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(5) Manuscript Treasures
Manuscript maps -- which are written ("script") by hand ("manu") -- are
generally held to precede printed maps. Historically, maps were made by hand
before the introduction of printing. Technically, a map is first drafted by hand
before a printing plate is prepared. The manuscript maps on display here all
buck this trend. They were all made in the United States in the early 1800s and
all were copied from existing printed maps. Why should someone bother to
copy an existing map? Answering this question gives us some insight into the
nature of cartographic culture in the early United States.
Most of these manuscript maps were made in the classroom. A standard device
for learning geography in the colonial period and early Republic was to draw
maps. School children were thus set the task of copying maps from any source
that might come to hand, perhaps a school text, a gazetteer (57, 58), or an atlas
(60, 61). The variety of sources suggests that maps were relatively rare among
the general public in the early 1800s. Furthermore, although geography has
always been a male preserve, girls as well as boys learned their geography by
copying maps. Indeed, the teaching of geography by women school teachers
also constituted a concerted female incursion into an otherwise male domain.
We believe that Emily Hill was a resourceful teacher who made a manuscript
wall map for her classroom. Perhaps the original printed map would have been
too expensive; certainly she cobbled several pieces of expensive paper
together, like a quilt, to make the whole (59). The expense and rarity of maps
in the early Republic are further intimated by a map of western Maine, perhaps
produced by one or more land speculators. Rather than marking up the
original, precious map, the unknown businessmen copied those towns in which
they were interested onto a separate map (62, 63).
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| 57 |

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United States
Undated manuscript, ink and water color on paper, 27 x 44cm
Gift of the Dyer Library Association
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| 58 |

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United States
Facsimile of a copper engraving hand-colored, 25 x42.5cm
From: Jedidiah Morse and Richard C. Morse, The Traveller's Guide; or
Pocket Gazetteer of the United States, 2d edition (New Haven, CT: S.
Wadsworth, 1826), frontispiece
Osher Collection
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| 59 |

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Emily Hill
American
A Map of the United States of
America By Emily Hill 1820
Manuscript, ink and water color on
paper, 100.5 x 115cm
Osher Collection
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| 60 |

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[John M. George]
American
The State of Rhode Island. Compiled from the Surveys & Observations of
Caleb Harris By Hardning Harris
Manuscript (ca. 1820), ink and water color on paper, 36.5 x 26 (largest extent
of irregular frame)
Smith Collection
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| 61 |

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Mathew Carey
American, 1760-1839
The State of Rhode-Island; compiled, from the Surveys and Observations
of Caleb Harris, By Harding Harris
Facsimile of a copper-engraving, 34.5 x 24cm
From: Carey's American Atlas: Containing Twenty Maps and One Chart
(Philadelphia: Mathew Carey, 1795)
Smith Collection
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| 62 |

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[Androscoggin Valley]
Undated manuscript, ink and water color on paper, 52.5 x 28 (largest extent)
Osher Map Library Collection
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| 63 |
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Osgood Carleton
American, 1742-1816
Map of the District of Maine
Massachusetts Compiled from Actual
Surveys made by Order of the
General Court, and under the
inspection of Agents of their
appointment
Boston: B. & J. Loring, 1800
Facsimile of a detail, and a reduced
facsimile of a copper-engraving, 133 x 90cm
Osher Collection |