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(4) Undiscovered Treasures
(b) Public Geographies

Other aspects of the industrial revolution included a steady rise in the standard of living and an associated increase in the consumption of culture. Among the large and illustrated Bibles, prints by Currier and Ives, upright pianos, and ornate furnishings bought by the Victorians, we find many maps and atlases that presented knowledge for a "general purpose." Without any specific uses, they provided repositories of knowledge that every proper household was expected to possess (35-38). Publishers also supplied an array of city plans (33), bird's-eye views (34), county atlases (35), and state and general atlases (36, 37), which spoke to civic, communal, and national pride. These works emphasized the industrial and social development of each town or county, with smoke stacks and railroads competing for space with church spires and colleges.

It is worth comparing two atlases from a century apart. The large atlas from 1821 was an expensive luxury reserved for only the wealthiest families, serving as both an atlas and an encyclopedia (38). The even larger atlas from 1912 was similarly expensive, being intended for urban public libraries, but through the libraries it would reach a potentially vast audience (39). In the intervening century, geographical knowledge moved from a realm restricted by class to a realm restricted only by individual literacy.
 

33 33.
Cullum Portland (1836)

 

John Cullum
A Map of the City of Portland with the Latest Improvements
Portland, 1836
Copper engraving, hand-colored, 50 x 70.5cm
Gift of Gary W. Libby, Esq.

 
34 34.
Brunswick/Topsham
(1877)

 

Brunswick Cumberland County and Topsham Sagadahoc County 1877 Maine
[Madison, WI: J. J. Stoner], 1877
Color lithograph, 39 x 53cm
Osher Collection

 
35 35.
Beers Brunswick (1871)

 

F. W. Beers & Co.
American Firm, ca. 1870-1881
Brunswick Village Town of Brunswick
Lithograph, hand colored, 57.5 x 36cm
From: Atlas of Cumberland Co. Maine (New York: F. W. Beers & Co., 1871), 62
Gift of Emerson Booksellers

 
36 36.
Stuarts Maine RR (1890)

 

Rail Road Map of Maine
Lithograph, 48.5 x 31.5cm
In: Stuart's Atlas of the State of Maine, "1st revised" edition (South Paris, Me: J. H. Stuart & Co., 1890), 19
Osher Collection

 
37 37.
Mitchell US RR (1887)

 

S. Augustus Mitchell
American, 1792-1868
Railroad Map of the United States showing the through lines of communication from the Atlantic to the Pacific
Color lithograph, 36 x 57cm
In: Mitchell's New General Atlas (Philadelphia: Wm. M. Bradley & Bro., 1887)
Gift of R. S. Blackwood Jr.

 
38 38.
Paguenaud Americas
(1821)

 

E. Paguenaud
French, fl. ca. 1820
Jehoshaphat Aspin
French, fl. 1800-1845
North America . . . improved to 1821 by E. Paguenaud | South America . . . By J. Aspin improved by E. Paquenaud
Two maps from one copper plate, both hand colored, totaling 22 x 39cm. Surrounding type printed separately
In: M. Lavoisne, A Complete Genealogical, Historical, Chronological and Geographical Atlas (Philadelphia: M. Carey & Sons, 1821)
Roos Collection

 
39 39.
Rand McNally World (1912
<P>-13) The World
Color lithograph, 48.5 x 66cm
In: The Library Atlas of The World A Reference Work in Two Volumes, 2 volumes (Chicago and New York: Rand McNally, 1912-13), 1: iv-v
Naden Collection

 

 

Contact: Matthew H. Edney
©2000 Osher Map Library
University of Southern Maine