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1891 General Survey Office Map of the North Island of New Zealand

NorthIsland-surveyoffice-1891
$600.00
Map of the North Island, New Zealand. - Main View
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1891 General Survey Office Map of the North Island of New Zealand

NorthIsland-surveyoffice-1891

An incredibly detailed map of the North Island of New Zealand.

Title


Map of the North Island, New Zealand.
  1891 (undated)     36.5 x 26 in (92.71 x 66.04 cm)     1 : 935000

Description


This is a c. 1891 New Zealand General Survey Office map of the North Island of New Zealand. The map depicts the region from the Tasman Sea to the South Pacific Ocean and from the Three Kings Islands to Karamea Bight. Highly detailed, myriad cities, towns, and villages are labeled throughout the island, including Auckland and Wellington. Roads are illustrated across the island, along with railroads as of 1887. Numerous coastal islands, points, bays, and other formations are also identified. A ship's course around nearly all of the North Island is indicated in manuscript, with the notation 'T.W. Oliver 1889' marked above Hauraki Gulf. Unfortunately, we have been unable to trace this reference.
Publication History and Census
This map was created by the General Survey Office of New Zealand under the tenure of S. Percy Smith c. 1891. The OCLC records an example of a map bearing the same title and publisher as being part of the collection at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Cartographer


Stephenson Percy Smith (June 11, 1840 - April 19, 1922) was a British surveyor and ethnologist who spent nearly his entire life in New Zealand. Born in Beccles, Suffolk, England. Known as Percy all his life, Smith's parents, John Stephenson Smith and Hannah Hursthouse, moved the family to New Plymouth, New Zealand, in the fall of 1849. Smith attended school in New Plymouth and Omata before ending his studies in 1854 to help on the family farm. He joined the provincial survey department in February 1855, spending his spare time going out of surveying excursions. He and four others set out on a two-month expedition into the interior of the North Island in January 1858 covering over 600 miles on foot, by canoe, and on horseback. Smith moved to Auckland in 1862, where he married Mary Anne Crompton on April 23, 1863, and stayed there until he was given a position in New Plymouth as district surveyor. Smith spent the years from 1864 tunic 1874 working on numerous different surveying projects around New Zealand, and his hard work was rewarded with several promotions. Smith was named assistant surveyor general in 1881, and commissioner of Crown lands for the Auckland district in 1888. He became surveyor general and secretary for lands and mines in January 1889 and held these positions until his retirement on October 30, 1900. Smith was also a founding member of the Polynesian Society. Today, Smith's work is remembered for its groundbreaking achievements, but also recognized for its faults. Most of his research concerning the Maori is generally accepted as unreliable today, but it is important to remember that his studies laid the groundwork for ethnology in New Zealand. Smith died on April 19, 1922, eleven years after his wife. Percy and Mary had four children together. More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Very good. Dissected and mounted on linen in 16 panels. Blank on verso.

References


OCLC 865944404.