This item has been sold, but you can get on the Waitlist to be notified if another example becomes available, or purchase a digital scan.

1934 National Trust Company and William Mark Young Pictorial Map of Illinois

Illinois100Years-nationaltrust-1934
$225.00
Illinois One Hundred Years Ago. - Main View
Processing...

1934 National Trust Company and William Mark Young Pictorial Map of Illinois

Illinois100Years-nationaltrust-1934

100 years of progress.

Title


Illinois One Hundred Years Ago.
  1934 (dated)     21.75 x 17.75 in (55.245 x 45.085 cm)     1 : 1152000

Description


This is a 1934 Northern Trust Company and William Mark Young pictorial map of Illinois. A pictorial border surrounds a historic map of the state created by J. H. Young and published by S. A. Mitchell.
A Closer Look
The map is constructed around a reissue of J. H. Young and S.A. Mitchell's 1834 The Tourist's Pocket Map of the State of Illinois Exhibiting its Internal Improvements, Road Distances, etc. Just as the title suggests, Young and Mitchell's map provides the 1934 viewer with a glimpse of Illinois in 1834 - highlighting 100 years of progress. Roads connect the state's cities and towns, while rivers wind their way throughout the state, adding a different means of transportation. The township grid overlays the state, illustrating orderly westward expansion. Steamboat routes are included along the right border, while population statistics appear along the left. An inset in the lower left details the lead mine region in northwestern Illinois and the Missouri Territory.
Pictorial Border
While the historical information provided by the Young/Mitchell map is intellectually compelling, William Mark Young's illustrated border is the highlight of the pictorial. Consisting of 12 vignettes and 3 portraits, Young chronicles Illinois history from the arrival of Jacques Marquette to the 1934 noise of automobiles on Chicago's La Salle Street. The advent of the railroad, stagecoaches, grain elevators, and public schools are celebrated. Portraits of Black Hawk and Shadrach Bond (the first governor of Illinois) flank the title cartouche and a portrait of President Abraham Lincoln appears at bottom center.
Publication History and Census
The central map was originally drawn by J.H. Young and published by Samuel Augustus Mitchell in 1834. The present example is embellished with illustrations by William Mark Young and published in 1934 by the Northern Trust Company. Two editions were published: the present first edition in 1934 and a second, reduced edition in the 1934 Chicago Sunday Tribune. We have traced examples of the present edition to the collections at Harvard University, the University of Chicago, the University of Illinois at Chicago, the Urbana Free Library, the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, the Wisconsin History Society Library, the Illinois State Library, Iowa State University, and the Los Angeles Public Library.

CartographerS


William Mark Young (March 18, 1881 – January 1, 1946) was an American etching artist, muralist, and commercial draughtsman active in Chicago during the first half of the 20th century. Young was born in Upper Alton, where he attended Upper Alton High School before moving on to Washington University's school of fine arts in St. Louis. His first business venture was a commercial arts firm in St. Louis. In time he moved to Chicago where his most substantial work was produced. Young is known for commercial art etching and painting, advertising, murals, and illustrations. His most impressive works were the murals issued for the Ohio Exhibit at the 1933 Chicago 'Century of Progress' World's Fair. These murals were subsequently relocated to the Ohio State Capital Building. In addition, young illustrated children's books, including a 1939 edition of Dickens' A Christmas Carol, and several books for Whitman Publishing Company in the Big Little Books and Better Little Books series. Young died on New Year's day, 1946. More by this mapmaker...


James Hamilton Young (December 18, 1792 - c. 1870) was a Scottish-American draughtsman, engraver, and cartographer active in Philadelphia during the first half of the 19th century. Young was born in Avondale, Lanark, Scotland and emigrated to the United States sometime before 1817. Young was a pioneer in American steel plate engraving, a process superior to copper plate engraving due to the increased durability of steel. His earliest known maps date to about 1817, when Young was 25. At the time he was partnered with William Kneass (1780 - 1840), as Kneass, Young and Company, an imprint that was active from 1817 to 1820. He then partnered with with George Delleker, publishing under the imprint of Young and Delleker, active from 1822 to 1823. Young engraved for numerous cartographic publishers in the Philadelphia area, including Anthony Finley, Charles Varle, and Samuel Augustus Mitchell, among others. His most significant work includes maps engraved for Anthony Finley and later Samuel Augustus Mitchell. Mitchell proved to be Young's most significant collaborator. The pair published numerous maps from about 1831 well into the 1860s. Young retired sometime in the mid to late 1860s. In 1840 he registered a patent for an improved system of setting up typography for printing. ˆˆ Learn More...


Samuel Augustus Mitchell (March 20, 1792 - December 20, 1868) began his map publishing career in the early 1830s. Mitchell was born in Bristol, Connecticut. He relocated to Philadelphia in 1821. Having worked as a school teacher and a geographical writer, Mitchell was frustrated with the low quality and inaccuracy of school texts of the period. His first maps were an attempt to rectify this problem. In the next 20 years Mitchell would become the most prominent American map publisher of the mid-19th century. Mitchell worked with prominent engravers J. H. Young, H. S. Tanner, and H. N. Burroughs before attaining the full copyright on his maps in 1847. In 1849 Mitchell either partnered with or sold his plates to Thomas, Cowperthwait and Company who continued to publish the Mitchell's Universal Atlas. By about 1856 most of the Mitchell plates and copyrights were acquired by Charles Desilver who continued to publish the maps, many with modified borders and color schemes, until Mitchell's son, Samuel Augustus Mitchell Junior, entered the picture. In 1859, S.A. Mitchell Jr. purchased most of the plates back from Desilver and introduced his own floral motif border. From 1860 on, he published his own editions of the New General Atlas. The younger Mitchell became as prominent as his father, publishing maps and atlases until 1887, when most of the copyrights were again sold and the Mitchell firm closed its doors for the final time. Learn More...

Condition


Good. Closed margin tears professionally repaired on verso. Closed tear extending 2 inches into printed area from top margin professionally repaired on verso. Edge chipping.

References


OCLC 12279522.