This is a 1918 Clason Map Company map of northern France illustrating the movements of the front line in World War I through late October 1918. Unlike World War II, World War I was fought along mostly static lines of trenches in northern France and Belgium from 1914 through 1918. The map depicts the region from the English Channel and Dieppe to Strasburg (Strassburg) in Alsace, then part of Germany, and from Holland and the North Sea to Colmar. Red overprinting is used to illustrate the battle line at seven different times during the four-year slaughter. The furthest line depicts the farthest advance of the German army, when they reached within thirty kilometers of the center of Paris before their advance was stopped by the French at the First Battle of the Marne. This is the battle that includes the fabled taxis of Paris ferrying soldiers to the battlefield. Dashed lines also trace the German offensives of March and June 1918, collectively known as the Spring Offensive. The two thin solid lines mark the battle lines of October 7, 1918 and October 14, 1918, which were part of the Hundred Days Offensive, a campaign that began in August 1918 with the Battle of Amiens. Following the Allied success in the Battle of Amiens, the Germans fell back to the Hindenburg Line, a well-fortified defensive line that was established in 1917 and is illustrated and labeled here. The Hundred Days Offensive, in fact a series of battles that pushed back the Central Powers, eventually led to the end of the war. The final, bold battle line reinforces how far the Germans and other Central Powers had been pushed back since the beginning of the Hundred Days Offensive.
Publication History and Census
This map was created by the Clason Map Company and published in 1918. We are aware of at least three different editions of this map, this being an example of the third edition. Likely published as a means for American civilians to keep track of where the American Expeditionary Force was fighting, previous editions include the battle lines up to their date of publication. All three editions of the map are scarce on the private market with only ten examples of varying editions catalogued in institutional collections.
Cartographer
George Samuel Clason (November 7, 1874 - 1957) was born in the city of Louisiana, Missouri in 1874. As a young man, Clason studied at the University of Nebraska before joining the United States Army in 1898 to fight in the Spanish American War. After the war, he moved to Denver, Colorado where in 1905 he founded the Clason Map Company, thus starting his lucrative publishing career. Clason initially focused on mining and mineral maps - capitalizing on the Colorado and Nevada mining industry, but quickly transitioned to railroad maps, city maps, and by the 1920s, road maps. As the company expanded, Clason opened a secondary office in Chicago, Illinois - then a rising map publishing center and railroad hub. At least one other satellite office was opened in Los Angeles. Among his many achievements, Clason is credited with producing the first modern road atlas of the United States. In the late 1920s, Clason also published a series of get-rich-quick pamphlets in the form of parables. The most famous of these is The Richest Man in Babylon. This tells the story of Arkad, a citizen of Babylon famed for his great wealth and generosity who shares his wit and wisdom with his fellow Babylonians. In 1949, Clason moved to Napa, California to retire and found a social club for retired gentlemen. More by this mapmaker...
Very good. Verso repairs at fold intersection and to fold separations. Closed tear extending 1.5 inches into printed area from left margin professionally repaired on verso. Extensive index printed on verso.
OCLC 381529939.