From the Open-Publishing Calendar
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Indybay Feature
Territorial Ambitions: Mapping the Far West
Date:
Friday, January 02, 2004
Time:
10:00 AM
-
11:00 AM
Event Type:
Other
Organizer/Author:
Vicki Wiese
Location Details:
300 Fourth Street at Folsom
Territorial Ambitions
Mapping the Far West, 1772 - 1872
The Society of California Pioneers is pleased to exhibit a selection of rare and influential maps in Territorial Ambitions: Mapping the Far West, 1772-1872. The exhibition spans the period of Western exploration in the later eighteenth century, when California was often depicted as an island, up until the establishment of the transcontinental railroad in 1869. During this time, vast, uncharted areas west of the one-hundredth meridian were gradually explored, mapped and remapped, while utopian fantasies of “lost” cities of gold, a northwest passage to India, and an American Arcadia on the Pacific Slope were reconciled with geographic reality.
Territorial Ambitions contains approximately fifty maps from The Society’s collection that have never before been shown publicly. The exhibition features such major works as Didier-Robert De Vaugondy’s 1772 Carte de Californie, La Perouse’s journal of 1785-88, and John Frémont and Charles Preuss’ 1842 Map of Oregon and Upper California. There are mining maps by Edward Ord and William Jackson and The Official Map of the City of San Francisco by William M. Eddy. The exhibition also includes railroad maps, topographical maps, bird’s eye views, nautical maps and coastal surveys. All of these maps were instrumental in helping to determine the economic and political future of the American West.
The Society of California Pioneers
300 Fourth Street at Folsom
San Francisco, CA 94107
415-957-1859
info@californiapioneers.org
http://www.californiapioneers.org
Exhibition Dates: October 31, 2003 - May 28, 2004
Museum Hours: Weds – Friday, and the 1st Saturday of each Month 10am– 4pm
General Admission $3; Students & Seniors $1
Mapping the Far West, 1772 - 1872
The Society of California Pioneers is pleased to exhibit a selection of rare and influential maps in Territorial Ambitions: Mapping the Far West, 1772-1872. The exhibition spans the period of Western exploration in the later eighteenth century, when California was often depicted as an island, up until the establishment of the transcontinental railroad in 1869. During this time, vast, uncharted areas west of the one-hundredth meridian were gradually explored, mapped and remapped, while utopian fantasies of “lost” cities of gold, a northwest passage to India, and an American Arcadia on the Pacific Slope were reconciled with geographic reality.
Territorial Ambitions contains approximately fifty maps from The Society’s collection that have never before been shown publicly. The exhibition features such major works as Didier-Robert De Vaugondy’s 1772 Carte de Californie, La Perouse’s journal of 1785-88, and John Frémont and Charles Preuss’ 1842 Map of Oregon and Upper California. There are mining maps by Edward Ord and William Jackson and The Official Map of the City of San Francisco by William M. Eddy. The exhibition also includes railroad maps, topographical maps, bird’s eye views, nautical maps and coastal surveys. All of these maps were instrumental in helping to determine the economic and political future of the American West.
The Society of California Pioneers
300 Fourth Street at Folsom
San Francisco, CA 94107
415-957-1859
info@californiapioneers.org
http://www.californiapioneers.org
Exhibition Dates: October 31, 2003 - May 28, 2004
Museum Hours: Weds – Friday, and the 1st Saturday of each Month 10am– 4pm
General Admission $3; Students & Seniors $1
Added to the calendar on Tue, Feb 3, 2004 10:24AM
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