1859 Boardman Map of the White Mountains, New Hampshire

WhiteMountains-boardman-1859-3
$1,200.00
Map of the White Mountains New Hampshire from Original Surveys. - Main View
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1859 Boardman Map of the White Mountains, New Hampshire

WhiteMountains-boardman-1859-3

Boardman's important map of the White Mountains.
$1,200.00

Title


Map of the White Mountains New Hampshire from Original Surveys.
  1859 (dated)     19.5 x 22.5 in (49.53 x 57.15 cm)     1 : 102000

Description


This is Harvey Boardman's 1858/59 map of the White Mountains, New Hampshire. This is among the first maps of the White Mountains made for the tourism industry - which, with the advantage of railroad access, opened the legendarily scenic area to regional travel.
A Closer Look
The remarkably useful map features roads, carriageways, and summit trails throughout the presidential range, Mount Moriah, Mount Lafayette, Mount Willard, and Cannon Mountain. It notes the locations of public buildings, churches, mills, and hotels. It is attractively decorated with vignettes of public houses and hotels throughout the region, naming their proprietors. Two tables in the lower right allow the calculation of distances between lodgings, making it relevant to the traveler. While Boardman is known to have surveyed the distances of the roads on his maps personally - contemporary reports have him trekking about the mountains with an odometer - he relied on the 1853 work of George Bond for elevations.
Tourism to the Whites
In 1858-59, the White Mountains emerged as a booming outdoor mecca as the region became a popular destination for urban visitors seeking natural beauty and fresh air. The completion of railroads made travel easier, bringing tourists from Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and other cities. The scenic landscape, characterized by towering peaks, dramatic valleys, and pristine forests, attracted artists, writers, and travelers. Grand hotels, such as the Mount Washington House (illustrated here) catered to wealthier visitors, offering comfortable accommodations in the wilderness. Outdoor activities like hiking and scenic carriage rides to famous landmarks, including Mount Washington, the Old Man in the Mountain, and Franconia Notch, became popular, as did the early form of landscape photography that helped publicize the area’s beauty. This era coincided with the Rusticators Movement, marking the beginning of the White Mountains as a premier destination in American tourism.
Publication History and Census
The present example of Boardman's map was printed in 1859 by John Henry Bufford. It is identifiable as the 1859 second state through several corrections (including the transposition of Mt. Jefferson and Mt. Adams) and the imprint of 'Smith, Knight and Tappan'. A further state, printed by H. S. Fifield in 1861, also exists. Over all of its editions, the map is well represented in institutional collections. We are aware of twelve examples in auctions and dealers' catalogs going back as far as 1911.

CartographerS


Harvey Boardman (October 14, 1833 - September 17, 1863) was an American surveyor and engineer in Griswold, Connecticut. The son of a wealthy farmer, it is likely that he was well educated, but we have no account of his particular training: accounts from 1857 have him surveying the White Mountains personally with an odometer, which suggests some expertise. He was acquainted with various important contemporaries in the surveying field, such as Arnold Guyot and the engraver J. H. Bufford. He was drafted into the Army in 1863 but refused to serve, believing that the Federal government had no constitutional power to prevent secession. He was arrested and imprisoned, first in Fort Trumbull in New London, and then Forrest Hall in Washington. The conditions of these prisons were both primitive and inhumane; Boardman died as a result in September of that year. More by this mapmaker...


John Henry Bufford (July 27, 1810 - October 8, 1870) was a Boston based lithographer and printer. Bufford was born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He apprenticed as an artist and lithographer at Pendleton Lithography (1825 - 1836) of Boston. In 1835 he relocated to New York where he took independent commissions from George Endicott and Nathaniel Currier, among others. Returning to his hometown of Boston in 1839, he took a position of chief artist with the firm of Benjamin W. Thayer, heir to Pendleton Lithography. He probably married Thayer's sister, Anna Melora Tufts Thayer (1808-1878). Bufford has been highly criticized as an engraver, with one historian, David Tatham, stating he had 'a mediocre sort of craftsmanship at best' and 'no very special skills as an original artist.' We, however, find no justification for this harsh criticism. Instead Bufford gravitated toward business and management. By 1844 Thayer's shop was renamed J. H. Bufford and Company. The firm specialized in decorative sheet music, panoramic views, illustrations for books, retractions of paintings, and commercial printing. Bufford is credited with being one of the first employers and mentors of the important artist and engraver Winslow Homer. Bufford died in 1870, passing on the business to his sons Frank G. Bufford and John Henry Bufford Jr. These young men, operating under the imprint of 'J.H. Bufford's Sons, Manufacturing Publishers of Novelties in Fine Arts', expanded the firm with offices in New York and Chicago. A possibly related lithographic printing firm named Bufford Chandler was incorporated in Boston in 1893. It later relocated to Concord, New Hampshire but closed in 1925 when its state business charter was repealed. Learn More...


George Girdler Smith (September 8, 1795 – December 18, 1878) was an American map and bank note engraver based in Boston throughout the 19th century. Smith was born in Danvers Massachusetts, the son of George Girdler Smith Sr. of Danvers and Sarah Girder of Marblehead. He was the grandson of Silas Smith, a privateer in the early part of the American Revolutionary War. He studied engraving under Abel Bowen Smith until 1815 and subsequently maintained an engraving studio on Boston’s Washington Street. In 1823 (although some suggest as early as 1818) he partnered with fellow Bowen apprentice, William B. Annin to found ‘Annin and Smith’. They were one of Boston’s earliest lithographic printers. As an engraver he worked with several other engravers and printers. In the 1850s he partnered with Charles A. Knight and George H. Tappan as ‘Smith, Knight, and Tappan’. In addition to his engraving work, he was an active churchman and a high-ranking Freemason Learn More...

Condition


Very good. Slight toning. Very slight verso reinforcements at some fold intersections.

References


Rumsey 3207.004. OCLC 44145194. Adam Apt, 'Harvard Astronomer George Phillips Bond and His Role in Mapping the White Mountains,' in Historical New Hampshire, vol. 57 nos. 1-2 (2002), pp. 39-56, #15. Cobb, New Hampshire in Maps to 1900 An Annotated Checklist, #244.