Rare Pamphlet with the First American Map of Oregon Territory and The Pacific Northwest
Nice example of this important map of the Oregon Territory, made as part of the United States South Seas Exploring Expedition, also known as U.S. Ex. Ex., the largest and longest United States' exploratory expedition.
The present copy of the map accompanies Albert Gallatin's pamphlet, The Oregon Question (New York: Bartlett & Welford, 1846), and while the booklet is disbound, evidence (binding stabs and continuous foxing) suggests that pamphlet and map have been together from circa mid-19th century. Gallatin presents a reasoned overview of the history of sovereignty relative to the Oregon country and calls for a peaceful resolution of the territorial dispute. The Gallatin text was printed in Washington the same year, but Howes describes the present New York issue as the best edition. Although Daniel Haskell's bibliography of U.S. Exploring Expedition publications does not mention an edition of the Wilkes map accompanying the Gallatin work (nor does Howes mention the Gallatin title as having a map), our offering would seem to be a unique survival of this natural pairing of text and cartography.
The map shows the results of the first American surveys of the Columbia River and Puget Sound. This larger format edition, published in a limited print run, is quite rare. The result is the most important and accurate map of the period and a map of considerable importance in the history of the cartography of the region.
The map shows an intricately detailed coastline and terrain stretching from just north of the 54th parallel, which U.S. Ex. Ex. commander and surveyor Charles Wilkes thought should be the northern boundary of the Oregon Territory, to Cape Mendocino in California. The Cascade Range is well delineated, as are the riverine systems. The officers of U.S. Ex. Ex. not only surveyed 800 miles of the coast, but they also explored overland in three groups, which explains the detail inland. The toponyms are split between European names given by Hudson's Bay Company traders, previous naval expeditions like Vancouver's, and the U.S. Ex. Ex. itself, as well indigenous place names.
To the left is a large inset of the Columbia River. The officers surveyed up the Columbia River and an overland group continued all the way to the mission at Walla Walla. This inset, oriented to the east, shows the river from the mission to the notorious bar at the mouth of the river. A notable feature is the many "Indian village" sites dotting the river's edge, showing how populated the region was before Europeans and Americans came up the river.
Wilkes, the primary architect of this and the other maps made on the voyage, drew upon the information provided in recent maps by Hood, Arrowsmith and Parker, as well as information from Jedidiah Smith and Peter Skene Ogden. In a note in northeast he mentions that, for the western portion of the map, he relied heavily on the information of the Hudson's Bay Company traders, whom he met on an overland foray, and, for the east, on the recently returned overland exploration expedition of John C. Fremont and the United States Topographical Corps.
United States South Seas Exploring Expedition (U.S. Ex. Ex.)
By the 1830s, the United States was eager to learn more about the Pacific Northwest, an area that had been contested by Britain for decades. The first boundary negotiation took place in 1818, and, by the late 1830s, streams of American immigrants had begun to make their way west in wagon trains, drawing the boundary question into sharp relief.
Additionally, the young nation craved international recognition like that garnered for Britain by Cook and for France by La Perouse. Leaders in Washington thought that if they mounted their own large-scale naval voyage of exploration, they would be considered as equals on the international intellectual stage. Despite enthusiasm in some corners, after initially approved in 1836 the voyage floundered due to lack of support from the conservative United States Navy. Eventually, Martin van Buren, who had inherited the project when he became President, appointed Secretary of War Joel Poinsett to take charge of the operation. Poinsett, in turn, chose Lieutenant Charles Wilkes (1798-1877) to head the squadron.
Wilkes was forty years old when selected to lead U.S. Ex. Ex. Although he had little command experience, a shortcoming that would become a liability while at sea, he was one of the country's premier nautical surveyors; at the time he was chosen he was heading the Depot of Charts and Instruments in Washington D. C.
