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Maps

Terrestrial Globe - Before treatment
Before treatment

Terrestrial Globe - Before treatment
Before treatment

Terrestrial Globe - Before treatment
Before treatment

Terrestrial - Globe Discolored shellac being removed
Discolored shellac being removed

Terrestrial Globe
After treatment

James Wilson, Globe Maker
James Wilson
[Terrestrial Globe]
3" globe, 1820's
Geography & Map Division

James Wilson was the first American globe maker. Starting as a Vermont farmer, he taught himself geography and apprenticed as an engraver in order to make paper globe gores. The skilled carpenter also made the spheres and wooden stands for his 3-, 9-, and 11-inch globes. His sons joined him in his Albany, N.Y., business and together they produced globes from 1811 to the late 1820s.

Treatment: The images on the sphere and horizon ring of this terrestrial globe were obscured by discolored shellac. There were multiple design losses on the horizon ring, as well as a break in its wooden structure. Conservators removed the discolored shellac using cotton swabs and solvent. They infilled and inpainted delicately and judiciously the design losses on the horizon ring.


Early Map of America
Americae sive quartae orbis partis nova et exactissima descriptio.
(Auctore Diego Gutiero Philippi Regis Hisp. etc. Cosmographo. Hiero Cock Excude. 1562),
Geography and Map Division

In 1562 Diego Gutiérrez, a Spanish cartographer from the respected Casa de la Contratación, and Hieronymous Cock, a noted engraver from Antwerp, collaborated in the preparation of a spectacular and ornate map of what was then referred to as the fourth part of the world, America. The map depicts the Spanish dominion of America. It shows the eastern coast of North America, all of Central and South America, and portions of the western coasts of Europe and Africa.

Treatment: The map was engraved on six assembled sheets of laid paper that were later lined with modern bond paper and fabric. However, areas of the map were badly damaged, tears were poorly aligned and repairs of pressure-sensitive tape were applied to the back prior to lining. Parts of the map were obscured by the overlap of neighboring sections. In order to take off the tape, conservators removed the linings by immersing the map in a water bath. They separated the sections using an enzyme to dissolve the old adhesive. They repaired damaged areas and aligned tears by mending with Japanese tissue and wheat starch paste. Finally, they reassembled the sections to reveal as much image as possible. Following conservation , the Library produced a full-size facsimile of the map which is available for sale in the Library's gift shop.

Americae sive quartae orbis partis nova et exactissima descriptio
During treatment

Americae sive quartae orbis partis nova et exactissima descriptio
After treatment


Universalior cogniti orbis tabula
Before treatment

Universalior cogniti orbis tabula

Universalior cogniti orbis tabula

Universalior cogniti orbis tabula

Mapping the New World

Johann Ruysch
" Universalior cogniti orbis tabula..." in Claudius Ptolemaeus' Georgraphia
Rome: Bernardius de Vitalibus
1507
Geography & Map Division

In 1507 and 1508, Bernardus Venetus de Vitalibus published editions of Ptolemy's Geography in Rome. It included not only the theretofore traditional 27 maps, but seven additional maps based on contemporary information. These are the first editions to include a world map showing the discoveries of the New World. The map, drawn by Johann Ruysch, clearly reveals the confusion that existed concerning the nature of the discoveries occurring in the New World. For example, Columbus's discoveries are drawn as islands off the coast of Asia, while Newfoundland, discovered by John Cabot in 1497, is shown as a peninsula of Asia.

Treatment: Conservators removed the textblock from its binding and disbound the pages. They brushed a solution of hydrogen peroxide over lead paint on two maps that had darkened with age and the dark color reverted to white They then drycleaned each page, washed them in water, and deacidified them using a dilute solution of magnesium bicarbonate. They made paper mends with Japanese tissue and wheat starch paste. The pages were resewn with linen thread over split alum-tawed strips. They also sewed on new endbands. Finally, they created a full limp vellum cover with yapp edges and exposed sewing strips, in a style sympathetic to the period in which the map was produced.


