermann, A.]
Author
[Stieler, Adolf, Petermann, A.]
Author
Hillebrands, A.J.
Note
A scarce small atlas of ten maps published in Holland, but authored by a school teacher from the Dutch Colony in Holland, Michigan. It was most likely sold to Dutch Americans and those in Holland planning to emigrate or who had relatives in America. The date is estimated by Phillips and Koeman. Koeman lists an earlier edition of 1849, with five maps. There is a double page of text at the end of the maps, with lists of distances by steamboat and railroad. The copy listed in Phillips has a cover title, not present here. Maps are hand painted with outline color.
Author
[Early, Eleazer, Sturges, Daniel]
Note
Ristow mentions two editions with the same title, date and imprint, and with the later edition having "a number of changes and additions... in the southern Alabama portion of the map." We believe this copy is the first edition as we can detect no plate changes in the areas mentioned. This is the first large scale map of Georgia and it ranks in importance with the other large Southern State and Territory maps of the period: Wilson's South Carolina of 1822, Madison's Virginia of 1807 and 1818, Price and Strothers' North Carolina of 1808, and Vignoles' Florida of 1823. While it was undoubtedly the most accurate Georgia map when published, it quickly came under criticism by Tanner in his Geographical Memoir of 1823 for his American Atlas - he found the delineation of the Savannah River to be more correct in the Wilson 1822 Map of South Carolina. It has a lovely cartouche vignette, a table of distances, a statistical table, and "Remarks, Statistical and Geological." Streeter: "All in all an important and elaborate map of Georgia in the first part of the nineteenth century." Full color by county, without rollers.
Author
Tanner, Henry S.
Note
Outline colored map. Prime meridian is Washington, D.C. Rare. Same maps used in Darby's View of U.S. Although this appears in Tanner's catalogues for several years after 1828, it must not have sold well, as few copies have survived. Bound with half leather and paper covered boards. "Pocket Atlas" embossed on spine.
Author
[Andree, Richard, Scobel, Albert]
Note
Outline color map. Shows settlements, inhabitants, telegraph cables, railways, canals, etc. Includes note. Shows Caucasus Mountain Region. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Depth shown by bathymetric tints and soundings. Prime meridian is Greenwich.
Author
[Bowen, Emanuel, Gibson, John]
Note
First edition. The "Historical Extracts" are short bits of text printed on the maps giving relevant geographical information. A revised edition was published in London in 1792. In 1759, another edition was published adding separate geographical descriptions and correcting some of the maps (see our copy). The Philadelphia 1798 edition by Mathew Carey incorporates the 1759 edition text word for word (excepting the maps of United States which Carey omits in favor of his pocket atlas of the U.S.). Gibson and Bowen made the four sheet map of North America (Stevens 49), and Gibson made the four sheet map of America (Stevens 3).
Author
Tanner, Henry S.
Note
In full color by county.
Author
Tanner, Henry S.
Note
In full color by county.
Author
Tanner, Henry S.
Note
In full color by county. Trimmed close at bottom of map.
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