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Browse All : Images of Indian Territory and Texas
1-28 of 28
Author
Rand McNally and Company
Note
In outline color by county. With inset map of western Texas. Map folds out and is mounted on linen. Shows named railroads. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Note
Hand colored map with inset. Relief shown by hachures. Shows settlements, railroads, etc. Covers also parts of New Mexico and Indian Territory. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus Jr.
Note
Hand colored map with inset. Relief shown by hachures. Shows settlements, railroads, etc. Covers also parts of New Mexico and Indian Territory. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Bartholomew, John, Black, Adam & Charles]
Note
States outlined in color. Land tinted.
Author
Asher & Adams
Note
Washington Meridian. Hand tinted full color. Relief shown in hachures. Shows railroads, settlements, counties, waterways, and lakes. Engraved.
Author
Fullarton, A. & Co.
Note
In full color.
Note
Hand colored map with inset. Relief shown by hachures. Shows settlements, railroads, etc. Covers also parts of New Mexico and Indian Territory. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Mitchell, Samuel Augustus
Note
Hand colored map with inset. Relief shown by hachures. Shows settlements, railroads, etc. Covers also parts of New Mexico and Indian Territory. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Black, Adam, Black, Charles]
Author
[Stieler, Adolf, Petermann, A.]
Note
The United States in 6 sheets. Sheet 5 includes Kansas, Indian Territory, Arkansas, Louisiana and parts of Texas and Missouri.
Author
Taintor Brothers & Merrill
Author
[Julius Bien & Co., United States. War Department]
Note
Col. map. Relief shown by hachures. Shows settlements, railroads, roads, ferries, etc.
Author
[Gray, Frank A., Gray, O.W.]
Author
[Morse, Sidney E. (Sidney Edwards), 1794-1871, Breese, S.]
Note
Wax engraved map. Shows towns, Indian villages, forts and fortifications, rivers, ranchos, springs, sandy regions, etc. Covers part of Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Missouri. Relief shown by hachures. prime meridians are Washington and Greenwich.
Author
[Morse, Sidney E. (Sidney Edwards), 1794-1871, Breese, S.]
Note
Uncolored map. Shows settlements, towns, villages, forts and trading posts, roads, rivers, etc. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington. Includes note and explanation.
Author
Appleton, D. & Co.
Note
Color map. Shows state and county boundaries and county seat, capital, Indian Reservations, railways, roads, rivers, etc. "Size of type indicates importance of the places". Includes notes. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
[Stieler, Adolf, Petermann, A.]
Author
[Stieler, Adolf, Petermann, A.]
Author
U.S. General Land Office
Note
One of the series of adjacent sixteen maps. Mounted on linen. Relief shown in hachures.
Author
U.S. War Department
Note
1st edition. Not in Streeter, Phillips, Wheat. Map shows routes of important reconnaissances, Indian trails, roads, railroads in operation, projected railroads, army routes, Indian lands and reservations. One of the earliest detailed Army surveys of the area. The map was printed in two sheets, a north sheet and a south sheet. The north sheet appears in the Atlas to Accompany the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies as Plate CXIX, with the same title as this map, but with the title placed in the upper right corner of the north sheet. We also have the North sheet without title, dated c1875, with much additional information on new routes, railroads, etc. This map is signed by William E. Merrill, Maj. Engrs., and dated August 10, 1867. Merrill also signed our copy of the Warren Map of the U.S., 1867, with a signature date of August 26, 1867 Merrill later made maps of Kansas (See Karrow). Graff misspells Merrill's name, as does Streeter (his signature is hard to read). Dissected into 48 sections and mounted on linen. Map folds into two dark green cloth end boards 22.5x13.5 with paper label reading "Kansas, Texas, And Indian Territory, With Parts Of Colorado And New Mexico. Engineer Bureau, W.D. Prepared for Issue in Engineer Office, M.D. Mo. All Person Into Whose Hands The Map Falls Are Particularly Requested To Send All Corrections And Additions To The Chief Engineer, Mil. Div. Of The Mo., St. Louis." With hand painted color.
Author
U.S. War Department
Note
See 1st edition 1867. Untitled and undated. Updates the first edition (north half only) with more routes, battles, etc. Unfolded separate issue. No title on the map. Probably issued with the south half which had the title and is now separated. Map is without color. Shows roads, railroads, rivers, and Indian lands and reservations. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
Texas Land and Immigration Company
Note
Lithographed map. Counties in outline color, Indian Territory in solid color. Relief shown by hachures. Shows railroads, roads, ship routes, settlements, Indian reservations and nations in Indian Territory, etc. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington. "Texas Land and Immigration Co., St. Louis, Mo." in side and lower margins.
Author
Texas and Pacific Railway
Note
Col. map. Relief shown by hachures. Shows the line of the railroad through Texas and its land grants. Colton did a similar map for the Texas & Pacific in 1873 (Modelski 578). This issue seems simpler and more of a land promotion. Covers also part of Indian Territory. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Asher & Adams
Note
Hand col. engraved map. Easternmost Indian Territory shown on pages 51-52 of this atlas. Shows townships, distances along railroads, etc. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Gray, Frank Arnold, Gray, Ormando Willis]
Note
Prime meridians Washington D.C. and Greenwich. Relief shown by hachures. Southern Texas inset is extension of main map.
Author
Arbuckle Bros.
Note
Sheet with maps of four states in full color. "Indian Territory" is now known as Oklahoma. It is noted that, "Of the 41,000,000 acres in the Territory, nearly 26,000,000 have been surveyed and set apart as reservations for the Indians. These have been gathered from all parts of the country, from Oregon to Florida, in pursuance of the general plan of congregating all the Indians in one territory, to be theirs forever." Each card measures 7.5 x 12.5 cm.
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