Rare, Remarkable Maps Trace America’s Path to Independence




If you’re lucky enough to get off work for Independence Day, you’ll probably be spending some time by the grill, perhaps with a few cold beers nearby. It’s practically your duty as an American citizen.


But don’t forget that our independence from those imperialistic, tax-happy Brits was hard won, and the Declaration of Independence, signed 238 years ago today, was just the beginning. Actually, it was more like a dramatic middle act in a decades long struggle to break free of colonial rule and set a fledgling nation on the path to prosperity. The maps in this gallery tell that story.


They were selected by Ed Redmond, a map curator at the Library of Congress who specializes in early American history. They include the first map ever made of the Gulf Stream current in the Atlantic Ocean, drawn by Benjamin Franklin when he was in charge of getting mail to and from the colonies. There are maps depicting key battles in the Revolutionary War, and a hand-drawn spy map used by George Washington to plan a successful attack on Princeton, New Jersey in January 1777.


One of the most remarkable maps here is a wall map made by Abel Buell, a Connecticut engraver, in 1784. The best-preserved of the seven known surviving copies is currently on display at the Library as part of its Mapping a New Nation exhibit. Buell’s map is the first map of the United States published in America by an American (also the first to be copyrighted here).


Buell’s map reveals the ambitions of the new nation, Redmond says. The 1783 Treaty of Paris, which officially ended the war and established American independence, set the new nation’s western border along the Mississippi, but most of the new state borders stopped well short. Nevertheless, Buell extended those borders all the way to the Mississippi. “That’s the first real expression of American imperialism by an American author,” Redmond said.



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