Maps of Piedmont

Maps of Piedmont

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A Map of the British Empire in America. (Sheet 10).

1 : 2000000 Popple, Henry
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[Die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika in 6 Blättern, Blatt 6]

Adolf Stieler's Handatlas über alle Theile der Erde und über das Weltgebäude Stieler, Adolf Justus Perthes
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[Die Vereinigten Staaten von Nord-Amerika, Blatt 6]

Handatlas über alle Theile der Erde und über das Weltgebäude Stieler, Adolf Justus Perthes
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A map of the states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia : comprehending the Spanish provinces of east and west Florida : exhibiting the boundaries as fixed by the late treaty of peace between the United States and the Spanish dominions

1 : 6336000 This map depicts the fixed boundaries by a peace treaty between the United States and the Spanish Dominions. Purcell, Joseph John Stockdale
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United States of America, southern part / drawn under the direction of Mr. Pinkerton by L. Hebert ; Neele, sculpt, 352 Strand.

from Whole
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Piedmont Air Line.

1 : 11900000 Piedmont Air Line Railroad Company
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Carolina.

1 : 5500000 Moll, Herman, d. 1732
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Map of the States of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia.

1 : 6336000 Morse, Jedidiah
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Map of the Seat of Civil War in America

Map of the Seat of Civil War in America. (Enlarged Plan of the Site of the most recent battles). This map, published by Davies & Co. in London, shows the state of America as things stood in July 1863. The Confederate borders are marked in red, the Union borders in green and the Border States in yellow. The separation between Virginia and West Virginia is also depicted. The smaller map in the right hand corner details where the most recent fighting had been, highlighting how volatile the region around the capitals of Washington, D.C., and Richmond were, with this area being the focus of attention in many of the maps produced. It is also possible to see the southern part of Pennsylvania in this map, marking the high–point of General Lee’s troops, who were pushed back out of Union territory after the Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863. Davies & Co.
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Vereinigte Staaten Von Nord-Amerika In 6 Blattern, Bl. 6.

1 : 3700000 Petermann, A.
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United States ... South Eastern States.

1 : 2851200 Fullarton, A. & Co.
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Map of the Seat of Civil War in America, September, 1862

Map of the Seat of Civil War in America, September, 1862. Produced by Davies & Co. in London, this map shows ten of the Confederate states, outlined in red, the Border States of Kentucky and Missouri, which remained within the Union, and lower portion of the Union states, outlined in green. The lower righter corner has an enlarged segment of the country detailing the sites of recent battles around lower Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Virginia. This includes Manassas Junction, where both battles of Bull Run had been fought prior to the map’s publication. Davies & Co.
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Parte Orientale della Florida, della Georgia, e Carolina Meridionale.

from Le colonie unite dell' America settentrle : di nuova projezione a s.s.e.e. li Signori Riformatori dello Studio di Padova.
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Balloon View of the Southern States

Balloon View of the Southern States, showing in the foreground the whole territory between Baltimore and St. Louis, and extending towards the horizon to Keywest and New Orleans. This map shows the country between Baltimore, Maryland, and St. Louis, Missouri, with the eastern side of America presented on the left hand side of the map. At the top, in the horizon, the map stretches to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and New Orleans, Louisiana. An interesting presentation of the country, this map was produced by Louis Prang in 1861 in Boston. Prang published many maps during the American Civil War. According to the description at the bottom of the map, this item was ‘a superior & truthful guide in the present war operations’. L. Prang & Co.
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Virginiae Item et Floridae Americae Provinciarum, nova Descriptio. [Karte], in: Gerardi Mercatoris Atlas, sive, Cosmographicae meditationes de fabrica mundi et fabricati figura, S. 553.

1 Karte aus Atlas Mercator, Gerhard Montanus, Petrus
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A Map of the British Empire in America. (Sheet 10).

1 : 2000000 Popple, Henry
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A General Map of the Southern British Colonies, in America.

