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Title: A Literary & Historical Atlas of America

Author: J. G. Bartholomew

Contributor: G. C. Brooke

Release date: July 31, 2018 [eBook #57610]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Melissa McDaniel and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LITERARY & HISTORICAL ATLAS OF AMERICA ***

EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY
EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS

REFERENCE

A LITERARY AND
HISTORICAL ATLAS OF
NORTH & SOUTH AMERICA

THE PUBLISHERS OF EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY WILL BE PLEASED TO SEND FREELY TO ALL APPLICANTS A LIST OF THE PUBLISHED AND PROJECTED VOLUMES TO BE COMPRISED UNDER THE FOLLOWING THIRTEEN HEADINGS:


TRAVEL SCIENCE * FICTION
THEOLOGY & PHILOSOPHY
HISTORY * CLASSICAL
FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
ESSAYS * ORATORY
POETRY & DRAMA
BIOGRAPHY
REFERENCE
ROMANCE

Logo

IN FOUR STYLES OF BINDING: CLOTH, FLAT BACK, COLOURED TOP; LEATHER, ROUND CORNERS, GILT TOP; LIBRARY BINDING IN CLOTH, & QUARTER PIGSKIN


London: J. M. DENT & SONS, Ltd.
New York: E. P. DUTTON & CO.

TO
THE
WISE MAN
ALL THE
WORLD'S
A SOIL

BEN JONSON

A LITERARY &
HISTORICAL
ATLAS OF
AMERICA


J G. BARTHOLOMEW LL.D

LONDON: PUBLISHED
by J·M·DENT·&·SONS·LTD
AND IN NEW YORK
BY E·P·DUTTON & CO

INTRODUCTION

When General Hamilton spoke in the Federalist over a century ago of "an empire, in many respects the most interesting in the world," meaning the United States of America, he did not, he could not, foresee the vast growth of his country and its northern and southern neighbours which this book portrays. The volume is the third in a series of small atlases, meant to cover in turn the whole globe, and to do it in a way to knit up geographical and historical knowledge with the facts of commerce and the literary record of each land or region. One chief purpose of these maps is to trace clearly the development of the United States, beginning with "the most remarquable parts" of the New England of the Pilgrim Fathers, described by Captain John Smith in 1614, and not forgetting the territories of the old American-Indian nations. Some inkling too is given in facsimile of the early charts, views, and maps by the explorers and cartographers who made a survey of the first settlements. For example, we have an old map of Guiana invaluable as a Sir Walter Raleigh record, giving the mouths of the Oronoke, or Orinoco, where his men tugged against the stream, and stretching southward to the Amazon itself, and we get from the map of Peru at the period of the Conquest a clear idea of the country in the time of Pizarro.

As with the great rivers, so with the great American cities. You can compare "old New York," as represented in one page, with the new New York and its environs which are a world's wonder to-day. Then again you can take the chart of the Early Highways that ran westward into the wilderness and estimate how the power of the engineer has, since the railway came, caught the States in an iron network and rearranged the Americas. Battlefields and sieges, by which the right of the new country to its national life and individuality was "wrenched," as Tennyson said in his address to the old country,[1] are not forgotten.

Note among the less familiar documents that we are able to include, the rare map of the territory in Virginia and North Carolina traversed by John Lederer in his three marches. Lederer was sent out by Governor Berkeley in 1669-70, and journeyed west as far as the top of the Apalatœan mountains. It seems doubtful how far he went in South Carolina. He did not penetrate far enough, according to Professor W. J. Rivers, to meet "the new-comers who were about founding the Commonwealth of Locke."

As for the local associations that have become familiar in American literature, you have a chart of the Concord neighbourhood showing Walden Pond, Forest Lake, Lexington, and Punkatasset Hill, associated with the name and fame of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and H. D. Thoreau. Fenimore Cooper recalls the old Indian Territory as it was in the wild prime of the Red Men; and you travel from the land of "Hiawatha" in Longfellow's poem southwards to the Mexico and Peru of Prescott, and then pause over something more amazing than any record in imaginative verse or prose—the plain statistics figured in the map of South America, and the emergence of Buenos Ayres with its million and a quarter inhabitants, Rio de Janeiro with its 860,000, San Paulo with 350,000, and Santiago with 330,000. Here are the elements of an immense new Latin civilisation which is going to count, and count enormously, just as China and its millions are bound to count enormously in the twentieth century.

We might have spoken at large of Canada and its huge dominion; of Newfoundland, New Brunswick, New "Scotia," and the chain of the Great Lakes in the North. But an Atlas speaks for itself with the accent of a world-bearer if one treats its pages as they ought to be treated, with a sense of the great perspective of history and of men and nations advancing along it to their fulfilment in the world. The Old World and the New have lately been drawn closer by the mysterious nerves that underrun the Atlantic and the understanding of a true world polity; and it is hoped that this volume will do something to foster that amity between states and nations.

We have again to acknowledge very gratefully the indispensable help given to our enterprise by Dr. Bartholomew with his unfailing knowledge and skill. Also to thank Miss Edwardes for her working gazetteer which makes reference easy, and Mr. G. C. Brooke of the Department of Coins and Medals at the British Museum for his notes on the coinage, and for his arrangements of the specimens which serve so vividly to illustrate the historical side of the atlas.

