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Description

Large format map, centered on the Great Lakes, with marvelous detail throughout.

Nice treatment of the River system which connects Lake owith Hudson's Bay and between the Lake of the Wood and Lake Superior. Many forts and early Hudson's Bay Trading Houses are shown. Sagana Bay appears on Lake Huron Many Indian Tribes named.

A note showing a NW Company Settlement below Lake Superior appears, as does details concerning Creek Boundaries and the Hunting Grounds of the Six Nations. Some Counties named.

John Thomson Biography

John Thomson (1777-ca. 1840) was a commercial map publisher active in Edinburgh. He specialized in guide books and atlases and is primarily known for his Atlas of Scotland (1832) and the New General Atlas, first published in 1817 and reissued for the next quarter century. The New General Atlas was a commercial success—it was also published in Dublin and London—and it compiled existing geographic knowledge in compelling ways for a wide audience.

His Atlas of Scotland introduced new geographic information and was the first large-scale atlas of Scotland to be organized by county. It provided the most-accurate view of Scotland available before the Clearances. Work on the atlas began in 1820 and led to Thomson’s bankruptcy in 1830 due to the high costs of gathering the latest surveys and reviewing the required materials. Despite the publication of the atlas, Thomson declared bankruptcy again in 1835.