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1873 Beers Map of Whitestone Village, Queens, New York City (Set of 2 maps)

WhitestoneVillage2-beers-1873
$125.00
Part of Whitestone Village. Town of Flushing, Queens Co. L.I. / Part of Whitestone Village. Town of Flushing, Queens Co. L.I. - Main View
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1873 Beers Map of Whitestone Village, Queens, New York City (Set of 2 maps)

WhitestoneVillage2-beers-1873

One of the finest maps of Whitestone, Queens, New York City.

Title


Part of Whitestone Village. Town of Flushing, Queens Co. L.I. / Part of Whitestone Village. Town of Flushing, Queens Co. L.I.
  1873 (undated)     31 x 28 in (78.74 x 71.12 cm)     1 : 3600

Description


A scarce example of Fredrick W. Beers' two map set of the community of Whitestone, Queens, New York published in 1873. Roughly covers the area between the modern day Whitestone Bridge and the Throgs Neck Bridge. More specifically, upper map depicts from 3rd Avenue to 17th Avenue, and Boulevard to 17th Street. Lower map covers from 3rd Avenue to 14th Avenue, and from 16th Street to 1st Street. Detailed to the level of individual properties and buildings with landowners noted. This is probably the finest atlas map of Whitestone, Queens, to appear in the 19th century. Prepared by Beers, Comstock & Cline out of their office at 36 Vesey Street, New York City, for inclusion in the first published atlas of Long Island, the 1873 issue of Atlas of Long Island, New York.

Cartographer


The Beers family (Fredrick, Silas, James and Daniel) (fl. c. 1850 - 1886), along with Charles and Augustus Warner, were prominent map publishers working from the 1850s to the late 1880s. Often publishing under the Warner & Beers designation, the combined firms produced a series of important state and county atlases and map of much of the northeastern United States. Many of their regional maps are among the most detailed and well laid out maps ever produced of their respective regions. Because Warner & Beers county maps were often detailed down to the individual homes and landowners, they have become highly sought after by general and family historians. In additional to producing maps of surpassing detail, Warner & Beers also maintained an earlier generation's attention to detail and quality while publishing in an era ever increasingly dominated by the low cost printing methods used by the publishing empires of Rand McNally and George Cram. More by this mapmaker...

Source


Atlas of Long Island, New York. From Recent Actual Surveys and Records Under the Superintendence of F. W. Beers. (1873 First Edition)    

Condition


Very good. Some toning and edge wear. Minor spotting. Minor verso repairs, including centerfold reinforcement. Set of two maps.

References


New York Public Library, Map Division, 1527295, 1527296. Rumsey 0066.044, 0066.045.