Louisiana

Subject

Louisiana

Date
1838
Mapmaker
Boynton, G[eorge] W. , engraver
Publisher

Bradford, T[homas] G[amaliel].

Place of Publication

Boston

Accession Number
12803.011
Condition
Fair; colors faded; moderate foxing
Curatorial Notes

Other copy located #02833; 12803.11. Photograph located 1982.077.002. Previous curator's notes describe this is originally housed in Bradford and Goodrich's " A Universal Illustrated Atlas," published by Strong in 1842. No evidence to support or deny the attribution. See Phillips, Vol. 1, p. 465, #783.

Market Value
1998: Gerald E. Turner, map dealer: $165.00 (in good condition)
Dec 1997, Heritage Map Museum auction catalog: $150-200
1982: Nebenzahl appraisal for copy 1982.077.002 - $150.00
Notes

The names of Louisiana parishes tell much of the history of the Pelican State. Several parishes are named for the Native American tribes living in the area at the time of European encounter: Natchitoches, Ouachita, and Avoyelles. Other parishes retained names assigned to the area by Indian inhabitants: Catahoula from the Tensas word, "Cataoola," meaning big, clear lake (Catahoula Lake, now located in La Salle Parish); and Plaquemines from a Mobile Indian and French dialect word for persimmons. Other parish names on this map are French in origin: West and East Baton Rouge (red stick), Lafourche (fork--in the Mississippi River), and Terre Bonne (good earth), and Pointe Coupee (cut point). The Feliciana (happy land) parishes derive their name from the Spanish language as does Concordia (harmony, unity.)
At the time this map was published, Louisiana was divided into thirty-two parishes. During the remainder of the nineteenth and into the first decades of the twentieth century additional parishes were sculpted from the large parishes west of the Mississippi River.

Size
11 1/4 x 14 1/4
Storage
c03d02