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1855 Colton Map of New York City and Brooklyn (First Edtion!)

NewYorkCity2-colton-1855
$212.50
Map of New York and the Adjacent Cities. - Main View
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1855 Colton Map of New York City and Brooklyn (First Edtion!)

NewYorkCity2-colton-1855

First edition of Colton's influential map of New York City.

Title


Map of New York and the Adjacent Cities.
  1855 (dated)     17 x 27.25 in (43.18 x 69.215 cm)

Description


This is an 1856 first edition Joseph Hutchins Colton city map or plan of New York City. The map depicts the region from Red Hook in Brooklyn to Eighty-Sixth Street and from Jersey City and Hoboken to Brooklyn and Queens. This is the first edition, first state, of the Colton New York City atlas map in which Olmsted’s Central Park is completely absent. This important map would become the template from which Johnson and late later S. A. Mitchell Jr. would build their own New York City maps. Manhattan's iconic street grid is illustrated in detail and nearly all the streets and avenues are labeled. The Battery, Washington Square, Union Square, and Madison Square are illustrated and labeled. City precincts are numbered and shaded different colors to allow for easy differentiation.
Publication History
this map was originally prepared as plates no 17 and 18 for publication in J. H. Colton’s 1856 single volume issue of the Atlas of the World…. Dated and copyrighted: 'entered according to the Act of Congress in the Year of 1855 by J. H. Colton and Co. in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.' Published from Colton’s 172 William Str. office in New York.

Cartographer


Joseph Hutchins Colton (July 5, 1800 - July 29, 1893), often publishing as J. H. Colton, was an important American map and atlas publisher active from 1833 to 1897. Colton's firm arose from humble beginnings when he moved to New York in 1831 and befriended the established engraver Samuel Stiles. He worked under Stiles as the 'Co.' in Stiles and Co. from 1833 to 1836. Colton quickly recognized an emerging market in railroad maps and immigrant guides. Not a cartographer or engraver himself, Colton's initial business practice mostly involved purchasing the copyrights of other cartographers, most notably David H. Burr, and reissuing them with updated engraving and border work. His first maps, produced in 1833, were based on earlier Burr maps and depicted New York State and New York City. Between 1833 and 1855 Colton would proceed to publish a large corpus of guidebooks and railroad maps which proved popular. In the early 1850s Colton brought his two sons, George Woolworth Colton (1827 - 1901) and Charles B. Colton (1832 - 1916), into the map business. G. W. Colton, trained as a cartographer and engraver, was particularly inspired by the idea of creating a large and detailed world atlas to compete established European firms for the U.S. market. In 1855, G.W. Colton issued volume one the impressive two volume Colton's Atlas of the World. Volume two followed a year later. Possibly because of the expense of purchasing a two-volume atlas set, the sales of the Atlas of the World did not meet Colton's expectations and so, in 1856, the firm also issued the atlas as a single volume. The maps contained in this superb work were all original engravings and most bear an 1855 copyright. All of the maps were surrounded by an attractive spiral motif border that would become a hallmark of Colton's atlas maps well into the 1880s. In 1857, the slightly smaller Colton's General Atlas replaced the Atlas of the World, which lacked the border. Most early editions of the General Atlas published from 1857 to 1859 do not have the trademark Colton spiral border, which was removed to allow the maps to fit into a smaller format volume. Their customers must have missed the border because it was reinstated in 1860 and remained in all subsequent publications of the atlas. There were also darker times ahead, in 1858 Colton was commissioned at sum of 25,000 USD by the government of Bolivia to produce and deliver 10,000 copies a large format map of that country. Although Colton completed the contract in good faith, delivering the maps at his own expense, he was never paid by Bolivia, which was at the time in the midst of a series national revolutions. Colton would spend the remainder of his days fighting with the Bolivian and Peruvian governments over this payment and in the end, after a congressional intervention, received as much as 100,000 USD in compensation. Nonetheless, at the time it must have been a disastrous blow. J. H. Colton and Company is listed as one of New York's failed companies in the postal record of 1859. It must have been this that led Colton into the arms of Alvin Jewett Johnson and Ross C. Browning. The 1859 edition of Colton's General Atlas lists Johnson and Browning as the 'Successor's to J. H. Colton' suggesting an outright buyout, but given that both companies continued to publish separately, the reality is likely more complex. Whatever the case may have been, this arrangement gave Johnson and Browning access to many of Colton's map plates and gave birth to Johnson's New Illustrated (Steel Plate) Family Atlas. The Johnson's Atlas was published parallel to Colton's atlas well in to the 1880s. The Colton firm itself subsequently published several other atlases including an Atlas of America, the Illustrated Cabinet Atlas, the Octavo Atlas of the Union, and Colton's Quarto Atlas of the World. They also published a large corpus of wall maps, pocket maps, and guides. The last known publications of the Colton firm date to 1897 and include a map and a view, both issued in association with the Merchant's Association of New York. Alice M. Colton married August R. Ohman (May 3, 1859 - April 22, 1934) on January 5, 1897. In 1898, Ohman joined the Colton firm, which continued to publish as Colton, Ohman & Co. until 1901. More by this mapmaker...

Source


Colton, G.W., Colton's Atlas Of The World, Illustrating Physical And Political Geography. (1856 single volume edition)    

Condition


Very good. Even overall toning. Wear and soiling along original centerfold. Verso repair to centerfold separation. Manuscript writing near Battery Park. Blank on verso.

References


Rumsey 0149.024. Phillips (Atlases) 816.