nationalatlas1970_specialsubjectmaps-history.pdf

13
HISTORY This historical section of The national atlas of the United States is intended to supplement, from the per- spective of time, the many other categories of information provided in the complete work. In selecting the topics for this section, the compilers have made no effort to achieve the kind of balanced coverage to be expected in a detailed chronological atlas of American history. Instead, the objec- tive has been to concentrate on areas in which new knowledge has become available, or on topics not likely to be found in other sections of the Atlas. Because of limitations of space and scale, all the maps in this section present generalized information. Their main purpose is to indicate the scope, nature, and location of certain kinds of activities historically important to the American people. It is hoped that they will provide guides for the investigations of specialists while at the same time alerting the general public to something of what has been learned in the area of historical geography since the pub- lication of Paullin and Wright’s A tlas o f historical geography of the United States 37 years ago. The first series of maps in this history section deals primarily with ethnohistory and presents the views of noted anthropologists and archeologists. The maps shown on this page locate archeological sites and prehistoric cultural complexes. These cultural complexes have two dimensions: the geographic extent of the culture as indicated by the range over which its characteristic artifacts are found, and its duration and relationship in time to the other cultures. Though a great deal of careful work has been done in the field of archeology over the last hundred years, the best that archeologists can do is to present an approximate picture of the temporal sequences and spacial ramifications of early man from about 10,000 B.C. to the coming of the white man. The location of Indian tribes at the time of European settlement is shown on the maps on pages 130-132. On the basis of anthropological research, it has been possible to relate the different tribes linguistically. Linguistic classi- fication of Indian tribes and cultures dates from the middle of the last century, but it has undergone considerable refinement, particularly with the availability of the com- puter to help analyze the enormous backlog of accumulated data. At best, however, these maps represent only a generalized and approximate reconstruction of the past, subject to modification in the years ahead. The second series of maps in the historical section concentrates on the dramatic story of the discovery and exploration of America. Here a great deal of new and detailed information has become available. This informa- tion was sufficient to suggest a significant reinterpretation of the American experience as it relates to exploration. The maps on page 133 depict the growing knowledge of North America among the Europeans in the worldwide Age of Discovery. They are intended to emphasize the global situation of North America in an age that was proving what many had long suspected—the earth was round, not flat. The sequence of maps on pages 134-139 indicates the PREHISTORIC SITES AND CULTURAL COMPLEXES These four maps of some major archeological sites and culture complexes represent an attempt to depict the broad outlines of the prehistory of the United States. They reflect the interpretations and judgments of selected specialists in various regions and the man- ner in which the local and regional assemblages of archeological materials are, or once were, organized into manageable systems. The views thus depicted are as of 1963. As with most map representations, they are overgeneralized and in considerable part already obsolescent because of the very rapid accumu- lation of vast quantities of new data and the changing interpretations placed upon the data as they are examined from different viewpoints and in light of new methods and information. The limitations of space, which allow only four small-scale maps, impose arbitrary datelines on each such map and preclude the representing of many of the prehistoric cultural complexes which professional archeologists recognize today. Man’s entry into the New World from Asia via the former Bering Strait land bridge is generally believed to have taken place some twenty to forty thousand years ago, and possibly even earlier. There is as yet no generally accepted archeological evidence of the earliest arrivals. Dated remains based on radio- carbon assays begin ca. 10,000 B.C., by which time well-developed stone-chipping techniques and hunting skills adapted to the taking of large game animals are manifested. Most of the evidence comes from game kill sites and from deeply stratified cave depos- its. In the Southwest, the Plains, and the Eastern United States, the large Clovis fluted points asso- ciated with mammoth (Clovis, Lehner, Dent, and others) at ca. 9500 B.C., are followed by the smaller Folsom points and extinct forms of bison (Linden- meier, Lubbock, etc.) at ca. 8000-9000 B.C. In the trans-Rocky Mountain West, the Desert culture (for example, Danger Cave) developed as a gathering and hunting tradition which lasted for thousands of years, and the Old Cordilleran tradition includes a series of principally hunting cultures. By 4000 B.C., the Early Big Game Hunters in the Eastern United States had developed into region- ally distinct groups who lived by small-game hunting, fishing, and wild-plant gathering. Their variants from place to place and through time can often be distin- guished in part by variations in projectile point forms—stemmed, notched, and barbed—which are also readily distinguishable from those of the earlier period. Milling stones appear in some numbers and are assumed to indicate increased reliance on the grinding of seeds and other vegetable foods. Ground and polished stone artifacts such as boatstones, ban- nerstones, and birdstones, were also made. The subsistence economy was presumably a sort of sea- sonal cyclical wandering from place to place as one or another kind of plant or animal