Wilkes was given six ships to command-one of, if not the, largest exploratory expedition ever mounted. Additionally, he selected a corps of nine scientists to accompany the mission and he put himself in charge of the physical sciences, surveying, astronomy, meteorology, and nautical science. Other scientists included Titian Peale, son of Charles Wilson Peale, and James Dwight Dana. The two artists included on the roster, Alfred Agate and James Drayton, got to use a new invention, a camera lucida, which projected an image on paper for tracing. Surveying, however, was Wilkes' top priority, a preference that continually frustrated his fellow scientists.
The squadron left August 18, 1838. First, they sailed for Madeira, then round Cape Horn and up the western coast of South America before setting off across the Pacific to Sydney. Then, the ships turned south to explore Antarctica, the last great unknown continent of the world. Afterward, they stopped at Hawaii en route to the Pacific Northwest, where they conducted the surveys for this map in 1841. Then, the squadron crossed the Pacific again, sailed through the Philippines and Borneo, around the Cape of Good Hope and back to New York on June 10, 1842.
Publications and Outcomes of U.S. Ex. Ex.
Upon their return, Wilkes himself oversaw the preparation of the thousands of pages of data and notes for publication. He also had to contend with a court martial about his behavior and dispensing of punishments while at sea, although he was acquitted of all but one charge. Congress was also interested in the results of the voyage and sought to control the distribution of the narrative and subsequent reports. They limited publication to 100 lavish copies which were allocated to each of the states, allies of the United States, the Library of Congress, the Naval Lyceum, and the principal officers of the voyage. However, as print runs could not be smaller than 250, additional copies lacking the seal of the United States were also distributed by private booksellers.
The first official publications to appear were Wilkes rambling five-volume narrative of the voyage, accompanied by a folio atlas, in 1844. This map appeared in that atlas. A further 19 volumes were prepared over the course of 30 years, each on a different scientific topic, although only 14 were ever distributed. Perhaps the most impressive legacy of the expedition was the almost 250 charts Wilkes prepared in two atlases (completed 1858, published 1861, but not distributed until after the Civil War). These formed the basis of the United States Hydrographic Office.
The Hydrographic Office was not the only institution affected by the U.S. Ex. Ex. The immense natural and ethnographic collections brought back were initially displayed at the U. S. Patent Office. Later, they formed the basis of the collection for the Smithsonian Institution. Additionally, specimens from the voyage helped to start the U.S. Botanical Garden, the National Herbarium, and the National Observatory.
The British-US Boundary Dispute
Another outcome of the voyage had to do especially with the subject of this map. The Oregon Territory was becoming a topic of increasing importance to the United States by the time the voyage returned. Even before Wilkes arrived in the Pacific Northwest in 1841, the Hudson's Bay Company was reporting that the expedition would likely increase the U.S. government's desire to possess the area. In June 1842, just as the ships returned to New York, the expedition became a topic in the continuing boundary negotiations with Britain. Wilkes himself was a strong advocate for the 54'40" boundary, as shown on this map.
Additionally, the 1840s was the boom decade of the Oregon Trail. Between 1840 and 1860, 400,000 journeyed overland on the 2,000 mile Oregon Trail; they formed one of the largest mass migrations in American history. It is no surprise, therefore, that James K. Polk made the Oregon Territory one of his campaign issues in 1844, with the slogan "54°40 or Fight!"
Polk was elected but quickly became embroiled in another border dispute to the south, the Mexican-American War (1846-8). Rather than fighting on two fronts, Polk tried to negotiate the northern border with the British. By this time, Americans outnumbered the British in Oregon six to one. The British, eager to protect the forts they had built via the Hudson's Bay Company, wanted a parallel at the 42nd parallel. Polk compromised on the 49th. The border treaty was signed in June 1846.
Initially, the land was left unincorporated. However, on November 29, 1847, an incident occurred at the Walla Walla Mission, which Wilkes' men had visited on an overland surveying trip. Marcus Whitman, his wife Narcissa, and their children were killed by Cayuse people during an attack on the mission. The Cayuse accused Whitman of poisoning Cayuse who had been in his care. Whitman had guided one of the first large wagon trains west and was well known to lawmakers in Washington D.C. Outraged by the violence, but not, presumably, by the alleged poisonings of the Cayuse, Congress began to organize to have Oregon brought under direct US control.
