1840 S.D.U.K. Map of New York City

NewYorkCity-sduk-1840-2
$500.00
New York. - Main View
Processing...

1840 S.D.U.K. Map of New York City

NewYorkCity-sduk-1840-2

Scarce and beautiful map of New York City.
$500.00

Title


New York.
  1840 (dated)     12.5 x 15.75 in (31.75 x 40.005 cm)     1 : 22000

Description


This is an 1840 Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (S.D.U.K.) city plan or map of New York City.
A Closer Look
The map depicts southern Manhattan from the Battery northwards to 42nd Street, as well as portions of adjacent Jersey City, Brooklyn, and Williamsburg. Governors Island and Ellis Island appear in the harbor. Massive proposed docks extend far into the Hudson River - the first of many ambitious urban expansion projects that never materialized. Other proposed landfills ghosted-in on the East Side and in Williamsburg were actually developed. Shading illustrates the areas of heaviest development in each of the three cities. In Manhattan, specifically, no less than 40 important buildings are identified numerically and by a key in the upper right quadrant. Several ferry lines cross both the Hudson and East Rivers. Red highlighting indicates railroad lines and tramways. Engraved views illustrating 'Broadway from the Park' (City Hall Park with Trinity Church clearly visible in the background) and City Hall itself are situated in the lower left and lower right corners, respectively.
Publication History and Census
This map was published by the S.D.U.K. and dated February 1, 1840. The map was first issued independently as part of the S.D.U.K.'s subscriber-based serial atlas and then in later compiled editions of the atlas. Well represented institutionally.

Cartographer


The "Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge" (1826 - 1848) was a Whiggish organization founded in 1828 at the instigation of idealistic British lord Henry Peter Brougham. The admirable goal of the Society was to distribute useful information via a series of publications to the English working and middle classes. It promoted self-education and the egalitarian sharing of all knowledge. While closely tied to the London University and publishing houses on the order of Baldwin and Cradock, Chapman and Hall, and Charles Knight, the Society failed to achieve its many lofty goals in finally closed its doors in 1848. Most likely the failure of the Society resulted from its publications being too expensive for its intended lower to middle class markets and yet not large and fine enough to appeal to the aristocratic market. Nonetheless, it did manage to publish several extraordinary atlases of impressive detail and sophistication. Their most prominent atlas consisted of some 200 separately issued maps initially published by Baldwin and Cradock and sold by subscription from 1829 to 1844. Afterwards, the Society combined the maps into a single world atlas published under the Chapman and Hall imprint. In its day, this atlas was unprecedented in its quality, scope, and cost effectiveness. Today Society, or S.D.U.K. as it is commonly known, maps are among the most impressive examples of mid-19th century English mass market cartographic publishing available. The S.D.U.K. is especially known for its beautiful and accurately detailed city plans. More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Very good.

References


Rumsey 0890.192.