Maps

Charting the Future I

Over the years, as we push more and more of our maps onto the web, such as Pieter Goos' Zee-Atlas, 1672, from which the below image was taken, we ask…
...what do we do with all this stuff?
...how do we make digital maps meaningful?

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One approach is through our blog, where we highlight various places and themes depicted. Often there is much more to read between the contours, about, among other things the social, geographic and cultural mix from where the maps were generated; something we, in future posts, will take the time to illuminate.

Another approach to extend the reach, utility and meaningfulness of our maps is through digital geographic indexing. Our staff has thus far created map indexes for close to 1/3 of our 10,000 digitized maps, which you can read about here and download here, in effect opening an opportunity for readers to access our collections geographically.

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And while schematic and geographic indexes serve a much needed function, they merely point to the next logical steps in the presentation and re-purposing of map images in a web context.

The first step is placing the maps themselves (as opposed to outlines of the map coverages) into geographic context, or put another way, turning pictures of maps into digital geospatial information, where a pixel can be read by a computer as a pair of coordinates, as latitude and longitude.

These images can then, in turn, be rendered using tools such as web map servers and the ubiquitous Google Earth. The image below is Plate 1 from William Perris' Maps of the City of New York, 1852, georectified and then rendered in Google Earth.

Stay tuned. In my next post I'll go the details about how we "stretch" maps for web presentation. We will also explain how you too can participate.

Mapping New York's Shoreline: The Storied River

Staff of the New York Public Library recently hand picked a set of nearly 500 images, collected from across our Digital Gallery, composing them as a curated set of images at the Commons on Flickr. They represent the Hudson River Valley through several hundred years of history and complement Mapping New York's Shoreline, 1609-2009, now up in the Gottesman Exhibition Hall at the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building.

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The images depict landscape scenes in stereoscopic vision, a popular 19th century format; everyday and commemorative menus from restaurants and catering halls; postcards of scenic places and buildings; and engravings of important estates, prominent citizens and dramatic turning points in historical events. These images have been geocoded and are part of map-based bibliography, The Storied River, coming soon to the NYPL. Stay tuned, the launch will be posted on the NYPL's map blog...

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In the meantime, enjoy the same photos at the Commons on Flickr, perused as a gallery of images... Mapping New York's Shoreline: The Storied River

...or, my favorite, pinned to a map on the Flickr website.

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Learn more about the NYPL Map Division.

New Maps of Brooklyn & Queens!

You might remember from previous posts, that the Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division has been busy digitizing our historical map collections, with a strong focus on New York City fire insurance maps. We’ve added some excellent new titles (about 500 maps total) to that collection in recent months detailing Queens and Brooklyn from the early 20th century. The example below is from E. Belcher Hyde’s Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Vol. 7., 1907. This map shows an early Luna Park, Coney Island’s famous amusement park, just four years after it opened to the public, which itself was built on the site of the former Sea Lion Park, home of the world’s first looping roller coaster. And you thought the Cyclone was scary.

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A Map of the Known World: A review

A Map of the Known World coverA Map of the Known World (April 2009) is Lisa Ann Sandell's third novel (it was also the first book I have discovered that was edited by Aimee Friedman a neat-o YA author in her own right whom I met very, very, very briefly at a reading). She has two other critically acclaimed novels under her belt. According to her website, those previous books were written in verse. I feel like saying that now because I want to address the tone of the book, before saying anything else about it. At times the writing felt erratic--sometimes profoundly authentic, at other times very much like a writer writing as a teen. That might be due in part to Sandell's experience with free verse. It might also be because I was reading and uncorrected advanced proof. I don't know, but I wanted to point it out all the same. Now you know.  read more »

North of Beautiful: A review

"Not to brag or anything, but if you saw me from behind, you'd probably think I was perfect."

North of Beautiful coverAfter sixteen years, Terra Rose Cooper has mastered the fine art of hiding the cracks in the facade of her perfect life. Concealer and foundation quickly camouflage the port-wine stain on Terra's cheek. A rigorous exercise regimen gives Terra control over her body that she never had over her face. It also makes sure her body is one that her boyfriend, a beautiful and popular jock himself, will definitely appreciate.

It's harder to hide her family's flaws; her father's denigrating comments, her mother's compulsive baking (and eating), the flight of her older brothers' away from the family--and from their little sister. Terra is so focused on her plan to finish high school early and flee to an East Coast college that, sometimes, it's easy to forget that she bears marks from the household as clear as any birthmark.  read more »

Mapping NYC

We've updated the Map Division's Google Earth index to digitized NYC map collections to include more than 2000 maps from 32 titles, organized chronologically and geographically (by borough), all published between 1852 and 1923. The map index requires installation of Google Earth on your computer.

