Washington Territory, 1884
Color lithograph map of Washington Territory showing the boundaries of Indian reservations, military reservations, and counties. Also shows limits of railroad land grants, subdivided townships, U.S. Surveyor General's Office, U.S. Land Offices, county seats, towns, villages, rivers, and mountai...
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Julius Bien & Co.
1884
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fttennesseeva:oai:cdm15138.contentdm.oclc.org:p15138coll23/9921 2023-05-15T15:42:39+02:00 Washington Territory, 1884 United States. General Land Office 62 x 79 cm Washington (State); Washington Territory New York (N.Y.) 1884 Maps http://cdm15138.contentdm.oclc.org/u?/p15138coll23,9921 unknown Julius Bien & Co. 44209 http://cdm15138.contentdm.oclc.org/u?/p15138coll23,9921 No copyright - United States: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ THS Map Collection 814 Tennessee Historical Society 45913004 THS 23 Washington Territory--Maps Indian reservations--Washington Territory--Maps Indians of North America--Land tenure--Maps United States. General Land Office Maps Boundaries Indian reservations Railroads Cities & towns Mountains Rivers Seas 1884 fttennesseeva 2023-01-08T19:11:21Z Color lithograph map of Washington Territory showing the boundaries of Indian reservations, military reservations, and counties. Also shows limits of railroad land grants, subdivided townships, U.S. Surveyor General's Office, U.S. Land Offices, county seats, towns, villages, rivers, and mountains. Relief shown by hachures. After America's first settlers crossed the Bering land bridge into North America, the Pacific Northwest became their earliest home within the present boundaries of the contiguous United States. The first Europeans arrived by sea in the 18th century until the famous Lewis and Clark Expedition reached Washington in 1805. Following the Oregon boundary dispute, the US/Canada border was established as the 49th parallel. Thereafter, the Oregon Territory was created in 1848. Washington Territory was established in 1853 from the northern portion of the Oregon Territory and existed until Washington became the 42nd state in 1889. A number of American Indian tribes remain in Washington on over 3 million acres of federally administered reservations. Other/Unknown Material Bering Land Bridge Tennessee Virtual Archive (TeVA - Tennessee State Library and Archives) Canada Pacific Indian |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Tennessee Virtual Archive (TeVA - Tennessee State Library and Archives) |
op_collection_id |
fttennesseeva |
language |
unknown |
topic |
Washington Territory--Maps Indian reservations--Washington Territory--Maps Indians of North America--Land tenure--Maps United States. General Land Office Maps Boundaries Indian reservations Railroads Cities & towns Mountains Rivers Seas |
spellingShingle |
Washington Territory--Maps Indian reservations--Washington Territory--Maps Indians of North America--Land tenure--Maps United States. General Land Office Maps Boundaries Indian reservations Railroads Cities & towns Mountains Rivers Seas United States. General Land Office Washington Territory, 1884 |
topic_facet |
Washington Territory--Maps Indian reservations--Washington Territory--Maps Indians of North America--Land tenure--Maps United States. General Land Office Maps Boundaries Indian reservations Railroads Cities & towns Mountains Rivers Seas |
description |
Color lithograph map of Washington Territory showing the boundaries of Indian reservations, military reservations, and counties. Also shows limits of railroad land grants, subdivided townships, U.S. Surveyor General's Office, U.S. Land Offices, county seats, towns, villages, rivers, and mountains. Relief shown by hachures. After America's first settlers crossed the Bering land bridge into North America, the Pacific Northwest became their earliest home within the present boundaries of the contiguous United States. The first Europeans arrived by sea in the 18th century until the famous Lewis and Clark Expedition reached Washington in 1805. Following the Oregon boundary dispute, the US/Canada border was established as the 49th parallel. Thereafter, the Oregon Territory was created in 1848. Washington Territory was established in 1853 from the northern portion of the Oregon Territory and existed until Washington became the 42nd state in 1889. A number of American Indian tribes remain in Washington on over 3 million acres of federally administered reservations. |
author |
United States. General Land Office |
author_facet |
United States. General Land Office |
author_sort |
United States. General Land Office |
title |
Washington Territory, 1884 |
title_short |
Washington Territory, 1884 |
title_full |
Washington Territory, 1884 |
title_fullStr |
Washington Territory, 1884 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Washington Territory, 1884 |
title_sort |
washington territory, 1884 |
publisher |
Julius Bien & Co. |
publishDate |
1884 |
url |
http://cdm15138.contentdm.oclc.org/u?/p15138coll23,9921 |
op_coverage |
62 x 79 cm Washington (State); Washington Territory New York (N.Y.) |
geographic |
Canada Pacific Indian |
geographic_facet |
Canada Pacific Indian |
genre |
Bering Land Bridge |
genre_facet |
Bering Land Bridge |
op_source |
THS Map Collection 814 Tennessee Historical Society 45913004 THS 23 |
op_relation |
44209 http://cdm15138.contentdm.oclc.org/u?/p15138coll23,9921 |
op_rights |
No copyright - United States: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
_version_ |
1766376615747518464 |