A chart of South Carolina and Georgia.
Nautical chart representing the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia. With one ancillary map: A chart of the bar and harbour of Charles Town [Charlestown], South Carolina. Maps show islands, cities, bodies of water, drainage, coast line, bays, ports, shoals, and depths, given in fathoms. Includes rh...
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Format: | Map |
Language: | unknown |
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Norman, William, -1807
1794
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Online Access: | https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~356214~90123118 https://media.davidrumsey.com/MediaManager/srvr?mediafile=/Size4/RUMSEY~8~1/213/14485010.jpg |
Summary: | Nautical chart representing the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia. With one ancillary map: A chart of the bar and harbour of Charles Town [Charlestown], South Carolina. Maps show islands, cities, bodies of water, drainage, coast line, bays, ports, shoals, and depths, given in fathoms. Includes rhumb lines, latitudinal and longitudinal lines. Chart of South Carolina and Georgia includes a compass rose with north oriented toward top of sheet; Chart of Charles Town [Charlestown] includes a compass rose with north oriented toward right of sheet. Black and white engraving. Chart is 52 x 42 cm, on sheet 54 x 45 cm. The American Pilot : Containing the navigation of the sea coast of North America, from the streights of Belle Isle to Cayenne, including the island and banks of Newfoundland, the West India islands, and all the islands on the coast … Published by William Norman in Boston, 1794. Folio; rebound in half calf over boards. Atlas comprised of eleven charts (including one ancillary chart and one inset chart). Charts show coastlines, cities, topography, vegetation, bodies of water, drainage, bays, ports, anchorage, shoals, rocks, directions of currents, and depths, given in fathoms. One chart features pictorial illustrations of ships and a sea monster; another provides descriptive notes with navigational instructions. Copper-plate engravings. The 1794 version of John and William Norman's American Pilot features foundational maps of Nantucket by Pinkham and the Carolinas by Daniel Dunbibin. This atlas is among the earliest to be published in the United States. In 1785, John Norman had proposed to the Massachusetts legislature to print a "Correct Set of Compleat Maps" depicting the coast from Newfoundland's Banks to the Gulf of Mexico. These maps were meant to align with the recent surveys conducted by the British Government, such as those by J.F.W. Des Barres, Samuel Holland, and others published in the Atlantic Neptune. Norman's proposal claimed that these drafts would be published on different scales to ... |
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