Subject: New Caledonia, Panama
Period: 1729 (circa)
Publication: Thomas Salmon's Modern History
Color: Hand Color
Size:
7.8 x 9.5 inches
19.8 x 24.1 cm
This copper engraved map is one of the few maps that show the short-lived Scottish settlement of New Caledonia on the north coast of Panama on the Isthmus of Darien. The isthmus was of strategic importance in the overland exchange of goods between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The Company of Scotland, led by William Paterson, established the settlement with 1,200 Scots in 1698. The colony failed within a year amid devastating illness and attacks by Spanish galleons. The failure of the Darien Scheme (as it became known) contributed greatly to the crippling of the entire Scottish economy that eventually led to the dissolution of the Scottish Parliament and the 1707 Act of Union with England. The settlement is well shown, as is topography. Long and fascinating text at upper right gives much information, including the discovery of gold, water, sailing instructions, etc.
References: Baynton-William, (The Map Forum #11) pp. 42-8; Kapp (MCC-73) #44; McCorkle (18th C. Geog.) #349, Vol. V, part 2 [3].
Condition: B+
A dark impression on paper with a bunch of grapes watermark, a diagonal printer's crease, and light toning and soiling at top. Issued folding with a binding trim at left that has been replaced with old paper.