A History of America in 100 Maps

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260 A HISTORY OF AMERICA IN 100 MAPS

ENDNOTES AND ADDITIONAL SOURCES


pp. 2–3: Image courtesy of the F. D. R.
Presidential Library & Museum.
pp. 6–7: Edward Savage, “The Washington
Family, 1789–1796.” Courtesy, Andrew W.
Mellon Collection, National Gallery of Art.

1. 1490 – 1600: Contact and Discovery


THE WORLD THAT COLUMBUS KNEW
Additional sources: Kenneth T. Nebenzahl,
Atlas of Columbus and the Great Discoveries
(Chicago: Rand McNally, 1990); Chet Van
Duzer, “Multispectral Imaging for the Study
of Maps: The Example of Henricus
Martellus’s World Map at Yale,” Imago Mundi
68 (2016), 62–6; Genevieve Carlton, Worldly
Consumers: The Demand for Maps in Renaissance
Italy (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
2015); Scot McKendrick, Kathleen Doyle, and
John Lowden, Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of
Illumination (London: British Library
Publications, 2011).
A GENERATION OF CONFUSION
Additional sources: Roberto Almagia,
“On the Cartographic Work of Francesco
Rosselli,” Imago Mundi 8 (1951), 27–35;
Edward Heawood, “A Hitherto Unknown
World Map of a.d. 1506,” Geographical
Journal 62: 4 (1923), 279–93.
HOW AMERICA (INADVERTENTLY) GOT
ITS NAME
Additional sources: David Buisseret, From
Sea Charts to Satellite Images: Interpreting
North American History through Maps (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1990); Seymour
Schwartz and Ralph Ehrenberg, The Mapping
of America (New York: Harry N. Abrams,
1980); John Hébert, “The Map That Named
America,” Library of Congress Information
Bulletin 62: 9 (2003), https://www.loc.gov/loc/
lcib/0309/maps.html (accessed February
20, 2018).
AMERICA LOOMS INTO VIEW
p.21 “a human bridge between Portuguese
and Spanish”: Arthur Davies, “The Egerton
MS.2803 Map and the Padron Real,”
Imago Mundi 11 (1954), p. 54.
Additional sources: Henry Harrisse,
The Discovery of North America: A Critical,
Documentary, and Historic Investigation
(Amsterdam N. Israel, 1961 [reprint of the
1892 edition]); G. Caraci, “A Little Known
Atlas by Vesconte Maggiolo, 1518,” Imago
Mundi 2 (1937), 37–54; Edward L. Stevenson,
Atlas of Portolan Charts (New York: Hispanic
Society, 1911).
THE INVASION AND DESTRUCTION
OF MEXICO
Additional sources: Barbara E. Mundy,
“Mapping the Aztec Capital: The 1524
Nuremberg Map of Tenochtitlan, Its
Sources and Meanings,” Imago Mundi 50
(1998), 11–33; Hernán Cortés, Letters from
Mexico, trans. and ed. Anthony Pagden
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001);
Barbara E. Mundy, “Indigenous Civilization,”
in Jordana Dym and Karl Offen (eds.), Mapping
Latin America: A Cartographic Reader (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2011); Robert S.
Weddle, Spanish Sea: The Gulf of Mexico in
North American Discovery, 1500–1685 (College
Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press,
1985); Philip D. Burden, The Mapping of
North America: A List of Printed Maps, 1511–1670
(Rickmansworth, Herts.: Clive A. Burden 1996).

THE HEMISPHERE TAKES SHAPE
Additional sources: Philip D. Burden, The
Mapping of North America: A List of Printed
Maps, 1511–1670 (Rickmansworth, Herts.:
Clive A. Burden 1996).
THE SPANISH REACH NORTHWARD
Additional sources: Rodney Shirley, The
Mapping of the World: Early Printed World Maps,
1472–1700 (London: Holland Press, 1983);
David Woodward, “The Italian Map Trade,”
in David Woodward (ed.), Cartography in the
European Renaissance, vol. 3 of The History
of Cartography (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2007); Michael Wyatt,
The Cambridge Companion to the Italian
Renaissance (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2014).
THE SPANISH ASSERTION OF AMERICA
Additional sources: John Hébert, “The 1562
Map of America by Diego Gutiérrez”, http://
http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/frontiers/gutierrz.
html? (accessed August 20, 2017); Clara Egli
LeGear, “Sixteenth-Century Maps Presented
by Lessing J. Rosenwald,” Quarterly Journal of
Current Acquisitions 6: 3 (May 1949), 18–22.
THE FATHER OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE
Additional sources: Lesley Cormack, Charting
an Empire: Geography at the English Universities,
1580–1620 (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1997); Ken MacMillan, “Brytanici
Imperii Limites,” Huntington Library Quarterly
64: 1–2 (2001), 151–9; Ken MacMillan,
“Discourse on History, Geography, and
Law: John Dee and the Limits of the British
Empire 1576–80,” Canadian Journal of History
36: 1 (2001), 1–25; David Livingstone,
The Geographical Tradition: Episodes in the
History of a Contested Enterprise (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1992).

