The Rochambeau Map Collection

Features:

Browse Collection by:

View more collections from the Geography and Map Division

Collection Connection
Classroom resources for teachers from the Learning Page

Detail of map of Williamsburg, Virginia
[Detail] Armée de Rochambeau, 1782.
About this image

Overview

The Rochambeau Map Collection contains cartographic items used by Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau (1725-1807), when he was commander in chief of the French expeditionary army (1780-82) during the American Revolution. The maps were from Rochambeau's personal collection, cover much of eastern North America, and date from 1717 to 1795. The maps show Revolutionary-era military actions, some of which were published in England and France, and early state maps from the 1790s. Many of the items in this extraordinary group of maps show the importance of cartographic materials in the campaigns of the American Revolution as well as Rochambeau's continuing interest in the new United States.

The collection consists of 40 manuscript and 26 printed maps, and a manuscript atlas, the originals of which are in the Library of Congress' Geography and Map Division.

Gallery

Rochambeau by the numbers.