food became locally available. These are the Archaic peoples. In the West, the Desert culture persisted with relatively immense amount of energy devoted to the internal explora- tion of North America from the early 17th century to the end of the 19th century. They show the relationship of the European explorer to the international struggle for a New World empire and a passage to India and the relationship of American exploring activity to expansion, overland migration, settlement, and economic development. The pattern of exploration is an uneven one, dictated in part by accident but in large measure by the varied regional geography of the country. By placing as many exploration routes as possible on these maps together with the main outposts of frontier settlement, it is hoped that the relation- ship of settlement to exploration has been made clear. This inventory of exploring expeditions within the boundaries of the present United States is the most complete that has ever been compiled. The routes of the exploring parties, extrapolated from studies made on larger scale maps, are laid down as accurately as possible given the limitations of the present map scales. American extra-continental exploring activity is shown on the map on pages 150-151. By implication this map demolishes the historical cliche that 19th-century Ameri- cans were isolationists largely preoccupied with “tending their own gardens” in the trans-Mississippi West. The exploring expeditions, sometimes following, sometimes leading American traders and whalers on the high seas, created a series of world frontiers across which Americans confronted rival nations and alien cultures throughout the historical existence of the nation. Nowhere is this more evident than in the maps of polar exploration, pages 148— 149, which indicate the intense American interest in the Arctic and Antarctic regions in the 19th and 20th centuries. From these maps two things are evident. First, America has been from the beginning a global nation, reorienting its position in response to new knowledge and strategic considerations. Secondly, judging from the amount of important 20th-century exploration, the Age of Exploration never ended but has actually accelerated in modern times. The final group of maps—those locating battlefields and historical sites and landmarks, tabulating election results, and outlining the territorial growth of the country presented on pages 140 through 147—are perhaps rather familiar to students of history. The political expansion of America is, of course, related to the patterns for explora- tion and settlement, though the actual territorial growth has been notably less global in scope. The charting of election results, while the best available at this time, may soon be superseded by computerized county-level election surveys. The maps of battlefield sites and other historical sites and landmarks represent one form of evidence of cultural activity, both good and bad, tragic and heroic, that has made up the experience of the American people. Taken together these maps suggest visually the enormous range and variety of American cultural experience in what is a complex, ever-changing regional society. If these maps only suggest the cultural complexity of America, they serve a useful purpose. little basic change, as it did into the historic period in many places. Reduced precipitation and increased temperatures between ca. 5000 and 2500 B.C. may have forced emigration of the Early Big Game Hunters from the western Plains into the mountain valleys and caused their replacement by people who foraged for a living in the Great Basin tradition. During the 500 B.C.-A.D. 500 period, maize agriculture and settled village life began to develop in the Southwestern and Eastern United States. Vari- ants of the Woodland culture, including the Hopewell mounds with their often richly stocked burials, flour- ished widely in the East, having grown out of the older Adena culture. Mexican-derived crops and increasing populations in the Southwest were devel- oping the distinctive Pueblo Indian culture. On the southern California coast, the early Canalino repre- sents the early stages of the maritime Chumash culture. Hunting, fishing, and food-collecting cultures occupied the northwest coast. In the Arctic, the Old Bering Sea culture and the early stages of Eskimo culture devel- oped, based on the hunting of sea mammals. Between A.D. 500 and 1300 came a great elabo- ration of village Indian life in several areas. Long experience with maize and other domestic crops and the leisure made possible by this experience led to a flowering of culture in the Mississippi-Ohio valleys and the Southeast, climaxing in such great middle Mississippi ceremonial centers as Etowah, Mound- ville, SfJiro, and Old Village Cahokia, with their well-developed stone carving, shellwork, textiles, pottery, and other arts and crafts. Late Woodland groups occupied the Great Lakes, the Northeast, and the Middle Atlantic. In the Southwest, pithouse villages were succeeded by multiroomed stone and clay pueblos, some of the later communities num- bering many hundreds of persons. In a number of areas in the Southeast, the Southwest, the Plains, and elsewhere, the archeological complexes from the 1300’s on are now seen to be directly ancestral to known and named tribal groups encountered by the Europeans who arrived in the 15th and 16th centuries. REFERENCES Jennings, Jesse D., Prehistory of North America, New York, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1968. Jennings, Jesse D. and Edward Norbeck, eds., Prehistoric man in the New World, Rice Univ. Semicentennial Pubs., Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1964. Willey, Gordon R., An introduction to American archae- ology, North and Middle America, Inglewood Cliffs, NJ., Prentice-Hall, 1966. Willey, Gordon R. and Philip Phillips, Method and theory in American archaeology, Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1958. Wormington, H. Marie, Ancient man in North America, 4th revised ed., Denver Mus. of Nat. History Pop. Ser. 4, Denver, Denver Mus. of Nat. History, 1957. 129

