University of Washington Libraries
Skip to content  Home : Favorites : Ordering and Use : Help : Blog   
Share
Digital Collections Special Collections : A-Z List : Subject List : Advanced Search  

« World and Regional Maps Collection

add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
 
Zoom in Zoom out Pan left Pan right Pan up Pan down Maximum resolution Fit in window Fit to width Rotate left Rotate right Hide/show thumbnail
Map of America or The New World wherein are introduced All The Known Parts of the Western Hemisphere From the Map of D'Anville; with the necessary alterations, and the addition of the Discoveries made since the Year 1761.
Map of America or The New World wherein are introduced All The Known Parts of the Western Hemisphere From the Map of D'Anville; with the necessary alterations, and the addition of the Discoveries made since the Year 1761.
TitleMap of America or The New World wherein are introduced All The Known Parts of the Western Hemisphere From the Map of D'Anville; with the necessary alterations, and the addition of the Discoveries made since the Year 1761.
Detailed view (zoom)http://content.lib.washington.edu/mapsweb/images/Viewer/G3290_1797_F3.html
CartographerFaden, William, 1749-1836
Anville, Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d', 1697-1782

EngraverPalmer, William
Century Published18th century
Publication Date1797
PublisherFaden, William 1749-1836
Place of PublicationEngland--London
Original Source"General Atlas." Faden, William. London: William Faden, 1811.
Descriptive NotesCopper engraving handcolored with watercolor.

Outline color.

Relief shown pictorially.

Printed in cartouche upper left corner:
" Map of America of The New World wherein are introduced All The Known Parts of the Western Hemisphere From the Map of D'Anville; with the necessary alterations, and the addition of the Discoveries made since the Year 1761. London. Published by W. Faden, Geographer to the King and to H.R. H. The Prince of Wales. Charing - Cross. April 12th 1797."

Printed beneath border in lower right corner:
"Wm. Palmer Sculp."

Printed above cartouche in upper left corner:
"O Rare Columbus."

Printed in right corner along border:
"Nb. Although the Acores and Cape Verd Islands lie within this Western Hemisphere, they are reckoned among the African Isles situated in the Old World, or Eastern Hemisphere."

Shows Bering Strait between modern-day Alaska and Russia. Also displays New Zealand as "New Zeeland." The "United States" is shown in green while the blue area adjacent to it is marked as "Western Territory." The rest of North America is divided into "Louisiana, " "New Mexico, " and "Canada." "Quivira" is labeled in the northwest region of North America. Of note, Greenland is shown as connected to North America. Title cartouche is decorated with a snake wrapping itself around grass.

Prime Meridian: Ferro Island.

Scale c.a. 1:40, 000, 000.
Contextual NotesWilliam Faden (1750-1836) was a publisher and cartographer. He was also Geographer to His Majesty and the Prince of Wales. He lived in Charing Cross in London as of 1802. He worked with and then succeeded Thomas Jefferys in 1771. He worked under the firm name, Jefferys and Faden from 1773 to 1783. He was then succeeded by J. Wyld the elder in 1823 (Tooley 201). Faden produced some of the best nineteenth century maps. His main interest was in the production of maps of North America. He also produced a number of large and smaller regional maps by customer order (Moreland and Bannister, 173). His works include: Mitchell's "North American" (1755), "World" (1775), Ratzer's "Plan New York" (1776), "North American Atlas" (1776), "British colonies in North America" (1777, reissued to 1820), "General Atlas" (1778), "Roads of Great Britain" (1781), "United States of North America" (1785), published surveys of Knight and Dessiou (1790-1816), "Battles of American Revolution" (1793), "Petit Neptune Francais" (1793), "Atlas Minimus" (1798), "Ottoman Dominions" (1822) and early Ordnance Survey Maps (Tooley, 201; Moreland and Bannister, 173).

William Palmer was an engraver. He worked for Ellis on the "English Atlas" (1766), Dalrymple in 1774, Faden from 1784 to 1803, Wilkinson in 1808, and for Cook on "New Caledonia" (1777). He also worked on Sayer's "World" (1792), Faden's "Atlas Minimus" (1798), and Laurie and Whittle's "World" (1800) (Tooley, 487).

This particular map was first published by Faden in 1797. According to Henry Wagner, the map shows discoveries made by Dixon but not Vancouver. The naming of places seems to come from the explorers, Cook, Dixon, Duncan and Meares. Faden's map uses much of its information from Henry Roberts' 1794 map, "Chart of the N. W. coast of America…" (Wagner, 362, entry 836).

Source(s): ""Louisiana State Museum Map Database. Moreland, Carl and David Bannister. "Antique Maps: A Collector's Handbook." New York: Longman Group, Ltd., 1983.

Stevens, Henry and Roland Tree. "Comparative Cartography." In "The Mapping of America." Ed. by Ronald Vere Tooley. London: Holland Press, 1985. 41-108.

Tooley, Ronald Vere. "Tooley's Dictionary of Mapmakers." Hertfordshire: Map Collector Publications Limited, 1979.

Wagner, Henry R. "The Cartography of the Northwest Coast of America to the year 1800 Volume 2." Berkeley: University of California Press, 1937.
LanguageEnglish
Location DepictedWestern Hemisphere
North America
South America
Central America
Mexico
West Indies
Pacific Ocean
South Pacific
Canada
New Zealand
Greenland
Subjects (LCSH)America--Maps--Early works to 1800
Digital CollectionWorld and Regional Maps, 16th to the 19th centuries
Digital ID NumberMAP092
Ordering InformationFor information about digital reproductions, please email photos@u.washington.edu. Please cite the Digital ID number.
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division.
Repository CollectionRare Map Collection. G3290 1797 F3
Object TypeMap
Engraving
Physical Description51 x 57 cm.
ConditionOriginal call number in lower left corner of leaf on label in ink. Old call number written in pencil in upper right corner. Has binder's guard. Repair of tear from bottom edge. Stain in upper right corner of map shows where cartouche in upper left corner has formed a reverse imprint on upper right corner. Acquisition information written in pencil on left border of map. On verso, number "49" printed in upper right corner, though cut off at edge. Old call number written in bottom left corner on verso.
Digital Reproduction InformationScanned from original map at 600 dpi in TIFF format, resized and enhanced at 400 ppi using Adobe Photoshop, and imported as JPEG2000 using ContentDM's software JPEG2000 Extension. 2008.
AcquisitionWritten in pencil on left edge: 9fl23 Museum Bk store. Central S. E. 10/0.
ReferencesStevens and Tree, 50, entry 2. Wagner, entry 836.
add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
Contact Us | Change display settings | About | Make a Gift | Privacy ^ to top ^