Map makers and topographic engineers.

For real??!! That is a nice map.
Yes, the Confed's had some talent too...

DefensesCharleston.jpg


From "Map Battle of Murfreesboro"
BattleMurf.jpg
 
Wow, is this ever the article all of you all have to read! The map Lee used during the Gettysburg Campaign was drawn up at Jackson's order by his highly skilled cartographer.

It was, however, a map of the entire northern operations area. On Lee's map the word "Gettysburg" covered practically all of the battlefield.

Who knows that, "1,050 horse paces equal a mile" or that counting them was used for map making? The content of this article is very enlightening.

Link:

 
By 1855, Thomas Cowperthwait and Co had published their map of Pennsylvania- showing roads, rail lines, canals, etc.


View attachment 546137

I have discovered a highly detailed & enlightening source. Lee did not have access to this 1855 map. The map he did use was on such a large scale that the word "Gettysburg" covers almost the entire area of the battlefield.

This article is filled with detailed references. Who knew that "1,050 horse paces equal a mile" & that counting them was a map making technique?

The author goes into great detail about why maps were vital for more than just getting from point to point.

You are going to like this a lot.

Link:

 
THE NATION BUILDERS A SESQUICENTENNIAL HISTORY OF THE CORPS OF TOPOGRAPHICAL ENGINEERS 1838-1863
Frank N. Schubert Editor
OFFICE OF HISTORY
UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
FORT BELVOIR, VIRGINIA
1988

In executing a wide variety of duties, the Topographical Engineers contributed significantly to the concept of the modern professional soldier. They believed they were servants of the state and looked to Congress and the Secretary of War for guidelines and policies. The power of the Topographical Engineers rested in their professional engineering expertise. This power was substantial in a period when Army Engineers had a virtual monopoly on the engineering skills so desperately needed by the developing nation. Today, of course, such expertise is shared with private and public engineers around the country.


Cheers,
USS ALASKA
 

Attachments

Journal Article
Civil War Maps and Mapping
JAMES BERTON RHOADS
The Military Engineer, Vol. 49, No. 327 (January-February 1957), pp. 38-43
Society of American Military Engineers

1748896728861.png



Full article at above link on JSTOR with Google sign-in (In the upper right-hand corner of the linked page, there is a 'Log in' button. If you have a Gmail account, you have a Google sign-in and this will allow for free reading of 100 articles a month).

Cheers,
USS ALASKA
 
Journal Article
Civil War Photo Maps: The happy union of photography and cartography during the first of the "modern" wars
William Gladstone
Military Images, Vol. 4, No. 2 (September-October 1982), pp. 16-19

1749060085023.png



Full article at above link on JSTOR with Google sign-in (In the upper right-hand corner of the linked page, there is a 'Log in' button. If you have a Gmail account, you have a Google sign-in and this will allow for free reading of 100 articles a month).

Cheers,
USS ALASKA
 
This History of Field Mapping in the Civil War / guide to the Library of Congress collection of Civil War maps is an extremely valuable tool. The description of the map making done by the Army of the Cumberland is succinct & provides links to the maps described.

Link:

 
Journal Article
Union Mapping in the American Civil War
A. Philip Muntz
Imago Mundi
Vol. 17 (1963), pp. 90-94
Imago Mundi, Ltd.

1750257710758.png



Full article at above link on JSTOR with Google sign-in (In the upper right-hand corner of the linked page, there is a 'Log in' button. If you have a Gmail account, you have a Google sign-in and this will allow for free reading of 100 articles a month).

Cheers,
USS ALASKA
 

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