2. 1600–1700: Early Settlement and the Northwest Passage


Northwest Passage

THE ORIGINS OF THE VIRGINIA COLONY
p.36 “where never Christian before hathe been”:
Letter of Robarte Tindall to Prince Henry,
June 22, 1607, British Library, Harley MS
7007, folio 139, reproduced in Alexander
Brown (ed.), The Genesis of the United States
(London, 1890), p.108–109.
p.38 “There were never Englishmen left”: George
Percy, journal, in Lyon Gardiner Tyler (ed.),
Narratives of Early Virginia: 1606–1625 (New
York: Scribner’s, 1907), p.9.
Additional sources: Maurice A. Mook, “The
Ethnological Significance of Tindall’s Map
of Virginia,” William and Mary Quarterly 23: 4
(1943), 371–408; “Tyndall’s Map of Virginia,”
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical
Society, 3rd series, 58 (1924–5), 244–7.
THE SURVIVAL OF VIRGINIA
p.41 “So great was our famine”: John Smith,
The Generall Historie of Virginia, New England
& the Summer Isles (Glasgow, Scotland:
James MacLehose & Sons, 1907), v.1,
p. 204.
Additional sources: William Cumming,
The Southeast in Early Maps (Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1958); Susan
Schulten, “Mapping History,” in James
Akerman and Robert Karrow (eds.), Maps:
Finding Our Place in the World (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2007); Donald
Meinig, Atlantic America, 1492–1800, vol. 1
of The Shaping of America (New Haven, CT:

Yale University Press, 1986); Peter Mancall,
Envisioning America: English Plans for the
Colonization of North America, 1580–1640
(Boston: St. Martin’s Press, 1995).
THE INVENTION OF NEW ENGLAND
Additional sources: John Smith, A Description
of New England; or, The Observations, and
Discoveries, of Captain John Smith (London:
Printed by Humfrey Lownes for Robert
Clerke, 1616); Walter W. Woodward,
“Captain John Smith and the Campaign
for New England: A Study in Early Modern
Identity and Promotion,” New England
Quarterly 18: 1 (2008), 91–125; John Smith,
The Generall Historie of Virginia, New England
& the Summer Isles, vol. 1 (Glasgow, 1907).
THE LURE OF A NORTHWEST PASSAGE
p.45 “very near as far toward the west”:
A Treatise of the Northwest Passage to the South
Sea, through the Continent of Virginia and by
Fretum Hudson, in Edward Waterhouse,
A Declaration of the State of the Colony and
Affaires in Virginia (London, 1622), p. 48.
p.45 “all those rich countries”: Ibid., p. 50.
p.45 “through the continent of Virginia”: Ibid.,
p. 49.
Additional sources: Edward Waterhouse,
A Declaration of the State of the Colony and
Affaires in Virginia (London, 1622); Samuel
Purchas, Purchas His Pilgrimes: In Five Books
(London: Printed by William Stansby for
Henrie Fetherstone, 1626); Ken MacMillan,
“Sovereignty ‘More Plainly Described’: Early
English Maps of North America, 1580–1625,”
Journal of British Studies 42 (2003), 413–47.
THE FRENCH EXPLORE AMERICA
Additional sources: David Hackett Fischer,
Champlain’s Dream (New York: Simon &
Schuster, 2009); Lawrence C. Wroth, “An
Unknown Champlain Map of 1616,” Imago
Mundi 11 (1954), 85–94; David Buisseret,
Mapping the French Empire in North America
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).
THE ORIGINS OF THE ATLANTIC SLAVE
TRADE
Additional sources: William Waller Hening
(ed.), The Statutes at Large: Being a Collection
of All the Laws of Virginia, vols. 2 and 3 (New
York: R. & W. & B. Bartow, 1823); Robin Law,
“The Slave Trade in Seventeenth-Century
Allada: A Revision,” African Economic History
22 (1994), 59–92; New-York Historical
Society, “Slavery in New York” (exhibition),
http://www.slaveryinnewyork.org (accessed
January 19, 2018).
I’LL TAKE MANHATTAN
Additional sources: Joyce D. Goodfriend,
Before the Melting Pot: Society and Culture in
Colonial New York City, 1664–1730 (Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994); Paul E.
Cohen and Robert T. Augustyn, Manhattan in
Maps, 1527–1995 (New York: Rizzoli, 2006).
VIOLENCE AND DEVASTATION IN EARLY
NEW ENGLAND
Additional sources: J. B. Harley, “New
England Cartography and the Native
Americans,” in The New Nature of Maps
(Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 2001); Jill Lepore, The Name of War: King
Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity
(New York: Knopf, 1998); Matthew Edney and
Susan Cimburek, “Telling the Traumatic
Truth: William Hubbard’s ‘Narrative’
of King Philip’s War and His ‘Map of

