COLLECTION NAME:
Touchton Map Library
mediaCollectionId
TBHC~3~3
Touchton Map Library
Collection
true
Accession Number:
2019.028.001
accession_number
2019.028.001
Accession Number
false
Short Title:
Coast of the United States, from Cape Fear to the Bahamas, with Plans of the Principal Harbors on an Enlarged Scale: Compiled From the Most Recent Surveys Made By Order of the United States Government, and Adjusted By the Latest Astronomical Observations
short_title
Coast of the United States, from Cape Fear to the Bahamas, with Plans of the Principal Harbors on an Enlarged Scale: Compiled From the Most Recent Surveys Made By Order of the United States Government, and Adjusted By the Latest Astronomical Observations
Short Title
false
Year:
1860
year
1860
Year
false
Updated through:
1865
updated_through
1865
Updated through
false
Author:
Charles Copley
author
Charles Copley
Author
false
Engraver or Printer:
C. J. Copley
engraver_or_printer
C. J. Copley
Engraver or Printer
false
Engraver or Printer:
F. S. Copley
engraver_or_printer
F. S. Copley
Engraver or Printer
false
Object Publisher:
Charles Copley & Sons
object_publisher
Charles Copley & Sons
Object Publisher
false
Place of Publication:
New York
place_of_publication
New York
Place of Publication
false
Pub Note:
Blueback nautical charts began appearing in London in the late 18th century. Bluebacks, as they came to be called, were privately published large format nautical charts known for their distinctive blue paper backing. The backing, a commonly available blue manila paper traditionally used by publishers to wrap unbound pamphlets, was adopted as a practical way to reinforce the low-quality paper used by private chart publishers to cut costs. That being said, not all blueback charts are literally backed with blue paper. The earliest known blueback charts include a 1760 chart issued by Mount and Page, and a 1787 chart issued by Robert Sayer. The tradition took off in the early 19th century, when British publishers like John Hamilton Moore, Robert Blachford, James Imray, William Heather, John William Norie, Charles Wilson, David Steel, R. H. Laurie, and John Hobbs, among others, rose to dominate the chart trade. Bluebacks became so popular that the convention was embraced by chartmakers outside of England, including Americans Edmund March Blunt, Charles Copley, and George Eldridge, as well as Scandinavian, French, German, Russian, and Spanish chartmakers. Blueback charts remained popular until the late 19th century, when government subsidized organizations like the British Admiralty Hydrographic Office and the United States Coast Survey, began issuing their own superior charts on high quality paper that did not require reinforcement.
pub_note
Blueback nautical charts began appearing in London in the late 18th century. Bluebacks, as they came to be called, were privately published large format nautical charts known for their distinctive blue paper backing. The backing, a commonly available blue manila paper traditionally used by publishers to wrap unbound pamphlets, was adopted as a practical way to reinforce the low-quality paper used by private chart publishers to cut costs. That being said, not all blueback charts are literally backed with blue paper. The earliest known blueback charts include a 1760 chart issued by Mount and Page, and a 1787 chart issued by Robert Sayer. The tradition took off in the early 19th century, when British publishers like John Hamilton Moore, Robert Blachford, James Imray, William Heather, John William Norie, Charles Wilson, David Steel, R. H. Laurie, and John Hobbs, among others, rose to dominate the chart trade. Bluebacks became so popular that the convention was embraced by chartmakers outside of England, including Americans Edmund March Blunt, Charles Copley, and George Eldridge, as well as Scandinavian, French, German, Russian, and Spanish chartmakers. Blueback charts remained popular until the late 19th century, when government subsidized organizations like the British Admiralty Hydrographic Office and the United States Coast Survey, began issuing their own superior charts on high quality paper that did not require reinforcement.
Pub Note
false
Cited References:
Library of Congress, G3872.C6P5 1865 .C6 Oversize.
cited_references
Library of Congress, G3872.C6P5 1865 .C6 Oversize.
Cited References
false
Geographical Description:
1865 Civil War Era Charles Copley 'blockade runner's' nautical chart or maritime map of the southeastern coast of the United States extending roughly from Cape Fear, North Carolina, to Miami, Florida, and the northern Bahamas. (Miami does not yet exist, but the Miami River and the Cape Florida Light, built in 1860, are illustrated.) Insets within the peninsula of Florida detail the most important southern harbors: Charleston, Georgetown Harbor, the Savannah River, Jacksonville (St. John's River), Fernandina Harbor, Cape Canaveral, Turtle Harbor, and Cedar Keys. The northern Bahamas are covered in some detail, but the chart does not extend as far south as Nassau.
