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.

1910 Bureau of Soils Soil Map of Jacksonville, Florida, and Environs

JacksonvilleSoilMap-bureausoils-1910
$200.00
Soil Map. Florida. Jacksonville Sheet. - Main View
Processing...

1910 Bureau of Soils Soil Map of Jacksonville, Florida, and Environs

JacksonvilleSoilMap-bureausoils-1910

Different soil in and around Jacksonville.

Title


Soil Map. Florida. Jacksonville Sheet.
  1910 (dated)     20.5 x 18.25 in (52.07 x 46.355 cm)     1 : 63360

Description


This is a 1910 U.S. Bureau of Soils soil map of Jacksonville, Florida, and environs. Various colors highlight different types of soil throughout the region.
A Closer Look
Jacksonville appears on the right, on the banks of the St. Johns River, with its street grid illustrated, although unlabeled. Nine different color/pattern combinations identify areas of differing soil composition, including Portsmouth fine sand, Portsmouth fine sandy loam, Swamp, and Tidal marsh. A legend outside the right border explains these notations and abbreviations on the map help the viewer identify the specific soils in question. The region's road network is illustrated in detail, along with the railroad network.
Publication History and Census
This map was created from soil surveys conducted by Grove B. Jones and James E. Ferguson and published by the Bureau of Soils, U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 1910. We note five examples cataloged in OCLC which are part of the collections at the U.S. Geological Survey Library, Michigan State University, the University of Chicago, the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, and Brigham Young University.

CartographerS


Grove Barclay Jones (September 30, 1877 - February 22, 1937) was an American scientist and businessman. Born near Kirkersville in Licking County, Ohio, Jones and his family moved to Granville, Ohio, when he was nine. He attended schools in Granville and then received a bachelor's degree from Denison University in 1898, followed by a master's degree in 1899. He worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture until 1922 and then returned to Granville where he opened his own business. He married Edith Cox on January 31, 1912, with whom he had one child. More by this mapmaker...


Julius (Julien) Bien (September 27, 1826 - December 21, 1909) was a German-Jewish lithographer and engraver based in New York City. Bien was born in Naumburg, Germany. He was educated at the Academy of Fine Arts, Cassell and at Städel's Institute, Frankfurt-am-Main. Following the suppression of the anti-autocratic German Revolutions of 1848, Bien, who participated in the pan-German movement, found himself out of favor in his home country and joined the mass German immigration to the United States. Bien can be found in New York as early as 1849. He established the New York Lithographing, Engraving & Printing Company in New York that focused on the emergent chromo-lithograph process - a method of printing color using lithographic plates. His work drew the attention of the U.S. Government Printing Office which contracted him to produce countless government maps and surveys, including the Pacific Railroad Surveys, the census, numerous coast surveys, and various maps relating to the American Civil War. Bien also issued several atlases both privately and in conjunction with a relation, Joseph Bien. At the height of his career Bien was elected president of the American Lithographers Association. After his death in 1909, Bien's firm was taken over by his son who promptly ran it into insolvency. The firm was sold to Sheldon Franklin, who, as part of the deal, retained the right to publish under the Julius Bien imprint. In addition to his work as a printer, Bien was active in the New York German Jewish community. He was director of the New York Hebrew Technical Institute, the New York Hebrew Orphan Asylum, and president of the B'nai B'rith Order. Learn More...

Condition


Very good. Light wear along original fold lines.

References


OCLC 69329468.