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1945 Traster and Wilson Bird's Eye View of Miami and Miami Beach, Florida

MiamiMiamiBeach-trasterwilson-1945
$275.00
[Miami. Miami Beach.] - Main View
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1945 Traster and Wilson Bird's Eye View of Miami and Miami Beach, Florida

MiamiMiamiBeach-trasterwilson-1945

A wartime bird's eye view of Miami promoting tourism in the city.

Title


[Miami. Miami Beach.]
  1945 (undated)     19.25 x 33.5 in (48.895 x 85.09 cm)

Description


This is a 1945 R.C. Traster, Sr. and Carmel Wilson bird's eye view of Miami and Miami Beach, Florida. From high over the Atlantic Ocean, the view overlooks the region from the east, with Biscayne Bay stretching to the left off the sheet. Myriad buildings are illustrated throughout, many of which are labeled as housing private companies, bars, restaurants, and schools, among others. Streets are illustrated and labeled, with major streets colored white such that they are easily located, while neighborhood streets are darker and fade into the landscape. The three causeways connecting the two cities are labeled, as are the islands in Biscayne Bay, including Belle Isle, Palm Island, and Star Island. The whole is framed by advertisements promoting local businesses, shopping centers, realtors, restaurants, hotels, and public transit. Columns on the left and right sides list hotels that are 'open to civilians' and include a grid location to help viewers locate them on the present map.
Publication History and Census
This map was created by R.C. Traster, Sr., painted by Carmel Wilson, and published by the Florida Retailers Supply Company in 1945. We found a newspaper advertisement in The Miami Herald from March 18, 1945 that allowed us to date this piece. This is the only known surviving example.

CartographerS


R.C. Traster, Sr. (18xx - 19xx) was an American printer, publisher, map maker, and advertising agent active in Miami during the first half of the twentieth century. Traster arrived in Miami in 1929 as the president of the T-A-D Companhy, which specialized in aerial advertising. He planned to spend the winter there promoting aviation in the city, particularly on behalf of the manufacturer of the Monocoupe. By the mid-1930s, Traster was publishing maps and views of American cities, particularly Miami and by the late 1940s was publishing guidebooks of South Florida. More by this mapmaker...


Marguerite Carmel Wilson (February 5, 1893 - November 10, 1977), known as Carmel Wilson in art circles, was an American artist and draughtsman. Born in New York City, Wilson née Becht, grew up in Pennsylvania and studied art at the School of Industrial Art at the Pennsylvania Museum in Philadelphia. After receiving her diploma, she volunteered to work in Europe during World War I. Her departure, however, was delayed for a month after she fell ill with influenza, then a global pandemic. She did not leave New York until after Armistice Day and soon after arriving in France was assigned to work in a canteen in Cauterets, in the south of France, where many American soldiers were being sent to recuperate from the flu. Wilson married Enoch Marvin Wilson in 1920, and soon after their marriage Carmel accompanied her husband to Poland, where he worked as an athletic director for the Y.M.C.A and she worked as a hostess in the Y.M.C.A. in Warsaw. After she and her husband returned from Poland, they settled in Coral Gables, Florida, and Wilson resumed her painting and artistic works. She did not work in one specific medium and created work in water colors and oils, as well as charchoal and pen-and-ink sketches. During the Great Depression, Wilson worked as a WPA artist. Over the course of her career, Wilson created several pictorial maps which were used published on postcards and in brochures in the 1930s and produced other later i nthe 1950s, one of which appeared in J. Calvin Mills' 'Highlights of Greater Miami' guidebook. She was a member of the Women's Overseas Service League of Miami. Learn More...

Condition


Average. Exhibits soiling. Wear along original fold lines. Verso repairs to fold separations and at fold intersections. Printed text and maps on verso.