There are three recommended ways to search for maps using this tool.

1. Select a borough and vintage using the folders from the list on the left sidebar.

2. Double click the map to fly to your chosen location, then use the time slider at the top left of the map frame to narrow the chronological search scope.

3. Enter a street address in the "fly to" search box, then use the time slider.

Once you've located a historical map coverage, scroll your mouse over the area and click. A popup window will allow you to access bibliographic information and a digital copy of the historical map. Happy surfing.

Weeksville Revisited

Brooklyn: Bergen Street - Roch... Digital ID: 703234F. New York Public Library In a previous post, we looked at maps of Brooklyn from the 19th and early 20th centuries of the neighborhood once called Weeksville, centered on Hunterfly Road. It was there, in 1969, according to The Weeksville Society, that researchers rediscovered the "Hunterfly Road houses," the neighborhood's only remaining residential structures from the period. I'm curious to know if those same researchers used the Photographic Views of New York City, 1870s-1970s, located in The Irma and Paul Milstein Division of United States History, Local History and Genealogy, particularly the photograph below, shot by Percy Loomis Sperr in 1940, in their reports. Click the link at the bottom of this post to see what the Hunterfly Road houses look like today.


Google Maps Streetview

Crystal Palace at Reservoir Square

On today's map you wouldn't have a clue as to where the Crystal Palace at Reservoir Square was located. Looking at a William Perris' fire insurance map from 1853 however reveals that, where now stands our magnificent central library on the corner of 5th Avenue & 42nd Street, once stood the huge Croton distributing reservoir, gravity feeding the thirsty city from near the top of Murray Hill and a spectacular Crystal Palace, seen here as the large purple shape on the top left.

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You can see both the reservoir and the Crystal Palace here.

An even closer look reveals a handwritten note reading "50,000". This is a fire insurance map which probably means that the fire insurance policy taken out for the Crystal Palace was $50,000 or about $1.5 million in today's dollars.

That seems like a shockingly low price for such a spectacular building.
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Especially considering the fact that in 1858 it burned to the ground.

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The story goes that the morning after the fire, in typical New York City fashion, street hawkers were selling still warm pieces of the melted Crystal Palace.

Digitizing the Historical Landscape

We've digitized more historical maps documenting the changing New York City landscape. Follow the link to a comprehensive listing of close to 2,700 maps showing buildings, old streets, farm lines, streetcar routes historical shorelines and more.

Here's a small section from G.M. Hopkins' 1880 Farm Line Atlas of Brooklyn.

Weeksville

Weeksville was a community of African Americans founded in 1838 by a freed slave named James Weeks in an area straddling modern day Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights in Brooklyn. By the 1860s, according to Weeksville Society, it had become a cultural nexus and a draft riot safe haven for New York City's growing African American population. While much has been written about its people, both today, as in this NY Times article from 2005 and in the past, as in The Freedman's Torchlight, one of the first African American newspapers, not all that much geographic information remains about this historical landscape. There are traces that surface today, from the Hunterfly Road Houses to Weeksville Park, commemorating a landscape swallowed up by Brooklyn's street grid. One of the remaining pieces of the streetscape is Hunterfly Place.

This one block section of street was once part of the larger Hunterfly Road, the main thoroughfare of Weeksville that ran north to south from what is now Fulton Street to East New York Avenue. The following is a time series of maps of the area published between 1880 and 1908 from the NYPL Digital Gallery that document the physical changes to this community. These maps are part of the larger series of property mapping from the collections of The Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division here at the NYPL.

Hopkins, G.M.
Detailed estate and old farm line atlas of the city of Brooklyn
1880

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Map Division in the Media

Fall 2008 has been a busy season for Map Division staff and media related activity. NYPL’s "Treasures" video series features Matt Knutzen and Alice Hudson in a 7 minute presentation about our paper and computer maps.

 1619020. New York Public LibraryOn Nov. 12 we were featured in USA Today, the Life Section: N.Y. Public Library puts its 'Treasures' online.

New York 1 Television filmed Paul LeClerc, Alice Hudson and Rebecca Federman in November, and aired this presentation the week of November 24 on NY1.

It may well be picked up by CNN, but that is not known at this point.

Visit these sites to get a fun introduction to maps at the Library!

Profiles and sections of the city (a worm’s-eye view?)

“Cartographic materials” and “cartographic resources” are phrases that we use in the map library world to describe a whole gamut of map-like information sources. Elevation profiles and geologic sections are particular types of cartographic materials that represent vertical planes, perpendicular to the earth’s surface, in contrast to the typical horizontal-surface representations commonly referred to as maps.

