Keywords: 1794 Pownell Wall Map of North America and the West Indies - Geographicus - NorthAmerica-pownall-1794.jpg An extraordinary monumentally proportioned 1794 map of North American by Governor Pownell Issued shortly after the end of the American Revolutionary War this map details the newly formed United States the British dominions in Canada the French territory of Louisiana the West Indies and Spanish holdings in Mexico Florida and Central America As one might expect from a map of this size the detail throughout is extraordinary All text is in English We begin our examination of this map in the newly formed post colonial United States The United States at this time extended from the Pacific to the Mississippi River and from Georgia to the Great Lakes and Maine The early state boundaries roughly conform to their original colonial charters Virginia North Carolina and South Carolina are drawn with indefinite western borders suggesting claims to further unexplored land beyond the Appellation Mountains By this time most of the boundary issues in the New England states had been resolved though there remained some vagaries regarding the Massachusetts Connecticut border and though Vermont is noted textually its boundaries are not drawn in At this time there were also some unresolved issues regarding the national borders between Maine and Nova Scotia In Pennsylvania the western border displays some surveying confusions that would not be resolved until the early 1800s and the creation of Ohio It is beyond the old colonial centers where this map really gets interesting Pownall offers copious notations on the lands and territories between the Appellation range and this Mississippi River In some cases he offers commentary on the various indigenous tribes including the Creeks Chickasaws Chocktaws Senekas Eriez Delawares Shawnee Iroquois Algonquians Ottawas and others The cartographer was clearly concerned with the development of these western regions and offers copious commentary on fit sites for factories the alliances and temperaments of tribes and the navigability of various river systems particularly the Mississippi and Ohio The Great Lakes are mapped with considerable accuracy though several apocryphal islands do appear in Lake Superior The most notable of these are Phelipeaux and Pontchartrain Phelipeaux Island first appeared in French maps of this region in the 1740s Later it was mentioned as a boundary marker in the 1783 Treaty of Paris which ended the American Revolutionary War The nonexistence of these islands was not conclusively proven until about 1820 To the west of the Mississippi we pass into the largely unknown lands of the Great Plains In what is roughly modern day Missouri between Memphis and St Louis there is an interesting note suggesting that this region is Full of Mines with a secondary note suggesting that these mines gave rise to the Mississippi Scheme of 1719 This refers to the Mississippi Company Compagnie du Mississippi or as it was more commonly known the Indies Company Compagnie d'Occident This organization was part of a French investment plan comparable to the South Seas Company which was developing contemporaneously in England The Mississippi Company's charter was to trade the riches of the Louisiana Territory The main proponent of the Mississippi Company John Law greatly exaggerated the wealth of Louisiana by describing a rich mining region easily accessible along the Mississippi from New Orleans This resulted in a stock buying rush which disproportionately overvalued Mississippi Company stock resulting in one of the world's first Bubble Economies Further North along the northern border between the United States and British America Canada Rain Lake the Lake of the Woods and Lake Winnepeg are noted This region was a hotbed of exploration throughout the 18th century 1794 dated Size in 46 40 object history credit line accession number NorthAmerica-pownall-1794 Kitchin Thomas <i>Kitchin's General Atlas describing the Whole Universe being a complete collection of the most approved maps extant; corrected with the greatest care and augmented from the last edition of D'Anville and Robert with many improvements by other eminent geographers engraved on Sixty-Two plates comprising Thirty Seven maps </i> Laurie Whittle London 1797 Geographicus-source PD-Art-100 1794 maps Old maps of North America Old maps of Central America Old maps of the Caribbean Caribbean in the 1790s North America in the 1780s Maps in English Gulf of California Hudson Bay Maps of Baffin Bay |