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1880 Ilsley Map of the White Mountains, New Hampshire

WhiteMountains-ilsley-1880
$125.00
Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad. Through the White Mountains. - Main View
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1880 Ilsley Map of the White Mountains, New Hampshire

WhiteMountains-ilsley-1880

An unsuccessful railroad through the White Mountains.

Title


Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad. Through the White Mountains.
  1880 (undated)     16.25 x 14 in (41.275 x 35.56 cm)     1 : 184320

Description


This is a c. 1880 Frederick Julian Ilsley map of the White Mountains in New Hampshire. Depicting from Lancaster on the Connecticut River south to Conway, the Saco River, and Black Sandwich Dome, thick black lines highlight the Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad's route through the mountains. Roads and rivers are illustrated and mountain peaks are identified.
Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad
The Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad was an unsuccessful railroad that planned to connect Portland, Maine and Ogdensburg, New York. Chartered in 1867, the railroad successfully connected Portland with a railroad junction call Fabyan at Carrol, New Hampshire in the White Mountains on August 7, 1875. Three railroad companies in Vermont consolidated on August 7, 1875 and formed the Vermont Division of the Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad. The Vermont Division was completed in 1877, but the railroad went bankrupt shortly after construction ended It went into receivership on October 19, 1877, and the railroad was broken up with the main division finally being reorganized into the Portland and Ogdensburg Railway on June 8, 1884.
Publication History and Census
This map was created by Frederick Julian Ilsley c. 1880 and engraved by the American Bank Note Company. This example was published in the 1880 edition of Chisholm's White Mountain Guide. An example is part of the collection at the New Hampshire Historical Society. An empty OCLC reference exists for this map, suggesting that an institution that was once affiliated with the OCLC but no longer is created the entry.

CartographerS


Frederick Julian Ilsley (March 6, 1855 - December 15, 1933) was an American artist. Born in Portland, Maine, Ilsley was self-taught. Ilsley worked as an engineer for Cumberland County Power and Light. He also was associated with Ilsley and Cummings, civil engineers. It is said that while working for Cumberland County Power and Light he traveled at least once a week to paint landscapes in Maine and New Hampshire. More by this mapmaker...


American Bank Note Company (1795 - present), known today simply as ABCorp, is an American corporation that traces its origins to the 1795 firm Murray, Draper, Fairman and Company, founded by Robert Scot, the first official engraver of the U.S. Mint. Initially the firm produced paper currency for the nation's thousands of state-chartered banks, superior quality stock and bond certificates, postage stamps (form 1879 - 1894), and other engraved and printed items, including maps. After the Panic of 1857, seven of the United States' most prominent securities printers merged, formally taking the name American Bank Note Company on April 29, 1858. Less than two years later, the remaining independent bank note printers merged to form the competing National Bank Note Company. When the US Treasury Department decided to circulate the first national paper currency at the outbreak of the Civil War, the American and National Bank Note Companies jointly received the contract, and, by the end of the war, had printed 7.25 million 'greenbacks'. Ironically, American and National were also producing paper money for the Confederacy. Following this first contract to print paper currency, American sought other contracts abroad, and ultimately supplied security paper and bank notes to 115 countries. In 1877, Congress passed a law establishing the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing as sole producer of U.S. currency. This forced a second shake up in the security printing industry, and in 1879, American formally absorbed both the National Bank Note and Continental Bank Note Companies. Continental at the time held the contract to print U.S. postage stamps, which continued under the American aegis. American completed the final contract for the private printing of postage stamps in 1894, just after printing the popular Columbian Exposition stamps. Subsequent postage stamps were printed by the federally administered U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Persevering, in 1891 the American Bank Note Company began printing a new currency for a longtime client: the American Express 'Travelers Cheque'. American printed 9,120 USD worth of Travelers Cheques that first year. Today ABCorp provides secure payment, retail and ID cards, vital record and transaction documents, systems and services to governments and financial institutions, and is one of the largest producers of plastic transaction cards in the world. Learn More...

Source


Chisholm, H. Chisholm's White Mountain Guide (Boston: Franklin Press) 1880.    

Condition


Good. Closed tear extending one inch along left border. Exhibits small areas of infill at six fold intersections.

References


New Hampshire Historical Society 100674. OCLC 57278554.