Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Summer Light Reading-Part 2

Here are some more maps to continue your summer light reading.

Captain Snow's Scetch of the Country

There's some questions online about who Captain Snow was but this is a beautifully hand drawn map of the lands south of Lake Erie with an interesting birds eye perspective. The fort across the river from "Log Town" is what is now Fort Pitt in the center of Pittsburgh. Some nice details of the forts and physical geography.

The "Obashee River" in the upper northwest corner confused me but I'm pretty sure it's what is now called the Wabash River.
 
Japan from Erwin J. Raisz's 1944 Atlas of Global Geography

"The good cartographer is both a scientist and an artist" - Raisz, 1938

  

The above image is a bit blurry so here is a close up of Europe for a better feel for his artistry.



Cities of Ravines/Drumlins/Waterfalls by Daniel Rotsztain

Rotsztain is this month's GeoHipster. Here is his description of this map. "Southern Ontario’s physical geography is often derided as flat and boring, ignored behind 400-series superhighways and big box plazas. Beyond the highways, the landscape is dramatic! This map is an effort to re-assert these three cities’ beautiful landscapes into our geographic conscience."

Chaininess

The Friendly Cities Lab at Georgia Tech made a series of maps showing the "Chaininess" (percentage of restaurants that are chains) by metro areas. Aside from a few poorly located cities (Boston and Seattle are way too far south) this map shows some clear patterns. The methodology can be found here.
 

Women's Tour de France

via Barron's
This event runs through Sunday.




Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Summer Light Reading

Here is a grab bag of maps I enjoy. I don't have much insight or commentary to add-let's just appreciate them!

SAS Airlines Map, 1965

via Airline Maps Tumblr
 

A "Belgocentric" map of Europe

via StrangeMaps

Melbourne Trams to the Beaches -Vernon Jones, 1930

available at the Transit Maps store

Vernon Jones was a printmaker who apparently did some work for the government of Victoria, Australia. I have not been able to find much information about him online the maps are truly a work of art. He used some really nice text styles too. Here is a detail from Trams to the Racecources, River and Zoo.

also from the Transit Maps store

New Jersey Lighthouses.

While on vacation at the Jersey Shore last year I took a picture of this map, hanging inside the Cape May Lighthouse.

Automobile Routes to Atlantic City sponsored by the Rudolf Hotel. I lost the original source of this one.

Hand drawn personal map of Detroit by 'jide Aje-not to scale! This is part of an exhibit/research project by Detroit Research.

via Detroitography

Walkway Over the Hudson - drawn by Maria Rabinky illustrating the bike/pedestrian rail trail bridge over the Hudson River in Poughkeepsie, New York.

The hand drawn cliffs are a really nice touch. Here's the whole map, complete with mountains and biplanes.

More to come....

Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Northern Expansion

I've seen plenty of map like this one, showing some ridiculous looking westward claims of US states and colonies before that.

via Library of Congress
If ridiculous seems like a strong word, just look at that South Carolina panhandle! What I've never seen before is this circa 1754 map showing some huge land claims to the north.
Sidney R. Knafel Map Collection/Leventhal Center
There is not much information about this map other than a simple title "An accurate map of the English colonies in North America, bordering on the river Ohio", and that it appeared in the Universal magazine of knowledge and pleasure. It's interesting to see New Jersey and Pennsylvania grabbing land in upstate New York, Maryland claiming much of Ohio, and Virginia reaching up towards Michigan. In some ways this makes sense given the north-northwesterly flows of the major rivers these colonies formed along, the Hudson, Delaware and Potomac.

I don't know anything else about this map or these claims but it's always interesting to see a different perspective on history.