French Atlas
Gerard Mercator
Atlas Minor, ou briefve et vive description de tout le Monde
Amsterdam, Chez. I. Ianson, 1630

Geography and Map Division

This atlas is the first French edition of Mercator's Atlas, translated from the 1607 Latin edition which contains 146 maps produced between 1512-1594. Mercator, a copper engraver and globe maker, is credited with revolutionizing 17th century cartography through his use of modern scientific methods to measure and create new maps rather than revising existing maps. In 1604 Mercator's copper plates were sold to Amsterdam cartographer Joducus Hondius and republished in several languages.

Treatment: Conservators disbound the atlas from its deteriorated binding and washed its pages in water. Next, pages were deacidified in a separate bath. The pages were mended and guarded with japanese tissue. To complete the treatment, the volume was sewn and rebound in full leather.

L'Atlas Ou Meditations Cosmographiques de la Fabrique du Monde

L'Atlas Ou Meditations Cosmographiques de la Fabrique du Monde

L'Atlas Ou Meditations Cosmographiques de la Fabrique du Monde


The Oztoticpac Lands Map
During treatment The Oztoticpac Lands Map
Before treatment The Oztoticpac Lands Map
Detail of worm holes The Oztoticpac Lands Map
After treatment

Earliest Recorded Land Dispute
The Oztoticpac Lands Map.
[Mexico,] ca. 1540.
Manuscript on "amatl" paper.
Geography and Map Division

The Oztoticpac (Mexico) Lands Map is a central Mexican pictorial document with Spanish and Nahuatl writing showing litigation surrounding the Oztoticpac estate within the city of Texcoco, ca. 1540.

As far as is known, this is the earliest recorded lawsuit or conflict in horticultural literature anywhere in the world. The document, on pre-European "amatl" paper, involves the land and property ownership of the ruler of Texcoco, who was publicly executed in Mexico City during the early days of the Spanish Conquest in the Central Valley of Mexico. The execution left in its wake litigation involving ownership of properties claimed by various sons of Nezahualpilli, the lords of Texcoco.

In the lower left of the map are depictions of tree grafts showing European fruit tree branches grafted to indigenous tree trunks. These are the only such depictions among all known Mexican Indian pictorial documents.Shown are 20 trees identified as pomegranate, quince, apple, and pear.

Treatment: A paper conservator removed fabric and paper backings from the fibrous two-ply original paper by applying a series of three sandwiches of soaked blotters to humidify the backings. The blotters came away dirty from pollutants that had lodged in the paper. The conservator then removed backings with a scalpel.

However, a stodgy orange adhesive still remained. To prevent original fibers from detaching, the conservator removed most of the adhesive by brushing it from underneath through an upholstery hoop stretched with bridal veil mesh netting.

The conservator filled in the extensive worm-hole damage using pulp from modern amatl paper handmade in the traditional fashion. Because the front ply and back ply were different colors, the conservator used colored pencils to tint the front.

Conservators made a sink mat with a polyester window that does not touch the surface to house and display the oversized map.


Portalan Charts
[Portolan Atlas of Nine Charts and a World Map. Dedicated to Hieronymus Ruffault, Abbot of St. Vaast]
Agnese, Battista, 1514-1564.
Geography & Map Division

This ca. 1544 nautical atlas of the world was rendered on vellum in pen-and-ink and watercolor and shows America at various stages of exploration. It includes an oval map, decorated with twelve named wind cherubim, that shows Magellan's route around the world, according to Ristow and Skelton's Nautical Charts on Vellum in the Library of Congress, 1977.

Treatment: Conservators carefully examined the charts for stability of pigments and condition of the vellum. Under microscopic magnification, they consolidated pigments which were actively flaking and in danger of loss with gelatin or parchment size diluted with ethanol. Where the vellum was cockled, the chart was humidified and flattened. Repairs of tears and losses were done with tinted vellum using parchment size for the adhesive.

Portalan Charts

Clicking on the above image will take you to the Library's digitized version.


Goldthwaite's Map of the World
Before treatment Goldthwaite's Map of the World
During treatment Goldthwaite's Map of the World
After treatment

Handy Hemispheres
Goldthwaite's Map of the World
1900
Geography and Map Division

This unique globe shows the world divided into eastern and western hemispheres. It includes an inset showing torrid, temperate, and frigid zones as well as the wildlife which inhabits each zone. The map was registered for copyright in November 1900 by William M. Goldwaite, Chicago, Ill.

