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1863 Public Survey Map of Minnesota

Minnesota-publicsurvey-1863
$125.00
(F) Sketch of the Public Surveys in the State of Minnesota. - Main View
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1863 Public Survey Map of Minnesota

Minnesota-publicsurvey-1863


Title


(F) Sketch of the Public Surveys in the State of Minnesota.
  1863 (dated)     23.5 x 21 in (59.69 x 53.34 cm)     1 : 1140480

Description


An attractive 1863 example of the 1863 public survey map of Minnesota by W. D. Washburn, Surveyor General. It covers the state of Minnesota from Brownsville to Rainy Lake. The state of the Land Survey, confined to the southern portions of the state in this case, is noted via a series of blocks representing the survey grid. A table in the lower left quadrant explains the various markings on the blocks. Various towns, cities, Indian reservations, rivers, lakes, and other topographical features are noted. This map was prepared to illustrate the progress of the public survey work in Minnesota and issued in the 1864 congressional report, Message of the President of the United States to the Two Houses of Congress at the Commencement of the First Session of the Thirty-Eighth Congress.

CartographerS


The General Land Office (1812 - 1946) was an independent agency charged with the administration and sale of public lands of the western territories of the United States under the Preemption Act of 1841 and the Homestead Act of 1862. During a time of frenetic energy and rapid westward expansion, the Land Office oversaw the surveying, platting, mapping and eventually the sale of much of the Western United States and Florida. The structural layout of the western United States that we see today, and many of their district and county divisions, are direct result of the early surveying work of the General Land Office. More importantly, as a branch of the Federal Government in Washington D.C. and the only agency able to legally sell and administer public lands in the western territories of the United States, the General Land Office played a pivotal role in consolidating power away from the original states and into the hands of the centralized federal government. The General Land Office was absorbed into the Department of Interior in 1849 and in 1946 merged with the United States Grazing Service to become the Bureau of Land Management. Today the Bureau of Land Management administers the roughly 246 million acres of public land remaining under federal ownership. More by this mapmaker...


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Source


Government Printing Office, Message of the President of the United States to the Two Houses of Congress at the Commencement of the First Session of the Thirty-Eighth Congress, (Washington) 1864.    

Condition


Very good. Some wear and toning along original fold lines. Professionally flattened and backed with archival tissue.

References


Rumsey 1070.006 (1866 edition).