The coverage, detail, and publication run, 1860 - 1865, of the map beg the question of why it was made at all? Copley was a private map publisher based out of New York, so his maps would not have been in demand by the U.S. Navy, which had access to superior U.S. Coast Survey charts. Nor was there significant 'legitimate' private trade, as southern ports were blockaded. Moreover, the choice to extend the coverage to the Bahamas is telling. To some, this chart can only have been intended for Blockade Runners and smuggling goods out of southern ports to Europe, which was heavily dependent upon southern cotton. Typically, goods, mostly cotton, would be shipped clandestinely to the Bahamas, where they were unloaded by merchant companies and transferred to neutral vessels bound for London or France. While Copley lived in the heart of the Union, and there is no evidence he had Confederate sympathies, he may well have recognized a business opportunity. Here he has compiled the best Coast Survey maps into a comprehensive chart of southern waters covering the key routes for anyone interested in slipping past the blockade. Perhaps he was able to sell them to European navigators calling in New York, who would then use them themselves, or sell the charts on to compatriots.
This map drawn by Charles Copley and first issued in 1860, shortly before the American Civil War (1861 - 1865). It was copyrighted to his sons, C. C. J. and F. S. Copley - suggesting by this time they had largely taken over the day-to-day operation of the firm. A second edition appeared in 1864 and is known in only one example, at the British Library. A third edition, as here, was issued in 1865.
The coverage, detail, and publication run, 1860 - 1865, of the map beg the question of why it was made at all? Copley was a private map publisher based out of New York, so his maps would not have been in demand by the U.S. Navy, which had access to superior U.S. Coast Survey charts. Nor was there significant 'legitimate' private trade, as southern ports were blockaded. Moreover, the choice to extend the coverage to the Bahamas is telling. To some, this chart can only have been intended for Blockade Runners and smuggling goods out of southern ports to Europe, which was heavily dependent upon southern cotton. Typically, goods, mostly cotton, would be shipped clandestinely to the Bahamas, where they were unloaded by merchant companies and transferred to neutral vessels bound for London or France. While Copley lived in the heart of the Union, and there is no evidence he had Confederate sympathies, he may well have recognized a business opportunity. Here he has compiled the best Coast Survey maps into a comprehensive chart of southern waters covering the key routes for anyone interested in slipping past the blockade. Perhaps he was able to sell them to European navigators calling in New York, who would then use them themselves, or sell the charts on to compatriots.
This map drawn by Charles Copley and first issued in 1860, shortly before the American Civil War (1861 - 1865). It was copyrighted to his sons, C. C. J. and F. S. Copley - suggesting by this time they had largely taken over the day-to-day operation of the firm. A second edition appeared in 1864 and is known in only one example, at the British Library. A third edition, as here, was issued in 1865.
geographical_description
1865 Civil War Era Charles Copley 'blockade runner's' nautical chart or maritime map of the southeastern coast of the United States extending roughly from Cape Fear, North Carolina, to Miami, Florida, and the northern Bahamas. (Miami does not yet exist, but the Miami River and the Cape Florida Light, built in 1860, are illustrated.) Insets within the peninsula of Florida detail the most important southern harbors: Charleston, Georgetown Harbor, the Savannah River, Jacksonville (St. John's River), Fernandina Harbor, Cape Canaveral, Turtle Harbor, and Cedar Keys. The northern Bahamas are covered in some detail, but the chart does not extend as far south as Nassau.
The coverage, detail, and publication run, 1860 - 1865, of the map beg the question of why it was made at all? Copley was a private map publisher based out of New York, so his maps would not have been in demand by the U.S. Navy, which had access to superior U.S. Coast Survey charts. Nor was there significant 'legitimate' private trade, as southern ports were blockaded. Moreover, the choice to extend the coverage to the Bahamas is telling. To some, this chart can only have been intended for Blockade Runners and smuggling goods out of southern ports to Europe, which was heavily dependent upon southern cotton. Typically, goods, mostly cotton, would be shipped clandestinely to the Bahamas, where they were unloaded by merchant companies and transferred to neutral vessels bound for London or France. While Copley lived in the heart of the Union, and there is no evidence he had Confederate sympathies, he may well have recognized a business opportunity. Here he has compiled the best Coast Survey maps into a comprehensive chart of southern waters covering the key routes for anyone interested in slipping past the blockade. Perhaps he was able to sell them to European navigators calling in New York, who would then use them themselves, or sell the charts on to compatriots.
This map drawn by Charles Copley and first issued in 1860, shortly before the American Civil War (1861 - 1865). It was copyrighted to his sons, C. C. J. and F. S. Copley - suggesting by this time they had largely taken over the day-to-day operation of the firm. A second edition appeared in 1864 and is known in only one example, at the British Library. A third edition, as here, was issued in 1865.
Geographical Description
false
OCLC:
696293531
oclc
696293531
OCLC
false