Transcript of nationalatlas1970_specialsubjectmaps-history.pdf

  • HISTORYThis historical section o f The national atlas o f the

    United States is intended to supplem ent, from the perspective o f time, the m any o ther categories o f inform ation provided in the com plete work. In selecting the topics for this section, the compilers have m ade no effort to achieve the kind o f balanced coverage to be expected in a detailed chronological atlas o f A m erican history. Instead, the objective has been to concentrate on areas in w hich new knowledge has becom e available, o r on topics no t likely to be found in o ther sections o f the Atlas.

    Because o f lim itations o f space and scale, all the maps in this section present generalized information. Their m ain purpose is to indicate the scope, nature, and location o f certain kinds o f activities historically im portant to the A m erican people. It is hoped that they will provide guides for the investigations o f specialists while a t the same time alerting the general public to something o f what has been learned in the area o f historical geography since the publication o f Paullin and W rights A tlas o f historical geography o f the United States 37 years ago.

    The first series o f maps in this history section deals prim arily with ethnohistory and presents the views o f noted anthropologists and archeologists. The maps shown on this page locate archeological sites and prehistoric cultural complexes. These cultural complexes have two dimensions: the geographic extent o f the culture as indicated by the range over which its characteristic artifacts are found, and its duration and relationship in tim e to the other cultures. Though a great deal o f careful work has been done in the

    field o f archeology over the last hundred years, the best that archeologists can do is to present an approxim ate p icture o f the tem poral sequences and spacial ramifications o f early m an from about 10,000 B.C. to the coming o f the white man.

    The location o f Indian tribes a t the time o f E uropean settlement is shown on the maps on pages 130-132. On the basis o f anthropological research, it has been possible to relate the different tribes linguistically. Linguistic classification o f Ind ian tribes and cultures dates from the m iddle o f the last century, b u t it has undergone considerable refinement, particularly with the availability o f the computer to help analyze the enorm ous backlog o f accum ulated data. A t best, however, these m aps rep resen t on ly a generalized and approxim ate reconstruction o f the past, subject to modification in the years ahead.

    T he second series o f m aps in the historical section concentrates on the dram atic story o f the discovery and exploration o f America. H ere a great deal o f new and detailed inform ation has becom e available. This inform ation was sufficient to suggest a significant reinterpretation o f the Am erican experience as it relates to exploration. The maps on page 133 depict the growing knowledge o f N orth America am ong the Europeans in the worldwide Age o f Discovery. They are intended to emphasize the global situation o f N orth A m erica in an age that was proving w h a t m any h a d long su sp ec ted th e e a r th w as ro u n d , no t flat.

    The sequence o f maps on pages 134-139 indicates the

    PREHISTORIC SITES AND CULTURAL COMPLEXESThese four maps o f some m ajor archeological sites and culture complexes represent an attem pt to depict the broad outlines o f the prehistory o f the U nited States. They reflect the interpretations and judgm ents o f selected specialists in various regions and the m anner in which the local and regional assemblages o f archeological materials are, o r once were, organized into m anageable systems. The views thus depicted are as o f 1963. As w ith m ost m ap representations, they are overgeneralized and in considerable part already obsolescent because o f the very rap id accum ulation o f vast quantities o f new da ta and the changing interpretations placed upon the data as they are examined from different viewpoints and in light o f new methods and inform ation. The limitations o f space, w hich allow only four small-scale maps, impose arbitrary datelines on each such m ap and preclude the representing o f m any o f the prehistoric cultural complexes which professional archeologists recognize today.

