1952 Denoyer-Geppert Literary Pictorial Map of the United States

UnitedStatesLiterary-denoyergeppert-1952
$2,750.00
A Pictorial Map Depicting the Literary Development of the United States - Main View
Processing...

1952 Denoyer-Geppert Literary Pictorial Map of the United States

UnitedStatesLiterary-denoyergeppert-1952

Celebrating American Literature.
$2,750.00

Title


A Pictorial Map Depicting the Literary Development of the United States
  1952 (dated)     41 x 63 in (104.14 x 160.02 cm)     1 : 3168000

Description


A spectacular 1952 Jean Boys pictorial wall map of the United States celebrating American literature.
A Closer Look
The map covers the United States from Coast to Coast, with insets of 'Bret Harte Country' California, New Orleans, and Lower Manhattan. Vignettes highlight important authors and locations from literature, generally accompanied by the author's name and the book in question. The most interesting, to us, include Brer Rabbit on the Savannah River, Booker T. Washington in Tuskegee, and Wizard of Oz characters in South Dakota, among many others. Green banners add additional content regarding areas that are off the map or just too dense to feature more general illustrations: Alaska, Harlem, Mexico, etc. Several important trans-continental routes, well referenced in literature, are noted and keyed to a legend in the lower left. The whole is surrounded by a mid-century style border, with unnamed portraits of literary heroes in each corner.
Publication History and Census
This map was compiled by Henry J Firley and illustrated by Jean Boys. It was published in Chicago by the educational publishing firm Denoyer-Geppert. OCLC records editions in 1952 (as here) and 1961, suggesting this is the first edition. We note 12 holdings of various editions in OCLC, and no history on the private market.

Cartographer


The Denoyer-Geppert Company (1916 - 1984) was a Chicago-based publishing firm that dealt in maps, atlases, and spherical cartography (globes). For 68 years, the company played a critical role in the education of the world’s students. Founded in 1916 by Otto E. Geppert (the salesman) and L. Philip Denoyer (the cartographer/editor). Denier was born in Milwaukee in 1875 and was a high school principal by the age of 32. He was also completing graduate work at the University of Chicago at the same time. He was appointed the first Professor of Geology and Geography at the State Teacher’s College - La Crosse (University of Wisconsin) in 1909. Legend has it that Denoyer met Geppert while teaching one of his classes, when the latter came up from Chicago to sit in on one. Geppert was working as a salesman for A.J. Nystrom and Company, which today self-identifies as ‘the United States’ older publisher of wall maps and globes for classroom use.’ Geppert was there to sell Denoyer on joining the team at Nostrum, believing that his expertise could benefit the company. Three years later they founded the Denoyer-Geppert Company, and within six years had moved from a 500 square foot space into the 50,000 square foot Swedish-American Telephone Building. By 1922, their catalogue consisted of ‘1,200 maps, charts, globes, and associate aids in teaching geography and history and 800 brilliantly illuminated biological charts and anatomical models.’ In 1967, Denoyer-Geppert was contracted by NASA to build the first official and accurate ‘lunar globe’, based on information gathered by Apollo 10 astronauts. The company made 200 of these globes, the first of which was presented by the astronauts of Apollo 10 to President Nixon. Rand McNally, one of their major competitors, bought out their inventory of maps and globes in 1984. Denoyer-Geppert left the Swedish-American Telephone Building and reinvented the company as the Denoyer-Geppert Science Company, which specializes in anatomical models for classrooms. The Swedish-American Telephone Company has been named a historic landmark and was remodeled into loft apartments. More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Very good. Original linen backing. A few minor spots.

References


University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 800 M-[1952]. OCLC 1411098947. Library of Congress, G3701.E65 1952.D4.