Here are a couple of examples from the NYPL Digital Gallery that show the added dimension that profiles can provide for an understanding of the New York City environment. Click on the images to connect to them in the Digital Gallery, where you can enlarge and zoom into them.


Profile of the twelve avenues in the city of New York


[Profile of] Tibbits Brook route [of Croton Aqueduct from the Harlem River to the Battery in Manhattan]

(Note the distributing reservoir on the crest of Murray['s] Hill, the site of NYPL!)

 read more »

County Atlases

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A popular collection in the NYPL's Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, and one of my personal favorites, is the county atlas series, most of which was published following the passage of a federal law commemorating the centennial of the United States. We have recently digitized 43 atlases covering New York and New Jersey from our collection of more than 420 titles printed before 1900. See this page for a list of digital holdings from this series.

Their pages are filled not only with wonderfully detailed maps on the national, state, county, township and city level, but also with interesting, flat perspective engravings depicting local business districts, prominent estates and farms. Business directories sometimes accompany the map pages that, along with the drawings, provide a glimpse into local social and economic geography of the 19th century. They also give us an idea of who provided funding for the production of these subscription based publications.

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Staten Island Aerial Photos from 1924

If you like the "Satellite View" feature in Google Maps then you should enjoy these aerial photographs of New York City. In 1924 Arthur Tuttle flew over the city snapping pictures of every building and landmark there was. His images of NYC rooftops clearly show the outline of all the buildings. The atlas containing his photos is called:

Sectional aerial maps of the City of New York / [photographed and assembled under the direction of the chief engineer, July 1st, 1924].

Here are a couple of samples cropped from larger images:

The Staten Island Ferry Terminal (from image 21A)
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Historical Staten Island Maps in the Digital Gallery

There's a great selection of Staten Island maps and Atlases in the NYPL Digital Gallery. Using the "Pan and Zoom" feature the maps can be enlarged to the point where you can read street names and even the names of residents of individual houses. "Pan and Zoom" is not available on all maps, however.

Here are some of the maps and atlases available:


Atlas of Staten Island, Richmond County, New York, from official records and surveys; compiled and drawn by F. W. Beers.

Published in 1874, this Atlas contains 35 maps of neighborhoods on Staten Island including property lines, names of property owners, and outlines of individual buildings.
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Borough of Richmond, Topographical Survey. (1906-1913)  read more »

State, County & City Atlases

New Jersey Counties
Hyde, E.B. & Co., Atlas of Hunterdon County, New Jersey, 1873

Beers, F.W., Atlas of Monmouth co., New Jersey, 1873

Hyde, E.B. & Co., Atlas of Passaic County, New-Jersey, 1877

New York State
Burr, David H., An atlas of the state of New York, 1829

Burr, David H., An atlas of the state of New York, 1839, c1829

Burr, David H., Atlas of New York, 1838

Burr, David H., An atlas of the state of New York, 1841

Asher & Adams, New topographical atlas and gazetteer of New York, 1871

New York Counties

Beers, S.N. & D.G., New topographical atlas of the counties of Albany and Schenectady, New York, 1866

Everts, Ensign & Everts, Combination atlas map of Broome County, New York, 1876

Beers, F.W., County atlas of Cayuga, New York, 1875

Stewart, William, New topographical atlas of Chautauqua County, New York, 1867

Beers, F.W., Atlas of Chemung Co., New York, 1869

Nichols, Beach, Atlas of Chenango County, New York, 1875

Beers, F.W., Atlas of Clinton Co., New York, 1869

D. G. Beers & Co., Atlas of Columbia County, New York, 1873

Beers, F.W., Atlas of Delaware co., New York, 1869

Gray, W. and Son, New illustrated atlas of Dutchess County, New York, 1876

Stone & Stewart, New topographical atlas of Erie Co., New York, 1866

Beers, F.W., Illustrated historical atlas of Erie Co., New York, 1880

D. G. Beers & Co., Atlas of Franklin County, New York, 1876

Everts, Ensign & Everts, Combination atlas map of Genesee County, New York, 1876

Beers, S.N. & D.G., New topographical atlas of Jefferson Co., New York, 1864

Nichols, Beach, Atlas of Montgomery and Fulton counties, New York, 1868

Beers, D. G., Atlas of Madison County, New York, 1875

New! Hyde, E.B. Atlas of Nassau County, Long Island, N.Y., 1914

Beers, D. G. & Co., Atlas of Niagara and Orleans counties, New York, 1875

Stone, C. K., New topographical atlas of Oswego County, New York, 1867

Beers, F. W., Atlas of Otsego Co., New York, 1868

Beers, S. N., New topographical atlas of Saratoga Co., New York, 1866

Beers, S. N., New topographical atlas of Schoharie Co., New York, 1866

Beach, Nichols, Atlas of Schuyler County, New York, 1874

Beers, D. G. amp&; Co., Atlas of Steuben County, New York, 1873

Beers, S. N., New topographical atlas of St. Lawrence County, N.Y., 1865

Wendelken & Co., Atlas of the towns of Babylon, Islip, and south part of Brookhaven in Suffolk Co., 1888

