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  • Seller image for Amerique Septentrionale d'apres Arrowsmith et de Humboldt / Charte von Nord America nach Arrowsmith, v. Humboldt for sale by Geographicus Rare Antique Maps

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    Very good. Rebacked on clean linen. Slight toning. Size 35 x 47.5 Inches. This is a rare 1823 wall map of North America published jointly by Tranquillo Mollo and Joseph Dirwald[t]. Although not published until 1823, this is one of the few maps to represent the ephemeral period between 1804 and 1818 when the United States was consolidating its hold on the newly acquired Louisiana Territory and expanding into what is today the Missouri / Arkansas region. It is one of the few general maps to illustrate the early districtization of Louisiana Territory. Early Ephemeral Louisiana Purchase Military Districts This map exhibits a very ephemeral period in the history of the Transmississippi in the vicinity of Missouri, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Although dated 1823, the cartography here, with various land districts hugging western shores of the Mississippi River, corresponds to roughly 1818. Following March 10, 1804, known as 'Three Flags Day,' when the United States physically took possession of Louisiana from France, both Orleans Territory and the District of Louisiana were created in what is modern-day Louisiana both are identified on this map. The lands north of the 33rd parallel were divided into five military districts loosely based upon earlier Spanish land districts: New Madrid, Cape Girardeau, Ste. Genevieve, St. Charles, and St. Louis. Of these counties, New Madrid was the largest, and from it, the District of Arkansas was spit off in 1806, for judicial reasons, becoming Arkansas County in 1813. Later, in 1815, the sprawling Lawrence County, as seen here, was split off. Howard County, named after deceased territorial governor Benjamin Howard was divorced from the St. Louis District in 1816 and occupied the full northwestern quadrant, on both sides of the Missouri River, of modern-day Missouri. Odd Configuration of the Transmississippi The mapmakers credit Aaron Arrowsmith and Alexander von Humboldt for the cartography, particularly in the Transmississippi, but our own study of the map suggests only a limited relationship to their work. The present map offers significantly more, although mostly inaccurate, detail than either predecessor map. While the geographical information included in the map is comparable to the maps of Melish, Arrowsmith, Tanner, and Brue, the topographical detail this Dirwald/Mollo map is far more comprehensive and dramatic, depicting a sense of the scope and grandeur of the mountain ranges of the Transmississippi West, including the Rocky Mountains and other ranges in Alaska and California. The Rocky Mountains loosely follow the lines laid down by Humboldt, but several large mountainous spurs extending westward as far as the Pacific are unique. Both the Great Salt Lake (Timpanagos) and Utah Lake (Slaz See) are identified. The cartographer has merged the apocryphal Timpanagos, Buenaventura, and St. Phillip (San Felipe) Rivers, as the St. Philip River, with a source in Lake Utah and drainage into San Francisco Bay. In Texas, Galveston is in the wrong location. There is also a highly detailed accounting of the many Indian Tribes of the Transmississippi, one of the most impressive we have encountered on a printed map of the period. American Claims to British Columbia The map further illustrates American claims to British Columbia. Americans argued that most of the Pacific Northwest should be part of the United States as a legacy of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. England, on the other hand, argued for residual claims to the region derived from its fur trading empires. The Oregon Dispute, as it came to be known, become an important in geopolitical issue between the British Empire and the United States, especially after the War of 1812. American's adopted the slogan '54-40 or Fight!' until the Oregon Question was finally resolved by the 1846 Oregon Treaty. Publication History and Census This map is rare. It appears to have been issued in at least three editions 1819, 1823 (present example), and 1849 as the Neue.