    M ans entry into the N ew W orld from Asia via the form er Bering S trait land bridge is generally believed to have taken place some twenty to forty thousand years ago, and possibly even earlier. There is as yet no generally accepted archeological evidence o f the earliest arrivals. D ated rem ains based on radiocarbon assays begin ca. 10,000 B.C., by which time well-developed stone-chipping techniques and hunting skills adapted to the taking o f large game animals are manifested. M ost o f the evidence comes from

    game kill sites and from deeply stratified cave deposits. In the Southwest, the Plains, and the Eastern U nited States, the large Clovis fluted points associated w ith m am m oth (Clovis, Lehner, Dent, and others) a t ca. 9500 B.C., are followed by the smaller Folsom points and extinct form s o f bison (Linden- meier, Lubbock, etc.) a t ca. 8000-9000 B.C. In the trans-Rocky M ountain W est, the Desert culture (for exam ple, D anger Cave) developed as a gathering and hunting tradition which lasted for thousands o f years, and the O ld C ordilleran tradition includes a series o f principally hunting cultures.

    By 4000 B.C., the Early Big G am e H unters in the Eastern U nited States had developed into regionally distinct groups who lived by small-game hunting, fishing, and wild-plant gathering. Their variants from place to place and through time can often be distinguished in part by variations in projectile point formsstemmed, notched, and barbedwhich are also readily distinguishable from those o f the earlier period. Milling stones appear in some num bers and are assumed to indicate increased reliance on the grinding o f seeds and o ther vegetable foods. G round and polished stone artifacts such as boatstones, ban- nerstones, and birdstones, w ere also m ade. The subsistence economy was presum ably a sort o f seasonal cyclical w andering from place to place as one or another kind o f p lant o r animal food became locally available. These are the Archaic peoples. In the West, the Desert culture persisted with relatively

    im mense am ount o f energy devoted to the internal exploration o f N orth Am erica from the early 17th century to the end o f the 19th century. They show the relationship o f the European explorer to the international struggle for a New W orld em pire and a passage to Ind ia and the relationship o f Am erican exploring activity to expansion, overland migration, settlement, and economic development. The pattern o f exploration is an uneven one, dictated in part by accident bu t in large measure by the varied regional geography o f the country. By placing as m any exploration routes as possible on these m aps together with the main outposts o f frontier settlement, it is hoped that the relationship o f settlem ent to exploration has been m ade clear. This inventory o f exploring expeditions w ithin the boundaries o f the present U nited States is the most complete that has ever been compiled. The routes o f the exploring parties, extrapolated from studies m ade on larger scale maps, are laid down as accurately as possible given the limitations o f the present m ap scales.

    A m erican extra-continental exploring activity is shown on the m ap on pages 150-151. By im plication this m ap demolishes the historical cliche that 19th-century Americans were isolationists largely preoccupied w ith tending their own gardens in the trans-Mississippi West. The exploring expeditions, sometimes following, sometimes leading A m erican traders and whalers on the high seas, created a series o f world frontiers across which Americans confronted rival nations and alien cultures throughout the historical existence o f the nation. N owhere is this more

    evident than in the m aps o f po lar exploration, pages 148 149, which indicate the intense Am erican interest in the Arctic and Antarctic regions in the 19th and 20th centuries. F rom these m aps two things are evident. First, America has been from the beginning a global nation, reorienting its position in response to new knowledge and strategic considerations. Secondly, ju dg ing from the am oun t o f im portant 20th-century exploration, the Age o f Exploration never ended b u t has actually accelerated in m odern times.

    The final group o f m apsthose locating battlefields and historical sites and landm arks, tabulating election results, and outlining the territorial growth o f the country presented on pages 140 through 147are perhaps rather fam iliar to students o f history. T he political expansion o f Am erica is, o f course, related to the patterns for exploration and settlement, though the actual territorial growth has been notably less global in scope. The charting o f election results, while the best available at this time, may soon be superseded by com puterized county-level election surveys.