CONTENTS

COLOURED MAPS

PAGE
Atlantic Ocean, Toscanelli, 1474 1
Discoveries of Columbus 2
Discoveries of the Norsemen 3
America, 1492-1522 3
America, 1522-1700 4, 5
North American Colonies, 1643 6
North America, 1740 7
North American Colonies, 1755-1763 8, 9
North American Colonies, 1783 10, 11
Canada, 1791 12, 13
United States, 1801 14
United States, 1845 15
United States—Civil War, 1861-65 16, 17
Cortes in Mexico, 1519 18
Mexico and West Indies, 1650 19
Mexico and West Indies, 1763 20
Mexico and West Indies, 1855 21
South America—Political Formation 22, 23
The World on Mercator's Projection, showing Routes to America 24, 25
America—Commercial Routes on Mercator's Projection 26, 27
America—January Temperature 28
America—July Temperature 29
America—Rainfall and Winds, January 30
America—Rainfall and Winds, July 31
Sketch Chart of the North Atlantic on Mercator's Projection 32, 33
Arctic Regions 34
Antarctic Regions 35
North America—Orographical 36
North America—Vegetation 37
North America—Political 38
North America—Population 39
Dominion of Canada 40, 41
Canada—Railways and Economic 42, 43
Newfoundland and Gulf of St. Lawrence 44
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, etc. 45
Quebec 46, 47
Ontario 48, 49
Manitoba and Part of Saskatchewan 50, 51
British Columbia, etc. 52, 53
United States—Political Acquisitions 54, 55
United States—Railways and Economic 56, 57
New York, Pennsylvania, and New England States 58, 59
New York and Environs 60, 61
Chicago 62
St. Louis 62
Boston 63
Philadelphia 63
Atlantic States 64, 65
Central States 66, 67
Southern States 68, 69
Western States 70, 71
The Yosemite Valley 71
California, etc. 72
Vancouver 73
San Francisco 73
Alaska 74
Philippine Islands 75
Mexico 76, 77
West Indies and Central America 78, 79
Cuba, Jamaica, etc. 80
Panama Canal 81
South America—Orographical 82
South America—Vegetation 83
South America—Political 84
South America—Population 85
South America—Railways and Economic 86, 87
Brazil and Guiana 88, 89
Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru 90, 91
Chile, Argentina, etc. 92, 93
Rio de Janeiro 94
Monte Video 95
Buenos Ayres 95
Patagonia 96
A BRIEF SURVEY OF THE COINAGE OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA, by G. C. Brooke, B.A., Department of Coins and Medals, British Museum 97

LINE MAPS

MAPS AND PLANS OF NOTABLE BATTLES AND DISTRICTS CONNECTED WITH FAMOUS AUTHORS AND THEIR BOOKS

Battle of Bunker Hill, 17th June, 1775 117
Siege of Charleston, 1776 118
Battle of Long Island, 1776 118
Battle of Brandywine, 1777 119
Battle of Freemans Farm 119
Plan of West Point, showing Forts and Batteries, 1780 120
Siege of Yorktown 120
Maps showing Principal Battles of the War of Independence 121
A Plan of the Operations at the taking of Quebec and the Battle fought near that City, September 13th, 1759 122
Port Royal, 1613 123
A Map of New England in 1631, as observed and described by Captain John Smith 124
A Map of the Whole Territory traversed by John Lederer in his Three Marches, 1672 125
A Map of the American Indian Nations adjoining to the Mississippi, West and East Florida, Georgia, South and North Carolina, Virginia, etc., 1775 126
New Amsterdam about 1650 127
New York about 1730 128
Plan of New York in 1746 129
Early Highways, showing expansion westwards 130
The Boston District 130
The Concord Neighbourhood—Emerson, Hawthorne, Thoreau, etc. 131
Virginia in American Fiction 131
The El Dorado of Sir Walter Raleigh, 1595 132
Map of Peru at the Period of the Conquest 133
Growth of Trade of the United States 134
Growth of Population of the United States 134
Immigration—United States, Canada, Argentine, Brazil 135
A Gazetteer of Towns and Places in America having a Literary or Historic Interest 137
Index 169

ATLANTIC OCEAN, TOSCANELLI, 1474
The Correct outline of North America is shown in light blue tint

John Bartholomew & Co., Edinr.

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DISCOVERIES OF COLUMBUS

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AMERICA, 1492-1522
DISCOVERIES OF THE NORSEMEN

John Bartholomew & Co., Edinr.

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AMERICA
1522 to 1700

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NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES
1643

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NORTH AMERICA
1740

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NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES
1755 TO 1763

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NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES
1783

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CANADA
1791

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UNITED STATES 1801

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UNITED STATES 1845

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UNITED STATES
CIVIL WAR 1861-65

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CORTES IN MEXICO
1519

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MEXICO & WEST INDIES
1650

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MEXICO & WEST INDIES
1763

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MEXICO & WEST INDIES
1855

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SOUTH AMERICA
POLITICAL FORMATION

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THE WORLD ON MERCATORS PROJECTION.
SHOWING ROUTES TO AMERICA

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AMERICA
COMMERCIAL ROUTES ON MERCATORS PROJECTION.

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AMERICA
JANUARY TEMPERATURE

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AMERICA
JULY TEMPERATURE

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AMERICA
RAINFALL & WINDS JANUARY

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AMERICA
RAINFALL & WINDS JULY

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SKETCH CHART OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC ON MERCATORS PROJECTION

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ARCTIC REGIONS

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ANTARCTIC REGIONS

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NORTH AMERICA
OROGRAPHICAL

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NORTH AMERICA
VEGETATION

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NORTH AMERICA
POLITICAL

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NORTH AMERICA
POPULATION

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DOMINION OF CANADA

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CANADA
RAILWAYS & ECONOMIC

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NEWFOUNDLAND & GULF OF ST LAWRENCE

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NEW BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA, &c.

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QUEBEC

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ONTARIO

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