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1836. Maine [showing disputed boundaries as claimed by US, New Brunswick and as settled by the King of the Netherlands]

  • Maine  [showing disputed boundaries as claimed by US, New Brunswick and as settled by the King of the Netherlands]

Maine [showing disputed boundaries as claimed by US, New Brunswick and as settled by the King of the Netherlands] information:

Year of creation: 
Resolution size (pixels): 
 7264x8624 px
Disk Size: 
 17.2926MiB
Number of pages: 
 1
Place: 
 New York
Author: 

Print information. Print size (Width x height in inches):
Printing at 72 dpi 
  100.89 х 119.78
Printing at 150 dpi 
 48.43 х 57.49
Printing at 300 dpi 
 24.21 х 28.75

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Maine  [showing disputed boundaries as claimed by US, New Brunswick and as settled by the King of the Netherlands]

Elegant map of Maine by David Burr, one of the most important cartographic publishers of the early 19th Century.

The map is highly detailed, showing towns, roads, rivers, lakes, mountains, and a host of other details.

The map locates the disputed Canadian-American border along Maine's northern boundary, which was then very hotly contested. It includes the American claims north of Temiscouata Lake, the English/New Brunswick claims south of Chimney Lake and the boundary line recommended by the King of the Netherlands during the boundary dispute negotiations between the US and England.

A fascinating map and one of the few atlas maps to address the boundary dispute in such detail.

David H. Burr studied law, passing the New York Bar Exam, and then surveying under Simeon DeWitt in New York. His first atlas was an atlas of New York State (1829), the second state atlas to be issued in the US (after Mills’ Atlas of South Carolina in 1826). In the 1830s, he served as the official topographer for the US Post Office, producing a series of rare and highly sought-after large-format state maps. He also created a map of the country’s postal routes, which features roads, canals, and railroads. Burr traveled to London to work with John Arrowsmith; together, they produced the American Atlas in 1839.

Upon his return to the States, Burr was appointed as a draftsman for the House of Representatives, where he worked until ca. 1841. He later worked for the Louisiana Survey and the Florida Survey. By 1850, he was back in Washington D. C., working on the census. In 1852, the Senate named Burr as the draftsman to compile maps from the Federal Surveys. In 1853, Burr traveled to San Francisco, perhaps as part of his work for the Senate. He was then named as the Surveyor General of Utah in 1855. However, he was unpopular there and returned to Washington D. C. by 1870. Burr is widely regarded as one of the most important names in the nineteenth-century American history of cartography.


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Item information:

Year of creation:
Size:
7264x8624 px
Disk:
17.2926MiB
Number of pages:
1
Place:
New York
Author:
David Hugh Burr.
$14.99

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