Oregon was officially incorporated as a US Territory on August 14, 1848. In 1853, the northern portion was carved out and became Washington Territory. In 1859, the southwestern portion of the Territory became the state of Oregon. The rest of the Territory eventually became parts of the states of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming.
U.S. Ex. Ex. was one of the largest exploration expeditions ever mounted. It was also the last great sailing voyage of discovery. The publications overseen by Wilkes augmented the U.S.'s international scientific reputation and the collections gathered by the scientists on board seeded some of the best known institutions in America. However, the voyage is little known and pales in comparison to public knowledge of Lewis & Clark and even Fremont. This is because the 1840s is also the time when the U.S. turned away from the seas and toward the interior, from sailors to cowboys.
However, the expedition was hugely important in the history of cartography of the United States, and this map in particular captures an important moment in U.S. expansion. While the smaller edition of the map appears on the market with some regularity, this large format edition has become somewhat of a rarity. It would make a fine addition to any collection of the American West.
Nathaniel Philbrick, “The Scientific Legacy of the U.S. Exploring Expedition,” Smithsonian Libraries. http://www.sil.si.edu/DigitalCollections/usexex/learn/Philbrick.htm
Viola, Herman J. "The Wilkes Expedition on the Pacific Coast." Pacific Northwest Quarterly 80.1 (January, 1989): 21-31.
James Walker, “United States Exploring Expedition (1838-1842)”, Oregon Encyclopedia. https://oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/united_states_exploring_expedition_1838_1842_/#.WfMyPWj9TIV
For the work by Gallatin: Howes G25. Sabin 26391.
Charles Wilkes (1798-1877) was a skilled naval surveyor and the commander of the United States South Seas Exploration Expedition (U.S. Ex. Ex.), the largest scientific voyage ever mounted by the United States. Wilkes was born in New York City and began to sail in merchant vessels from 1815-1917.
Wilkes joined the United States Navy as a midshipman in 1818; by 1826, he had risen to the rank of lieutenant. Fascinated by hydrography, Wilkes studied triangulation and surveying with Ferdinand Hassler, the first superintendent of the United States Coast Survey. This expertise and initiative led him to be named Director of the Navy’s Depot of Charts and Instruments in 1833.
After being stalled by the Navy, U.S. Ex. Ex.—the U.S. response to the scientific voyages of Cook and La Perouse—was finally preparing to sail in the late 1830s. Wilkes was offered command, thanks to the heavy surveying focus on the voyage. He was given command of six vessels and nine scientists. However, the ships were not well supplied and the expedition was executed with some difficulty.
The ships left Norfolk in August 1838. They went in convoy to Tierra del Fuego, where they split and some explored in the South Seas and others in the South Atlantic. In late 1830, Wilkes surveyed portions of Antarctica that today are named for him (Wilkes Land). From spring 1840, the ships explored the mid- and North-Pacific. In June 1842, Wilkes returned to New York Harbor with only two of his six ships and a mountain of ethnographic, botanical, and natural historical specimens, as well as reams of observations, drawings, and charts.
Wilkes was met with a court martial; while he was acquitted of most charges, he was convicted of illegal punishment and reprimanded by the Secretary of the Navy. Despite this, he was promoted commander in 1843, captain in 1855, and commodore in 1862.
Wilkes spent much of his remaining career overseeing the publications of the expedition. The first official publication to appear was Wilkes’ rambling five-volume narrative of the voyage, accompanied by a folio atlas, in 1844. A further 19 volumes were prepared over the course of 30 years, each on a different scientific topic, although only 14 were ever distributed. Perhaps the most impressive legacies of the expedition were the almost 250 charts Wilkes prepared in two atlases (completed 1858, published 1861, but not distributed until after the Civil War). These formed the basis of the United States Hydrographic Office.
Wilkes served in the Union fleet in the Civil War. In 1864 he was before a court-martial again, this time for the publication of a private letter to the Secretary of the Navy. He was found guilty. He retired two years later, in 1866, and died in Washington D. C. in 1877.