Land, Maps, and Natural Resources

Showing 3161 - 3170 of 3595 Records

Bath: Maple Grove Cemetery B
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: WPA Cemetery Plans


Bath: Oak Grove Cemetery A
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: WPA Cemetery Plans


Bath: Oak Grove Cemetery J
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: WPA Cemetery Plans


Richmond: Richmond Cemetery
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: WPA Cemetery Plans


Skowhegan: South or Bloomfield Cemetery A
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: WPA Cemetery Plans


WPA Cemetery Plans
During the Great Depression, the Work Projects Administration (WPA) put millions of Americans to work on public works projects that ranged from building trails in National Parks to creating over 500 surveys of Maine cemeteries. These cemetery plans, transferred from the Office of the Adjutant General and now part of the holdings of the Maine State Archives, help us to identify war veterans’ final resting places.


Page 39. Plan of four tracts of land containing 9562 acres bordering New Hampshire
Plan of four tracts of land adjoining New Hampshire line, now Riley and Grafton area. Includes front and back of page.
  • Type: OBJECT



BMC 13--L'Amerique, ou, Le nouveau continent : dresseè sur les memoires les plus nouveaux et sur les relations les plus recentes, rectifiez sur les dernieres observàtions. 1742
Published in Paris by John Baptist Nolin (mapmaker); Engraver: Charles Cochin Covers Western Hemisphere from New Zealand to western coast of Europe and Africa. Rare map of America, one of the earliest to illustrate the Sea of the West. The map also includes an interesting treatment of Florida as an Archipelago, and detail in California and the Mississippi Valley. Also includes an interesting projection of New Zealand and location of many Islands in the Pacific, many of which are either fanciful or badly misplaced. Nolin dedicates this map to Monseigneur LAW controlleur general des finances. John Law was a Scottish financier, who was masterminding the economic recovery of France, one element of his plan being the exploitation of the French possessions in Louisiana, the so-called Mississippi scheme, which was briefly successful and set off a wild period of speculation, before the Mississippi Bubble burst. Law fled to Venice in disgrace, but not before creating one of the first speculative booms based upon American real estate.
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Baxter Rare Maps