Treatment: Conservators dry cleaned the globe. They washed the boards and removed a now-outmoded silking treatment designed to consolidate pieces in danger of falling off. They used enzymes to remove leftover adhesive residues from the silking process. They then immersed the globe in an alkaline solution to deacidify it. They reattached fragments using heat-set tissue toned to be color compatible, and filled in large losses with pieces of Japanese tissue.


Drawing of the Battle of Shimabara (1637)
Map
Inscribed 1773
Asian Division

This map depicts the peasant uprising of December, 1637 which caused the last great mobilization of the armed forces of the Tokugawa Shogunate (1603-1867). This hand drawn and painted map shows Christian rebels being put under siege in the Hara Castle on the Shimabara Peninsula in Kyushu and depicts many of the standards with the crests of the daimyo forces of the Tokugawa Shogunate of northern Kyushu.

Treatment: The map was hand painted in panels which had then been joined in strips and lined with Japanese handmade paper. The images were misaligned along the joins. Conservators cleaned the map using grated vinyl eraser shavings in the non-image areas.They removed the old backing and adhesive residue and float washed the map after fixing soluble areas in the image with a gelatin wash. They repaired tattered edges and tears with Japanese paper and wheat starch paste. Finally, they rejoined the pieces aligning the parts as before to keep the map historically accurate. The whole map was lined with Japanese Usu Mino paper and paste.

Drawing of the battle of Shimabara
Before treatment Drawing of the battle of Shimabara
During treatment

Drawing of the battle of Shimabara
Before treatment

Drawing of the battle of Shimabara
After treatment


Theatrum Orbis Terrarum
Before treatment

Theatrum Orbis Terrarum
After treatment

First Modern Atlas
Abraham Ortelius
[Theatrum Orbis Terrarum]
Bound volume
1570
Geography and Map Division

This book is known as the first modern atlas. It is important because it is the first bound, uniformly sized, systematically organized collection of maps depicting the countries of the world. Ortelius created the atlas as a reference work. It was to become the prototype of almost all geographical atlases from 1570 to modern times.

The book is very rare as it is the first printing of four editions to appear in 1570 and is made more valuable by its original binding dated 1570 on the front cover.

The atlas in its original full leather binding in calfskin with a lavishly gold tooled herald device of John Bishop of Munster, Osnabruck, and Paerborn. Its highlights are painted in red, white, and brown pigments.

Treatment: Conservators disbound the volume and washed and lined the maps to increase overall stability. In so doing, they introduced magnesium bicarbonate in the wash to provide chemical stability to the paper by increasing the alkalinity to 8.5 pH and thereby slowing the degradation in the verdigris areas. They placed sheets of interleaving paper opposite the leaves with verdigris as a barrier to slow the transfer of degradation products from one page to the next.


Map of Alexandria
George Washington
[A Plan of Alexandria now Belhaven]
1749
Geography and Map Division

George Washington drew this town plan of Alexandria, Va., the first map of the city. The town was formally incorporated on July 13, 1749, and consisted of 84 lots, most of which were one-half acre in size. The site for this new town focused on a tobacco inspection warehouse and the stores of several Scottish merchants, located on the Potomac River just north of Great Hunting Creek in a small community that was originally known as Belhaven. Washington apparently prepared the map to send to his half-brother Lawrence, who was in England at the time, to show him the two town lots that had been purchased for him. Based on this map, early biographers erroneously concluded that Washington personally designed or was at least heavily involved in the city's formation. While the map is clearly in Washington's hand, there is no documentary evidence to support the claim of Washington's involvement. It is more likely that Washington derived or copied these from originals drawn by someone else,in this case John West Jr., Deputy Surveyor of Fairfax County, whom he assisted in surveying boundaries and lots. Nevertheless, the map stands as a unique example of 18th-century planning and Washington's career as a surveyor and mapmaker.

Treatment: Conservators worked hard to stabilize friable inks by consolidating them with parchment size. They removed two lining, one paper, and one cloth layer. They realigned the map, which had been distorted for many years. They then mended the map using Japanese tissue paper and wheat starch paste. They filled losses using compatible western paper.

