Asia map by Aaron Arrowsmith. Courtesy of Library of Congress.
Map of Asia (1801) by Aaron Arrowsmith. Image courtesy the David Rumsey Map Collection

Artist/Maker: Aaron Arrowsmith (1750-1823)

Created: 1801

Origin/Purchase: England

Materials: paper engraved on 4 sheets

Dimensions: 121.9 × 143.8 (48 × 56 5/8 in.)

Location: Entrance Hall

Owner: Library of Congress

Historical Notes: Jefferson's Entrance Hall map collection was dominated by the wall maps of the London mapmaker Aaron Arrowsmith. In Jefferson's day Arrowsmith's maps were renowned for their clarity and large scale. He was particularly skilled in producing maps from a wide variety of source material, ranging from visitors' accounts of terrain, to sketch maps and triangulations.[1] His map of the United States was compiled largely from Native American maps and information supplied by the Hudson Bay Company.[2] Arrowsmith began his career as a surveyor and worked with the prominent map and globe maker John Cary. His success led to an appointment as hydrographer to King George IV.[3]

Jefferson made all of his purchases of Arrowsmith maps while serving as president. The first, in 1803, was "A Map of the United States of North America," published in London in 1802. Apparently satisfied with Arrowsmith's work, in 1805 Jefferson ordered maps of Europe, Asia, and Africa "on linen, with rollers & varnished," from a London agent, William Tunnicliff.[4] These three, along with the map of the United States, were probably among the maps that hung in Jefferson's Cabinet at the President's House.[5]

Jefferson's copies of Arrowsmith's maps remain unlocated, with the possible exception of his maps of Asia and the United States, varnished on rollers as Jefferson specified, which descended through the Cabell family of Nelson County and may have been purchased by Joseph Cabell at the Dispersal Sale in 1827.[6] Much of the Monticello map collection may have been used after Jefferson's death at the Edgehill School, which was operated from 1829 until around 1900 by his granddaughters at a nearby farm.[7]

- Text from Stein, Worlds, 389

References

  1. ^ G.R. Crone, Maps and Their Makers: An Introduction to the History of Cartography (Fourth Revised Edition) (London: Hutchinson, 1968), 139.
  2. ^ Seymour I. Schwartz and Ralph E. Ehrenberg, The Mapping of America (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1980), 221.
  3. ^ Ronald V. Tooley, Tooley's Dictionary of Mapmakers (New York: Alan R. Liss, Inc., 1979), 24.
  4. ^ Jefferson to Tunnicliff, April 25, 1805, Thomas Jefferson Papers, Huntington Library. Transcription available at Founders Online. See also W. & S. Jones Bill to Jefferson, August 3, 1805, Thomas Jefferson Papers, Library of Congress. Transcription available at Founders Online.
  5. ^ For a description of maps in the President's House, see Smith, First Forty Years, 385.
  6. ^ These maps are in Monticello's collection.
  7. ^ [Martha Jefferson Randolph?], "Inventory of the furniture in the house at Monticello," Coolidge Collection of Thomas Jefferson Manuscripts, Massachusetts Historical Society. Next to the maps in the Entrance Hall is the following notation: "these maps we should like to have for the school, and particularly the map of South America."