Subject: Colonial Eastern United States & Canada
Period: 1700 (circa)
Publication: Suite de Neptune Francois
Color: Hand Color
Size:
35.8 x 23.4 inches
90.9 x 59.4 cm
This large, interesting map is filled with various geographic misconceptions of the late seventeenth century. The map is based on Robert Morden 's important map of 1698, New Map of the English Empire in America, even though the cartouche credits le Sieur S. (Nicolas Sanson). It does not include Morden's inset of the Atlantic, otherwise, the cartography is the same. The area shown extends from Hudson Bay and the Canadian Arctic to the Gulf of Mexico. The Mississippi, R. Mitchisipi ou Rio Grande, enters the gulf too far west; an error resulting from the intentionally faulty reports of French explorer La Salle. The coastal areas are filled with names including James Tovum on the well-defined Chesapeake Bay. The map has both French and English names including a mention of a Copper Mine near what would become Chicago. The Great Lakes are all present, but with some odd shapes; Lake Michigan is square in shape and Green Bay is very elongated and named Bay de Puans (Bay of evil smells). A prominent mountain range begins in the Michigan peninsula and runs all the way down through Florida. This spurious feature is one of the most mysterious geographic mistakes in the mapping of North America. The notorious errors derived from the reports of John Lederer (Ashley Lake, the Savana, and the Desert Arenosa) are present in Caroline. Boston Harbor is inset at the upper left; the first example of an English colonial city on a map that did not originate in England. Printed on two sheets and joined.
References: Burden #765; Cumming (SE) #129; McCorkle #695.7.
Condition: B+
A fine impression with contemporary outline color and some color offsetting. There are two short cracks and one tiny hole (along the eastern border of <i>Nouvelle Angleterre</i>) that have been closed on verso with archival tape.