1954 Monan Pictorial Historical Map of the Caribbean

HistoricalCaribbean-monan-1954
$850.00
Historical Map of the Caribbean. - Main View
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1954 Monan Pictorial Historical Map of the Caribbean

HistoricalCaribbean-monan-1954

Treasure, Piracy, Slavery.
$850.00

Title


Historical Map of the Caribbean.
  1954 (dated)     14.75 x 21 in (37.465 x 53.34 cm)     1 : 450000

Description


An altogether engrossing 1954 pictorial / historical map of south Florida and the Caribbean by William Paul Monan. It romanticizes regional history, economy, and folklore, with a heavy emphasis on exoticizing piracy and shipwrecks.
A Closer Look
Covering an area from Palm Beach, Florida, southwards, with references made to the northern shores of Panama, Colombia, and Venezuela, this pictorial map centers on the Greater Antilles. Illustrations and text throughout refer to history, especially the history (sometimes mythologized) of piracy, reflecting considerable research. Sport fishing, oil refineries, and the Overseas Highway to Key West also make an appearance. Given the time period, Monan is surprisingly respectful in discussing Native American peoples and the African influence on Caribbean culture (such as Voodoo), and appropriately attentive to the centrality of slavery to the region's history.
Publication History and Census
This map was drawn and published by William Paul Monan, a pilot for Pan Am, in 1954. It is one of a series of historical maps of locations in the Caribbean (Jamaica, Guatemala, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands) that he published in the 1950s and early 1960s, all of which are quite rare. The present map is only noted among the holdings of the Library of Congress and the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign and has no known history on the market.

Cartographer


William Paul Monan (c. 1918 - 1990) was a pilot and illustrator based in the Miami area who produced a series of historical pictorial maps of locations in the Caribbean. Little is known about his early life aside from being born in New York 'about 1918'. By the mid-1940s, he had moved to Miami and begun work as a pilot with Pan American World Airways. After retiring from Pan Am, Monan served as a key 'old eagle' assisting the Federal Aviation Authority and NASA in developing aviation safety standards in the mid-1970s into the 1980s. He was instrumental in identifying safety problems, and published reports on the 'Call Sign Problem' and 'Hearback Problem,' which had led to accidents and near misses in preceding years. More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Average. Foxing throughout and light soiling.

References


OCLC 968143391.