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Joseph S. Wood and Alison Boissonnas, University of Southern Maine | Shaping the Territory | The William and Mary Quarterly, 59.3 | The History Cooperative
59.3  
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July, 2002
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Reviews of Books

Shaping the Territory


New England in Early Printed Maps, 1513 to 1800: An Illustrated Carto-Bibliography. Compiled by BARBARA BACKUS MCCORKLE . (Providence, R. I.: The John Carter Brown Library, 2001 . Pp. xx, 354 . $ 185.00. )

Virginia in Maps: Four Centuries of Settlement, Growth, and Development. Edited by RICHARD W. STEPHENSON and MARIANNE M. MCKEE. (Richmond: The Library of Virginia, 2000 . Pp. xxii, 338 . $ 90.00 .)

Reviewed by Joseph S. Wood and Alison Boissonnas, University of Southern Maine

     William Wood's flyleaf map for New Englands Prospect (London, 1634) was the first map to describe the coastline from Narragansett Bay to New Hampshire in some detail. By giving shape to the territory, it served practical purposes; though it did not allow precise navigation, it provided a semblance of location, so that European newcomers could obtain some idea of where they were. The map also shaped the territory figuratively. Despite Wood's clear description of dispersed agricultural settlement, the map has forever linked in historians' minds particular points—the location of meetinghouses—with surrounding spaces—towns and villages on the New England landscape. The result has been a fundamental misunderstanding of colonial historical geography. We still cling to the notion that early New Englanders lived in nucleated villages.1 And we do so, even as methods of survey and cartographic representation prove otherwise, thanks to dramatic improvements in their descriptive techniques over the passing centuries. 1
     By the middle of the eighteenth century, American surveyors such as George Washington mapped with much improved scientific accuracy, compared to Wood's generation. Enterprising Virginians interested in inland resources pondered these maps to determine the most efficient routes to the Ohio Country. They quickly decided that the town of Alexandria, perched on the Potomac River, offered a shorter route, by water and with a few comparatively easy portages, to the mouth of the Cuyahoga River at Lake Erie, site of present-day Cleveland, than did any other eastern seaboard city.2 Surely, they reasoned, Alexandria would rise into the great entrepôt of the eastern seaboard. Speculators were destined to disappointment; rival cities—New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore—captured the western trade thanks to transportation improvements that overcame the disadvantage of location. Nonetheless, mid-eighteenth-century cartographic understanding was consequential; it strongly influenced the constitutional compromise that located the new nation's capital on the banks of the Potomac at century's end. . . .


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