    The m aps o f battlefield sites and o ther historical sites and landm arks represent one form o f evidence o f cultural activity, both good and bad, tragic and heroic, that has m ade up the experience o f the American people. Taken together these m aps suggest visually the enorm ous range and variety o f Am erican cultural experience in what is a complex, ever-changing regional society. I f these maps only suggest the cultural complexity o f America, they serve a useful purpose.

    little basic change, as it d id into the historic period in m any places. Reduced precipitation and increased tem peratures between ca. 5000 and 2500 B.C. may have forced emigration o f the Early Big G am e H unters from the western Plains into the m ountain valleys and caused their replacem ent by people who foraged for a living in the G reat Basin tradition.

    D uring the 500 B.C.-A .D . 500 period, maize agriculture and settled village life began to develop in the Southwestern and Eastern U nited States. Variants o f the W oodland culture, including the Hopewell mounds with their often richly stocked burials, flourished widely in the East, having grown out o f the older A dena culture. M exican-derived crops and increasing populations in the Southwest were developing the distinctive Pueblo Indian culture. O n the southern California coast, the early Canalino represents the early stages o f the m aritim e C hum ash culture. Hunting, fishing, and food-collecting cultures occupied the northwest coast. In the Arctic, the Old Bering Sea culture and the early stages o f Eskimo culture developed, based on the hunting o f sea mammals.

    Between A.D. 500 and 1300 came a great elaboration o f village Indian life in several areas. Long experience with maize and o ther domestic crops and the leisure m ade possible by this experience led to a flowering o f culture in the M ississippi-Ohio valleys and the Southeast, climaxing in such great middle Mississippi ceremonial centers as Etowah, M ound- ville, SfJiro, and Old Village Cahokia, with their

    well-developed stone carving, shellwork, textiles, pottery, and o ther arts and crafts. Late W oodland groups occupied the G reat Lakes, the Northeast, and the M iddle Atlantic. In the Southwest, pithouse villages were succeeded by m ultiroom ed stone and clay pueblos, some o f the later communities num bering m any hundreds o f persons. In a num ber o f areas in the Southeast, the Southwest, the Plains, and elsewhere, the archeological complexes from the 1300s on are now seen to be directly ancestral to known and nam ed tribal groups encountered by the Europeans who arrived in the 15th and 16th centuries.

    REFERENCESJennings, Jesse D., Prehistory of North America, New York,

    M cGraw-Hill Book Co., 1968.Jennings, Jesse D. and Edw ard N orbeck, eds., Prehistoric

    man in the New World, Rice Univ. Semicentennial Pubs., Chicago, Univ. o f Chicago Press, 1964.

    Willey, G ordon R., An introduction to American archaeology, North and Middle America, Inglewood Cliffs, N J ., Prentice-Hall, 1966.

    Willey, G ordon R. and Philip Phillips, Method and theory in American archaeology, Chicago, Univ. o f Chicago Press, 1958.

    W ormington, H. M arie, Ancient man in North America, 4th revised ed., Denver Mus. o f N at. H istory Pop. Ser. 4, Denver, D enver Mus. o f N at. History, 1957.

    129

  • NATIONAL ATLAS INDIAN TRIBES, CULTURES & LANGUAGES

  • NATIONAL ATLAS INDIAN TRIBES, CULTURES & LANGUAGES

    132

    EARLY INDIAN TRIBES, CULTURE AREAS, AND LINGUISTIC STOCKS

    TRIBAL DISTRIBUTIO NS

    Tribal distributions depicted on these maps (and on all other tribal m aps covering a com parable area) are arbitrary at m any points. D etailed knowledge o f tribal areas was acquired at different times in different regions. For example, by the tim e knowledge was gained o f the areas occupied by P lains tribes, m any groups in the East had becom e extinct o r had m oved from their aboriginal locations. Some o f these m ovements ultim ately affected distributions on the Plains prior to reasonably detailed knowledge o f Plains occupancy. Hence, it is not possible to approximate aboriginal areas o f occupancy on a single m ap o f continental scope. Furtherm ore, most groups d id no t occupy sharply defined areas, so that the delineation o f territories is misleading.

