1890 Vorzet Map of Nashville, Tennessee, Galveston, Texas, and Barshear City, Louisiana

NashvilleGalveston-vorzet-1890
$350.00
Brashear City (Louisianie) / Nashville (Tennessee) / Galveston (Texas). - Main View
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1890 Vorzet Map of Nashville, Tennessee, Galveston, Texas, and Barshear City, Louisiana

NashvilleGalveston-vorzet-1890

A Crushing Defeat for the Confederacy at Nashville.
$350.00

Title


Brashear City (Louisianie) / Nashville (Tennessee) / Galveston (Texas).
  1890 (undated)     13.75 x 10 in (34.925 x 25.4 cm)

Description


This sheet, including three detailed maps, was prepared by Ernest Dumas-Vorzet for the 1890 work Histoire de la Guerre Civile en Amérique. It maps battles at Nashville, Galveston, and Brashear City, three important battles in the Western and Trans-Mississippi Theaters of the U.S. Civil War.
A Closer Look
Despite their different subjects and scales, all three maps emphasize the topography and terrain of the battlefields in question while also noting roads, railways, settlements, waterways, shoals, and other terrestrial and maritime features. Galveston was the site of two battles: a confused but ultimately bloodless Union capture of the city in October 1862 and a successful Confederate counter-attack on New Year's Day 1863. The Battle of Brashear City (now Morgan City) on June 22 - 23, 1863, was, like the first engagement at Galveston, fairly unusual. In this case, a small Confederate force snuck to the outskirts of the city at night. It attacked the much larger Union garrison the next morning, taking them by surprise and capturing hundreds of enemy soldiers and weapons with very light casualties.

But the Battle of Nashville in 1864 was the most influential of the three depicted here. After falling to Union troops in February 1862, Nashville had been the target of Confederate hopes for a revival in the Western Theater, which had gone quite badly for them. Late in the war, in mid-December 1864, as Sherman was completing his 'March to the Sea,' Confederate General John Bell Hood tried to draw out Union forces at Nashville in a desperate attempt to turn the tide of the war. However, the Union forces were overwhelming and routed Hood's army, scoring one of the more lopsided Union victories of the conflict and effectively ending the war in the Western Theater.
Publication History and Census
This map was drafted by Ernest Dumas-Vorzet, engraved by Louis Wuhrer, printed by Becquet, and published by Michel Lévy in Paris for the 1890 French edition of Philippe d'Orléans' Histoire de la Guerre Civile en Amérique. The atlas supplement, of which this map was part, was issued only with the 1890 French publication and not included in any of the earlier English editions. The entire work, in this edition, is uncommon in institutional collections, with only 3 being identified in OCLC, and is scarce to the market. Most examples lack the atlas, which in OCLC appears only at the Boston Athenaeum. Very little market history.

CartographerS


Ernest Dumas-Vorzet (18?? - 18??) was a French line and letter engraver active in Paris in the late 19th century. He engraved the lettering on nautical charts for the Dépôt des Cartes et Plans de la Marine. His later work is often associated with Émile Delaune (18?? - 19??) and Hachette et Cie. He is likely the father of Edouard Dumas-Vorzet, a French publisher and cartographer. More by this mapmaker...


Frédéric Louis Charles Wuhrer (1844 - 1925) was a French cartographer, engraver, and artist. He lived in the town of Buc, France, where he purchased the former Town Hall. Wuhrer is better known as a landscape artist, with a strong record at auctions. Little is known of his engraving work, but the Bibliothèque nationale de France has over one hundred pieces in their collection attributed to his name. Learn More...


Louis-Philippe-Albert d'Orléans, Comte de Paris (August 24, 1838 - September 8, 1894) was a French prince, scholar, officer in the American Civil War (1861 - 1865), and unofficially King of France (February 24, 1848). Louis-Philippe-Albert was the grandson of French king, Louis Philippe I of the house of Orléans. With the advent of the French Second Republic (1848 - 1852), Louis-Philippe-Albert and his family fled to the United States. Louis-Philippe-Albert became an outspoken journalist who, when the Civil War broke out, volunteered to serve in the Union Army, being instantly appointed assistant adjutant general under General George McClellan with the rank of captain. During his service, he used the abbreviated name Philippe d'Orléans. He served in the Peninsular Campaign, the first large-scale offensive in the Eastern Theater, but resigned from service in July 1862. Later, he wrote a History of the Civil War in America, published in 1875. He returned to Europe in 1864, where in England, he married his paternal first cousin, Princess Marie Isabelle d'Orléans (1848–1919), Infanta of Spain. In 1871, after the Franco-Prussian War and the downfall of Napoleon III, they were allowed to return to France, and many of their properties were restored. He renounced all claims to the French throne in 1873 but was still considered by some Orléanists as Philippe VII of France. In 1886, the prince and his family again went into exile in London, where he died in 1894. Learn More...


Michel Lévy (1821 - May 4, 1875) was a French publisher and founder of the Michel Lévy Frères publishing house. Born in Phalsbourg in the Moselle to a bookseller (colporteur), he began selling books in Paris at the age of fifteen under the name Michel Lévy Frères. Although his brothers Kalmus (Calmann) and Nathan were sometimes involved in his business, Michel was the primary bookseller and later publisher. Initially, Lévy focused on works relating to the theater, but later expanded into literature, periodicals, and other fields. By the 1860s, Michel Lévy Frères was one of the major publishers in France, putting out works by the likes of Honoré de Balzac, Gustave Flaubert, and Victor Hugo. Michel Lévy was inducted into the Légion d'Honneur in 1873, but died unexpectedly two years later. Afterwards, his brother took charge of the firm, then renamed Calmann Lévy (sometimes as Calmann-Lévy), and it continued its success as a leading publisher in France. In 1893, Calmann turned over the business to his three sons, Georges, Paul, and Gaston, who ran it until the Second World War, when Gaston was interned by the Nazis and the publishing house was renamed Editions Balzac. After the war, the firm continued and still exists today as a subsidiary of Hachette. Learn More...

Source


Orleans, Louis-Philippe-Albert d', Histoire de la Guerre Civile en Amérique, par M. le comte de Paris, (Paris: Michel Lévy) 1890.    

Condition


Very good. Mounted on linen.

References


LC Civil War Maps (2nd ed.), 80. OCLC (one sheet cataloged three times) 877854532, 877854531, 877854598.