October 26, 2007 |
Rare Almanac Map Showing Texas on the Eve of the Civil War
123. [MAP]. RICHARDSON, W[illard]. Richardson’s New Map of the State of Texas Including Part of Mexico Compiled from Government Surveys and Other Authentic Documents Published by Charles Desilver No. 714 Chestnut Street Philadelphia. Engraved Expressly for the Texas Almanac. Corrected by H. Wickeland 1861 [below ornamental border at left] Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1861 by Charles Desilver, in the Clerks Office of the District Court of the eastern district of Pennsylvania. [lower left] Explanation [key] Railroads, etc. in Texas [pasted printed slip covering earlier printing].... [inset map at lower right measuring 16.1 x 17.3 cm] Map Showing the Proposed Route of the Aransas Railroad (and its) Connections with the Eastern Roads. Philadelphia: Charles Desilver, 1861. Lithograph map with original full coloring, ornate vine border. Border to border: 62.4 x 82.4 cm.; neat line to neat line: 57.2 x 77.3 cm. Triangular piece of upper corner (approximately 14 x 8 x 17 cm) supplied in neat facsimile, a few minor losses at folds, several small ink blots (some in main image but most confined to left side), a few closed tears. Professionally washed and stabilized. Basic Texas Books 172E (citing the 1861 almanac with map). Howes T138 (citing the Richardson series of almanacs, noting that some of the almanacs did not have maps, but designating the present map for the 1861 almanac). Phillips, America, p. 846. Rader 3070 (citing the series and maps). See also: Day, pp. 67, 78, 85 (citing the maps available with the Texas almanacs for the years 1860, 1867, and 1871). Taliaferro 322A, 322B (citing photostats of the 1859 and 1860 almanac maps). Winkler 1373x (Vol. I, pp. 271-272). Cf. Winkler 1373 (citing the almanac) notes that the publishers had the map printed in the North because it could not be printed in Texas. Rumsey (5178.000) has an excellent discussion of this map (http://www.davidrumsey.com/maps6390.html):
Willard Richardson (1802-1875) came to Texas in 1837. After working as a teacher for nearly a decade, he became a newspaperman almost by chance, the career for which he is best known. His main achievements were the publication of his series of Texas almanacs and his guidance of the Galveston News from a small local paper to what shortly after his death became present-day Dallas Morning News. Handbook of Texas Online: Willard Richardson. The reviser of this map, Heinrich Wickeland (ca. 1833-1864), was a professional engineer and surveyor who arrived in Texas around 1856 from Germany, at which time he accompanied Jacob DeCordova as one of the chief surveyors on his expedition to the Canadian River Valley. He also served in the Confederate Army. Handbook of Texas Online: Heinrich Wickeland. ($3,000-6,000) |
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Copyright Dorothy Sloan 2007