Map of Alexandria
Before treatment Map of Alexandria
Detail Before treatment Map of Alexandria
During treatment Map of Alexandria
After treatment

Vienna Map

Vienna Map

Vienna Map
Joseph Daniel von Huber
Map
18th century
Geography and Maps Division

This late 18th century map of Vienna by Joseph Daniel von Huber is one view on 24 separate sheets and measures 350 X 410 cm. Mounted on cloth backing with two wooden rods for rolling or hanging, this is the largest map in the Geography and Map Division's collections. Relief is shown by hachures, and buildings are numbered corresponding to census numbers. An index map is included with summaries in Latin, Italian, and French.

Treatment: The map's huge size makes it a challenge to display, transport, and store. The map is currently stored in a large cardboard tube. The thick-walled tube was covered with polyester to prevent any migration of acids from the tube to the map. The rolled map is stored elevated at each end by two simple stand to prevent the heavy weight of the tube from harming the map and causing any differential aging that might occur under the heavy weight. In addition, the rolled map is covered with opaque paper and plastic sheeting to protect it from dust, light, and any unexpected water exposure.


Secret Maps
Joao Teixeira
[Secret Maps of the Americas and the Indies from the Portuguese Archives]
1631
Geography and Map Division

Compiled in Lisbon in 1630, this manuscript atlas was the work of João Teixeira, who served as cosmographer to the king of Portugal and is considered the most prolific Portuguese cartographer of the 17th century. This unique compilation not only provides a comprehensive portrait of the Portuguese empire at the beginning of the 17th century but also reflects the rivalry of the Portuguese and Spanish during the European Age of Discovery.

Treatment: The binding of the atlas was deemed to be detrimental to the manuscript, therefore, it was removed prior to treatment. Each folio was drycleaned. Conservators used poultices to remove old mends. They consolidated pigment areas using methyl cellulose. They washed each folio locally using ethanol and distilled water sprayed on top of a suction table and used enzymes to remove adhesive residue. They constructed inserts for large loss areas to support rebinding. Finally, they rebound the folios.

Secret Maps of the Americas and the Indies from the Portuguese Archives
Before treatment

Secret Maps of the Americas and the Indies from the Portuguese Archives
After treatment

Secret Maps of the Americas and the Indies from the Portuguese Archives
After treatment

Secret Maps of the Americas and the Indies from the Portuguese Archives
After treatment


U.S. County Atlas Collection
Before treatment

U.S. County Atlas Collection
Pages being encapsulated

U.S. County Atlas Collection
Pages post-bound into new volume.

U.S. County Atlas Collection

County Atlases
U.S. County Atlas Collection
Bound volumes
Geography and Map Division

The Geography and Map Division's collection of county landownership atlases numbers more than 1800 volumes. These volumes, commercially produced and sold by subscription in the late 19th century, contain cadastral or landownership maps for the individual counties and townships within a county. The atlases were based on the pre-Civil War, wall-sized, single-sheet county land ownership maps. They often included county and township histories, personal and family biographies and portraits, and views of important buildings, residences, farms, and in some cases, prized livestock.

Treatment: Conservators disbound the atlases and saved the original covers. They washed the pages and deacidified ones whose colors would not be adversely effected. They sealed the pages in polyester and placed them in a post-binding structure to permit use, provide support for the pages, and to retain the book structure.


P.O.W. Playing Cards
World War II Playing Cards Maps
Geography and Map Division

In 1943, the U.S. Playing Card Company began printing card decks that contained escape maps for WWII prisoners of war. The map cards were shipped to a Ben Franklin Store in Baltimore, Md., and retrieved by a covert U.S. agency named MIS-X, based at Fort Hunt in Fairfax County, Va. The MIS-X sent the decks to German POW camps. Parcels that contained the decks of cards were made to look like donations from the U.S. charities. Part of an escape map was glued between the face and back of each of the 52 cards. To retrieve the maps, the prisoners soaked the cards to dissolve the glue that held them together, then peeled apart the layers to find the map portions bonded between them. A parcel would also contain a radio part concealed in a wooden brush, a compass hidden inside of a razor, and a cigarette pack containing foreign currency. Former POWs have told stories of using the map cards to escape. Of the 73 prison escapes by Americans during the war, it is believed that a large percentage had help from MIS-X.

