Showing 221 - 230 of 388 Records
Androscoggin River Survey, Livermore Falls to Errol, New Hampshire Sheet 12
- Androscoggin River Survey, Livermore Falls to Errol, New Hampshire, 1906. Approximately 37 x 30 inches. Sketch. Sheet number 12.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Water Storage Commission Maps and Plans
Androscoggin River Profile, State Line to Brunswick Showing Existing and Possible Power Developments
- Androscoggin River Profile, State Line to Brunswick Showing Existing and Possible Power Developments. Approximately 28 x 20 inches.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Water Storage Commission Maps and Plans
Androscoggin River, undated.
- Androscoggin River. Blueprint, approximately 62 x 15 inches.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Water Storage Commission Maps and Plans
Androscoggin River Survey, Livermore Falls to Errol, New Hampshire Sheet 2
- Androscoggin River Survey, Livermore Falls to Errol, New Hampshire, 1906. Approximately 37 x 30 inches. Sketch. Sheet number 2.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Water Storage Commission Maps and Plans
The Lakes of Franklin and Oxford Counties, Maine From Actual Surveys Made During the Winter
- The Lakes of Franklin and Oxford Counties, Maine from actual surveys made during the winter of 1876. Blueprint, approximately 36 x 27 inches.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Water Storage Commission Maps and Plans
BMC 52--Province of New Hampshire, 1730
- Map of the Province of New Hampshire with note "rec'd from Col. Dunbar with his letter to the Sec'y dated at Boston 2 May 1730." Notes "Charter Division Line between the Provinces 3 miles N[orth] of the Meremack River." David Dunbar (1728–1737) was a British military officer; as Surveyor of the King's Woods he made numerous enemies in his enforcement of regulations governing the cutting of trees that could be used as ship masts. He was the leader of an attempt to establish a colony named "Georgia" in what is now the central coast of Maine, and was in 1730 commissioned as lieutenant governor of the Province of New Hampshire in an attempt to strengthen his authority. He engaged in frequent disputes with New Hampshire's Governor Jonathan Belcher. He established Fort Frederick in Maine.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps
BMC 63--Nova Francia et Regiones Adiacentes, 1633
- Map of the East Coast of North America, extending from Cape Cod to Newfoundland. De Laet’s map appeared in his seminal work on America, which is widely regarded as the most important and influential treatise on the subject published in the 17th Century. The map provides the best representations of the coastline and is referred to as "one of the foundation maps of Canada" and "the first printed map to include an accurate Prince Edward Island, and the earliest depiction of a north-south oriented Lake Champlain."
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps
BMC 67--Route from Fort Pownal to Quebec, 1764
- "A Draught of a Rout from Fort Pownall on Penobscot River by way of Piscataquess River, Lake Sabim, Wolf River, and the River Chaudiere, to Quebec, and back again to Fort Pownall, by Penobscot River. Taken by order of His Excellency Francis Bernard. Esq: Governor &c of His Majesty’s Province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England 1764." Map of route to Quebec from Fort Pownal on the Penobscot River, based on a survey undertaken by Joseph Chadwick during 1764.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps
BMC 68A--Province Massachusetts Bay Penobscot Dominions of Great Britain Possession Confirm'd by Thos. Pownall Govr.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps
BMC 70--Partie orientale du Canada, avec la Nouvelle Angleterre, l'Acadie, et la Terre-Neuve par le S. D'Anville, 1776
- Map of northeastern Canada, New York and New England based upon D'Anville's map of 1746.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps