Maps
Showing 2141 - 2150 of 2873 Records
Township 3 Range 3 BKP WKR, Dead River, Shows Morgan Farm Survey with Long Falls Dam. Surveyed by NEPSCO Services,
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Somerset County
- Date: 1949
Township 4 Range 16 WELS, Elm Stream Township. Shows public lots, roads, burn areas and blowdown areas.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Somerset County
- Date: 1910
Township 1 Range 6 BKP EKR, Indian Stream. Shows public lot and railroad.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Somerset County
- Date: 1924
Township 4 Range 5 BKP WKR, King and Bartlett Township. Shows public lots and owners in color. No date.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Somerset County
Washington County Atlas
- Atlas of Washington County, Maine. Compiled, drawn and Published from Official Plans and Actual Surveys by George N. Colby & Co., Houlton and Machias, ME, 1881.
- Type: COLLECTION
- Collection: Atlases 1871-1884
Penobscot County Atlas
- Atlas of Penobscot County, Maine. From Recent and Actual Surveys & Records Under the Superintendence of W.A. Sherman. Published by Comstock & Cline, 27 Warren Street, New York, 1875.
- Type: COLLECTION
- Collection: Atlases 1871-1884
1884 Atlas of Maine
- Atlas of the State of Maine. Including Statistics and Descriptions of Its History, Educational System, Geology, Rail Roads, Natural Resources, Summer Resorts and Manufacturing Interests. Compiled and Drawn from Official Plans and Actual Surveys and Published by George N. Colby & Co., Houlton, ME, 1884.
BMC 74--America Septentrionalis oder Mitternachtiger Theil von America [...], 1762
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps
- Date: 1762
BMC 84--A map of the most inhabited part of New England : containing the provinces of Massachusets Bay and New Hampshire, with the colonies of Conecticut and Rhode Island, divided into counties and townships : the whole composed from actual surveys and its situation adjusted by astronomical observations, 1774
- This large, detailed map of New England was compiled by Braddock Mead (alias John Green), and first published by Thomas Jefferys in 1755. Green was an Irish translator, geographer, and editor, as well as one of the most talented British map-makers at mid-century. The map was re-published at the outset of the American Revolution, as it remained the most accurate and detailed survey of New England. Of interest are engraved double lines found beneath certain place-names, including Boston. These lines indicate cities whose longitude had been calculated with the aid of the newly invented marine chronometer. Includes compilation data and insets of "A plan of the town of Boston" and "A plan of Boston Harbor from an accurate survey."
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Baxter Rare Maps
- Date: 1774