    Distributions were derived, with slight modifications, from Indian tribes o f North America (Driver and others, 1953), and boundaries w ithin California were simplified after Languages, territories, and names o f California Indian tribes (Heizer, 1966). According to the authors o f these

    publications, the boundaries shown are those o f the mid- nth century in the Southeast and the eastern part o f the N ortheast, the late 17th and early 18th centuries farther west in the Northeast, the late 18th and early 19th centuries in the Plains, the late 18th century in California, and the m iddle-to-late 19th century elsewhere. Even so, m any compromises had to be made.

    CULTURE AREAS

    Culture areas, which indicate groupings o f tribes o f similar cultural type, are after Comparative studies o f N orth American Indians (D river and Massey, 1957), with revisions by W illiam C. Sturtevant in consultation with John C. Ewers, Smithsonian Institution. Boundaries are arbitrary in m any places because the basis o f classification is vague and distributions o f most cultural traits do not coincide. The groupings shown are fairly representative o f classifications found useful by several generations o f anthropologists.

    LING UISTIC STOCKS

    Genetic relationships between Indian languages are shown on these maps. Subgroupings o f m ore closely related languages and several remote relationships are omitted. The linguistic stocks are based on Languages o f the world: Native America fascicle one and Languages o f the world: Native America fascicle two (Voegelin and Voegelin, 1964 and 1965), and Map o f North American Indian languages (Voegelin and Voegelin, 1966). A few modifications and corrections were made by the present au thor (partly following suggestions by Ives G oddard, H arvard University, and D ell Hymes, University o f Pennsylvania).

    Research on this subject is advancing rapidly. These m aps try to give a reasonable balance between fact, p robable fact, and probable future opinion and take into account some o f the unevenness o f data and o f research in different regions and different stocks.

    v. 47, p t 2,1957, p. 172-174

    Driver, H arold E., and others, Indian tribes of North America, Mem. 9, Intem at. Jour, o f Am. Ling., Baltimore, W averly Press, 1953

    Heizer, Robert F., Languages, territories and names of California Indian tribes, Berkeley and Los Angeles, Univ. o f California Press, 1966

    Voegelin, C. F., and Voegelin, F. M., Languages o f the world: Native America fascicle one, Anthropo. Ling., v. 6, no. 6, 1964

    ------ Languages o f the w orld: N ative A m erica fascicle tw o,Anthropo. Ling., v. 7, no. 7, 1965

    -----Map of North American Indian languages, Pub. 20, Am.Ethnological Soc., revised ed., Menasha, Wis., George Banta Pub. Co., 1966

    175" WEST

    M a c k e n z ie-.ESKIM O

    rkagnVmt

    Uninhabited;]

    EARLY INDIAN TRIBES, CULTURE AREAS, AND LINGUISTIC STOCKS

    William C. Sturtevant Smithsonian Institution, 1967

    SCALE 1:7,500,000

    175 EAST

    1 K jr r c^ 1

    1 J JP l / N /

    1 I Black R~ S " T

    I \' A

    E a g l e Hoona

    A L E U T EYAK

    WESTERNARCTIC

    MINOR TRIBES

    MAJOR TRIBES

    CULTURE AREAS

    LINGUISTIC STOCKS

    Eskimo-Aleut

    Na Dene

  • DISCOVERY OF NORTH AMERICA

    Com piled from inform ation provided by W illiam H. G oetzm ann, University of Texas, 1966

