- Scale ca. 1:950,000.
- Hand colored.
- Relief shown pictorially.
- "Contracted from his large map of the state."
- Shows township boundaries.
- Includes index to "Towns" in Kings and Richmond counties.
Cartographer:
De Witt, Simeon
Date:
1804
Attribution:
Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/74696138/>.
- Relief shown pictorially.
- Prime meridian: Washington, D.C.
- Handwritten on slip of paper affixed to map verso: "No. 154, title page of Map of United States deposited by Abm. Bradley junr. as author, Sept. 26th 1796."
- "W. Barker, sculp. Philada."
- Sheets joined to form 1 map.
- LC Trails, 30
- Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as a raster image.
- Includes mail transportation chart and text.
- Fold-lined, some brown coloration along folds. Some annotations in pencil.
Cartographer:
Bradley, Abraham; with sculptor Barker, W. (William)
John Mitchell's map was the only map consulted during the negotiations preceding the Treaty of Paris in 1782-1783. Several editions of the map were annotated with boundary lines marked in red ink. In 1934, Col. Lawrence Martin, then chief of the Library of Congress Geography and Map Division, called Mitchell's map, "the most important map in American history." Manuscript annotations by J.E. Hawkins, draughtsman of the War Office certifying "that the boundaries transcript notes on this map are a true copy of those shown on the "Red Line" map in the British Museum. J.E. Hawkins, Intelligence Division War Office, 9th September 1898." This fourth edition published by William Faden with a new title reflecting the British defeat of the French and the annexation of Quebec.
Cartographer:
John Mitchell
Date:
1755
Attribution:
Accessed at https://collections.leventhalmap.org/search/commonwealth:hx11z549x