New-England’,” William and Mary Quarterly
61: 2 (2004), 317–48.
PENN’S HOLY EXPERIMENT
p.56 “such a Scituation is scarce to be parallel’d”:
A Portraiture of the City of Philadelphia, as part
of A Letter from William Penn Proprietor and
Governour of Pennsylvania ... (London: Printed
and sold by Andrew Sowle, 1683).
p.56 “two Miles in Length and one in Breadth”:
Ibid.
p.58 “we want a map to the degree that I
am ashamed”: quoted in Walter Klinefelter,
“Surveyor General Thomas Holme’s ‘Map
of the Improved Part of the Province of
Pennsilvania’,” Winterthur Portfolio 6
(1970), p. 42.
Additional sources: Albert Cook Myers,
Narratives of Early Pennsylvania (New York,
Charles Scribner’s Sons ,1912); Irma
Corcoran, “Thomas Holme, 1624–1695:
Surveyor General of Pennsylvania,” Memoirs
of the American Philosophical Society 200 (1992);
James T. Lemon, The Best Poor Man’s Country:
A Geographical Study of Early Southeastern
Pennsylvania (Baltimore, MD, 1972).
FRENCH EXPANSION IN AMERICA
Additional sources: Philip D. Burden,
The Mapping of North America: A List of Printed
Maps, vol. 2, 1671–1700 (Rickmansworth,
Herts.: Clive A. Burden 2007).

3. 1700–1783: Imperialism and Independence


Independence
THE WAR OF THE MAPS I
Additional sources: Anne Godlewska,
Geography Unbound: French Geographic Science
from Cassini to Humboldt (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1999); James Pritchard,
In Search of Empire: The French in the Americas,
1670–1730 (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004); Christine Petto,
When France Was King of Cartography: The
Patronage and Production of Maps in Early
Modern France (Lanham, MD: Lexington
Books, 2007).
THE WAR OF THE MAPS II
Additional sources: William P. Cumming
(ed.), The Southeast in Early Maps (Chapel
Hill, NC: University of North Carolina
Press, 1998).
NATIVE AMERICANS NAVIGATE THE
DEERSKIN TRADE
Additional sources: Alan Taylor, “Squaring
the Circles,” in Eric Foner and Lisa McGirr
(eds.), American History Now (Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 2011); Gregory
Waselkov, “Indian Maps for the Colonial
Southeast,” in Gregory A. Waselkov, Peter H.
Wood, and Tom Hatley (eds.), Powhatan’s
Mantle: Indians in the Colonial Southeast, rev.
ed. (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska
Press, 2006); Ian Chambers, “A Cherokee
Origin for the ‘Catawba’ Deerskin Map,”
Imago Mundi 65 (2013), 207–16.
ENGLAND AND THE SLAVE TRADE
p.74 “our Planters a constant Supply of
Negroe-Servants”: Malachy Posthlethwayt,
The National and Private Advantages of the
African Trade Considered (London, repr. 1772
[1746]), p. 1.
Additional sources: Malachy Posthlethwayt,
The African Trade, the Great Pillar and Support of
the British Plantation Trade in America (London:
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