16
London: Printed and Sold by R. Sayer and J. Bennett, 1776. Second edition, early issue. Folio, 22 1/4 x 16 in. (565 x 406 mm). Letterpress title-page and Index to the Maps. Illustrated with 22 fine engraved maps on 29 sheets, each with contemporary outline hand-coloring, one partly hand-colored (all, but one, double-page or large folding sheets), by Henry Mouzon, Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson, William Scull, Thomas Jefferys, Samuel Holland, and others; each map numbered in ink in top corner recto. Rebound in full brown diced russia, stamped in gilt, red morocco spine label; all edges trimmed; plates mounted on guards; scattered offsetting and spotting to plates and text. Howes J-81; Sabin 35953.
Maps Comprising:
A fine example of the most important 18th-century atlas of America, including some of the most groundbreaking maps of North America and the English colonies, such as Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson's A Map of the Most Inhabited part of Virginia, the most influential map of the Chesapeake region up until the 19th-century, Braddock Mead's A Map of the Most Inhabited Parts of New England, the largest and most detailed map of the region at that time, Lieutenant John Ross's Course of the River Mississipi, the first large scale map of the Mississippi River and the first based wholly on English sources, and William Scull's A Map of Pennsylvania, the first map of the province to chart its western frontier. This atlas represents the most comprehensive and detailed collection of maps of North America in the American Revolutionary War period, "as a major cartographic reference work it was, very likely, consulted by American, English, and French civilian administrators and military officers during the Revolution" (William Ristow).
Sold for $69,300
Estimated at $30,000 - $50,000
London: Printed and Sold by R. Sayer and J. Bennett, 1776. Second edition, early issue. Folio, 22 1/4 x 16 in. (565 x 406 mm). Letterpress title-page and Index to the Maps. Illustrated with 22 fine engraved maps on 29 sheets, each with contemporary outline hand-coloring, one partly hand-colored (all, but one, double-page or large folding sheets), by Henry Mouzon, Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson, William Scull, Thomas Jefferys, Samuel Holland, and others; each map numbered in ink in top corner recto. Rebound in full brown diced russia, stamped in gilt, red morocco spine label; all edges trimmed; plates mounted on guards; scattered offsetting and spotting to plates and text. Howes J-81; Sabin 35953.
Maps Comprising:
A fine example of the most important 18th-century atlas of America, including some of the most groundbreaking maps of North America and the English colonies, such as Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson's A Map of the Most Inhabited part of Virginia, the most influential map of the Chesapeake region up until the 19th-century, Braddock Mead's A Map of the Most Inhabited Parts of New England, the largest and most detailed map of the region at that time, Lieutenant John Ross's Course of the River Mississipi, the first large scale map of the Mississippi River and the first based wholly on English sources, and William Scull's A Map of Pennsylvania, the first map of the province to chart its western frontier. This atlas represents the most comprehensive and detailed collection of maps of North America in the American Revolutionary War period, "as a major cartographic reference work it was, very likely, consulted by American, English, and French civilian administrators and military officers during the Revolution" (William Ristow).