    ------------NORSE ---------------------------BRITISH

    --------- --SPANISH ------------------------- --DUTCH

    ------------PORTUGUESE -------------------------- --RUSSIAN

    ------------FRENCH

    PRINCIPAL VOYAGES

    1562 J. Ribaut

    1565 P. d e A vilfe

    1565 A. d e A rellano

    1576-1577 M. Frobisher

    677 F. Drake

    1578 M. Frobisher

    1584 A. Barlow-P. A madas (Roanoke Voyages)

    1585 J. Davis

    1586 J. Davis

    1587 |. Davis

    1587 P. de U nam uno

    1595 S. C erm enho

    1602 S. Viscaino

    1603 S. de Cham plain

    1604-fc07 S. de C ham plain

    1609 H. H udson

    160 H. H udson

    1612 T. Button

    1616 R. Bylot-W . Baffin

    1631 L. Foxe

    1648 S. D ezhnev

    1728 V. Bering

    1741 V. Bering

    1776-1780 J. Cook

    1790 M. Q uim per

    1791-1794 G. V ancouver

    VOYAGES BEFORE 1550 PRINCIPAL VOYAGES

    985-986 B. Herjulfsson

    995-9% L. Ericsson

    1003-1004 T. Karlsefni

    1492 C. C olum bus

    1493 C. C olum bus

    1497 ). C abot

    1498 C. Colum bus

    1498 ). Cabot

    1500 G. Corte-Real

    1501 G. Corte-Real

    1502 C. Colum bus

    1502 M. Corte-Real

    1508-1509 S. Cabot

    1513 V. de Balboa

    1513 ). Ponce de Le6n

    1518 ). d e Grijalva

    1519 A. de Pineda

    1520 J. Fagundes

    1523 G. da V errazano

    1524 E. G 6m ez

    1526 L. d e Ayllon

    1528 P. de N arviez

    1534 J. Cartier

    1535 J. Cartier

    1539 H. de Soto

    1542 L .M oscoso (after de Soto)

    1539 F. de Ulloa

    1540 H. d e A larc6n

    1542 ). Cabrillo

    VOYAGES AFTER 1550

    133

  • NATIONAL ATLAS

    By 1530, only a decade after Cortez had h

    In the persons of tl

    ,t was soon joined. Gee

    s Cabeza de Vaca, de S

    sh long hunters, who were pushing inland fro I the Carolinas. In 1673, well over a century aft juried in its lower reaches, Joliet and Marquet

    :ast of the Mississippi was the object of fier is and between the Indian and the white man.

    Spanish explora,ion,he Sl ^ r ^ ^ ! ^ ' Thecc

    Brebner, John B The explorers of North America, 1

    ^ 2 vob-New YOTk-

    ^ S o r t r t T t i T 0/ *8 vols- Boston- Houghton

    EXPLORATION AND SETTLEMENT BEFORE 1675

    134

    - Champlain, S. de, 1615 (Georgian Bay-Caciaque -E. Ontario-Oneida L. and return)

    - Henry-

    B yacno, ,567 (Savannah R.-B,ue Ridge-

    E,|jp, A. de&B. Beltran, 1582 (Mex.co-R.o

    Eipi ^ r e w s t

    a " & W (C

    craytTow^h^r-owen'67

  • EXPLORATION AND SETTLEMENT

  • NATIONAL ATLAS EXPLORATION AND

    Exploration in the period 1835-50 was largel the search for adequate emigration routes throu Oregon and California. At the same time, this < the opening phase of what might be called the G sance Period, during which troops of the U.S. i out by the Government to explore the West and mation about its natural resources. Much of this stimulated by the

    By 1835, the trail to Oregon was relative! the trail to California was not. In 1833, the mo Reddeford Walker, operating under orders frc Bonneville, first marched west from Great Salt boldt River and over the Sierra Nevada. Wi located several passes over the Sierras and prol U.S. explorers to see the wonders of pi Park. The Bartleson-Bidwell party of

    wed part way by the Butter-

    int explorer of the period,:ctacular and impor John C. Frimont v

    Period. Frfemont, a U.S. Army topo- 'eral trips into the West. In 1842, he

    South Pass. In 1843-44, he made a grand

    Capt. George Warner in California; Capt. Randolph B. Marcy and Lt. James H. Simpson on the Staked Plain; and Capt. Howard Stansbury and Lt. John W. Gunnison in Utah. Lt. George Horatio Derby explored and mapped parts of California and also became its first American writer under the pen name of John Phoenix, Esq. All of these Army men engaged in a great recon-

    : of the West and began the all-important geographical mapping of the region which brought it within the purview of public knowledge.

    the West during * * * 0/ * ^

    and 6 vokSan Fran-

    Aberts'aL?e

    BartlHumboldt R.-Son PatUsanVra^ Kol B^ aCana

  • NATIONAL ATLAS TERRITORIAL GROWTH

  • NATIONAL ATLAS

    . ELECTIONS AND POLITICAL PARTIES

    144

    r . r ......rr.rr.:"r..: irrrrr.rlr i S - - r . r f r

    ELECTION RESULTS

  • NATIONAL ATLAS GEOGRAPHIC EXPEDITIONS

    ARCTIC GEOGRAPHIC EXPEDITIONS FROM THE UNITED STATES

    GEOGRAPHIC EXPEDITIONS