1 : 3000000 Robert Sayer and John Bennett (Firm)
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S. section U.S.

1 : 4200000 Melish, John
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N. & S. Carolina, Georgia &c.

1 : 2900000 Bowen, Emanuel
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Military Map of the Middle and Southern States

Military Map of the Middle and Southern States, showing the Seat of War during the Great Rebellion in 1861. Drawn and engraved by J. Schedler. This map, published by Schaus, shows the majority of the Confederate states and the Border States of the Union. The map lists the major cities and towns as well as the railroad links across the country.
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War chart of the Southern States showing the towns, rivers, rail-roads and common roads

B.B. Russell & Co.
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Lloyd's Map of the Southern States

Lloyd's Map of the Southern States showing all the Railroads, their Stations and Distances, also the Counties, Towns, Villages, Harbors, Rivers & Forts. This map was published by J.T. Lloyd in New York in 1861. It details ‘all the railroads, their stations & distances’, as well as the ‘counties, towns, villages, harbors, rivers and forts’ based on the ‘latest Government and other reliable sources’. The map details states beneath the Mason-Dixon line which theoretically separated the northern and southern states. As well as showing the states that made up the eastern side of the Confederacy, the map also shows the Union states of Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware, which, along with Missouri, made up the Border States. Maintaining these states within the Union was a crucial war aim for Lincoln. J.T. Lloyd
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Map Of The Southern States

1 : 3612000 Harper's Weekly
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The Field of Battle.

The Field of Battle and Prominent US Generals. The Field of Battle and Prominent Union Generals is one of the most picturesque maps in the collection, detailing the main theatres of conflict in the Confederacy, with each state broken up by counties, and surrounded by virtually all of the main Union Army generals that would have been well known to viewers in 1864 when this map was published in New York by Ensign & Bridgman. The generals are mostly all arranged close to the areas where they were conducting operations at the time of the map’s production, for example Generals Grant and Sherman are close to Georgia and South Carolina. Union Navy generals are also pictured, such as General David Farragut who can be seen close to the Georgia coastline. Ensign & Bridgman
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Southern U.S.

1 : 3500000 Cornell, S. S. (Sarah S.)
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The model war map giving the southern & middle states, with all their water & railroad connections

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(Canada, Louisiane et Terres Angloises. Southeast section)

1 : 2900000 Anville, Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d, 1697-1782
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Virginia and Maryland.

from An epitome of Mr. John Speed's Theatre of the empire of Great Britain, and of his Prospect of the most famous parts of the world : in this new edition are added, the descriptions of His Majesties dominions abroad, viz. New England, New York, ... Carolina, Florida, ... Virginia, Maryland, ... Jamaica, Barbados, ... as also the empire of the Great Mogol, with the rest of the East Indies, ... the empire of Russia, with their respective descriptions.
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War Chart of the Southern States.

War Chart of the Southern States. Published in 1862 by B.B. Russell in Boston, War Chart of the Southern States details the cities, towns, rivers, railroads and marked roads in the Confederacy (with the exception of Texas). The portrait at the bottom right of the map is of the Battle of Hampton Roads, which took place over two days in March 1862 off the Virginian coastline. The naval battle was famous for the fight between the USS Monitor, seen in the foreground of the image, and the CSS Merrimac (sometimes referred to as the CSS Virginia due to the fact that it was built from composite parts of Confederate ships). As can be seen in the image, these ships were ‘ironclads’, built with iron and steel armoured plates. Originally a British naval design, the Civil War witnessed the first clash of these ships at the Battle of Hampton Roads, resulting in worldwide attention on this aspect of naval warfare in America. Arguably the battle between the Monitor and Merrimac was the most famous naval event of the conflict and there are numerous contemporary cultural references to the engagement in items produced during the war. The battle itself was inconclusive, although the Union suffered more casualties than their Confederate counterparts. B.B. Russell
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Lloyd's new military map of the border & southern states

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