Treatment: A special housing was created for these unusual items to provide support and ease access to the collection items. The housing consists of a recto/verso mat showing an uncut sheet of cards, and pockets holding two individual cards and a complete deck. There is also a wrapper attached to the cover board which contains an additional uncut map, newspaper article about the item, and a letter from the donor.

P.O.W. Playing Cards

P.O.W. Playing Cards


Plan for City of Washington
Before treatment

Plan for City of Washington

Clicking on the above image will take you to the Library's digitized version.

Plan for City of Washington
Argon housing

Plan for City of Washington
Pierre L'Enfant
[Plan for City of Washington]
1791
Geography and Map Division

Pierre-Charles L'Enfant's 1791 plan for the city of Washington is one of the great landmarks in city planning. It was, L'Enfant claimed, "a plan whol[l]y new," designed from its inception to serve as the framework for the capital city of the new nation beginning in the year 1800. Its scheme of broad radiating avenues connecting significant focal points, its open spaces, and its grid pattern of streets oriented north, south, east, and west is still the plan against which all modern land-use proposals for the Nation's Capital are considered.

Treatment: A two-step bench treatment was devised to take place before and after preservation digitization. At one point in its history, the map had been varnished and over the years the varnish turned dark brown, rendering the street plan illegible.Removing the varnish was determined to be out of the question as it could cause some of the original map and subsequent notations, including those made by Thomas Jefferson, to be lost. In 1988, the Library worked with the U.S. Geological Service to photograph and digitize the plan so the dark varnish background could be removed digitally and the street plan would show through once again. Simultaneously, a full-color facsimile reproduction was made. Before digitization, conservators made critical minor repairs such as removing pressure-sensitive tape from the back of the plan, reattaching detached pieces, and mending some tears. After digitization, final treatment took place. Conservators removed or thinned the white paper reinforcing strips that had been placed on the verso during the map's 1951 treatment to protect the map's edges. Conservators also removed thick glue residues along the upper and lower front edges, filled in any losses with western paper, and mended unrepaired tears using Japanese paper and wheat starch paste. Finally, the map was placed in a hermetically sealed case containing inert argon gas to protect it from further chemical and atmospheric degradation.


Indian Lands of Eastern Wisconsin
Henry Rowe Schoolcraft
Manuscript Division

This map of a part of eastern Wisconsin, probably made by a French voyageur, was carried by explorer, geologist, ethnologist, Indian agent, superintendent of Indian affairs for Michigan and author Henry Rowe Schoolcarft (1793-1864), who annotated it in the course of an expedition he made in summer 1831. Sent out by Lewis Cass (1782-1866), govenor of Michigan Territory, Schoolcraft was to take a census of the Chippewa(Ojibwa Indians) and Sioux(Dakota Indians) settlements in the upper Mississippi River country and try to resolve hostilities there between the two tribes. Schoolcraft added the place names of Indian villages, chiefs' names, and pertinent census figures as well as translations of some French terms and the identification of certain geographical features. The reverse orientation of the map, with north at the bottom, may be due to voyageur's approaach into the region from that direction.

Schoolcraft planned further exploration of regions beyond those shown on this map and was especially interested in mapping the sources of the Mississippi River, but he had to abandon this goal because of low water on the upper Mississippi. Exploration was resumed the following year, however, and Schoolcraft succeeded in establishing Itasca Lake as the river's source. He published the results in his "Narrative of an Expedition Through the Upper Mississippi to Itasca Lake, The Atual Source of the River; Embracing an Exploratory Trip through the St. Croix and Burntwood (or Broule) Rivers; in 1832" (New York, 1834). An account of the earlier 1831 expedition is included in this volume, and Schoolcraft's original manuscript journal is a part of his papers in the Manuscript Division.

Treatment: The map was delaminated, washed and deacidified. It was flattened and mended with japanese tissue and wheat starch paste. Addditionally it was fully lined with Japanese tissue to provide further support and stability.

Schoolcraft map

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April 28, 2000