New! Hyde, E.B. Atlas of ... Suffolk County, Long Island, New York, 1915-1917

Stone & Stewart, New topographical atlas of Tompkins County, New York, 1866

Hopkins, G. M. & Co., Atlas of the city of Utica, New York, 1883

Beers, D. G. & Co., Atlas of Wayne County, New York, 1874

J.B. Beers & Co., County atlas of Westchester, New York, 1872

New York State (City Atlases, non-NYC)

Hopkins, G.M., City atlas of Albany, New York, 1876

Hopkins, G.M., City atlas of Auburn, New York, 1882

Wendelken & Co., Atlas of the towns of Babylon, Islip, and south part of Brookhaven in Suffolk Co., 1888

Hopkins, G.M., Atlas of the City of Buffalo, Erie Co., 1872

M.S. Converse & Co., City atlas of Elmira, New York, 1876

Pidgeon, Roger H., Atlas of the City of Elmira, New York, 1896

Hopkins, G.M., City atlas of Oswego, New York, 1880

Beers, F.W. and Cramer, Louis H., Combination atlas of Saratoga and Ballston, 1876

Barton, William, Map of the city of Troy, West Troy and Green Island, N.Y., 1869

Hopkins, G.M., City atlas of Troy, New York, 1881

Hopkins, G.M., Atlas of the city of Utica, New York, 1883

New York City Fire Insurance Atlases

Fire Insurance maps are some of the most detailed city maps published, showing building structures, lot dimensions, shoreline locations and sometimes, property bk_br_1907.jpgownership. At the NYPL we have an extensive collection of these maps, originally published as atlases, primarily covering the New York City area. In the past three years, we have digitized over 3,100 pages from some 65 of these atlases. Also included in this collection of digital images are zoning maps and detailed topographic surveys conducted by some of the borough topographic bureaus. We are in the process of creating Google Earth based indexes for these collections. Please see the attached file at the bottom of this post.

The following is a chronological list of atlases arranged by borough from the NYPL Digital Gallery.

Bronx

New! Robinson, E. & Pidgeon, R.H., Atlas of the city of New York, 1887

Robinson, Elisha. Certified copies of important maps, v. 1, 1888-1897

New York Topographic Bureau. Bronx, West, N.Y. 1:1,800, 1892-1895

Hyde, E.B., Atlas of the borough of the Bronx, 1901

Bromley, G.W., Atlas and owners names, borough of the Bronx, 1904

Bronx Topographic Bureau. Bronx, East, N.Y. 1:1,800, 1905

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the Borough of the Bronx, 1921

Brooklyn

Perris, William, Maps of the city of Brooklyn, 1855

Perris, William, Plan of the city of Brooklyn, (8 sheets), 1855

Perris, William, Plan of the city of Brooklyn, (15 sheets), 1855

New! Perris, William, Insurance maps of the warehouses in Brooklyn, 1861

New! Higginson, J.H., Higginson's insurance maps of the city of Brooklyn, 1868

Dripps, Matthew, Map of the city of Brooklyn, 1869

New! Fulton, Henry, Farm line map of the city of Brooklyn, 1874

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the entire city of Brooklyn, 1880

Hopkins, G.M. Detailed Estate and Old Farm Line Atlas of The City of Brooklyn, 1880

Robinson, Elisha, Robinson's atlas of the city of Brooklyn, New York, 1886

Robinson, Elisha, Robinson's atlas of Kings County, New York, 1890

Ullitz, Hugo, Atlas of the Brooklyn borough of the City of New York, 1898-99

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Wards 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12 & 22, 1903

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Wards 7, 11, 20, 21, 23, 24 & 25, 1904

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Wards 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 27 & 28, 1904

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Wards 26 and part of 29 & 32, 1905

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Ward 29 and part of 32, 1906

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Ward 30, 1905

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, Ward 31, 1907

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the Borough of Brooklyn, 1907-8

Manhattan

Sackersdorff, O., Maps of farms commonly called the Blue book, 1815 (1868)

Perris, William, Maps of the city of New York, 1852-4

Serrell, J. Maps & profiles of ground for new reservoir situated between 86th and 96th streets and between 5th and 7th avenues, 1855

Perris, W. Maps of the City of New York. v.1, 1855

Unknown Publisher. Maps of the wharves and piers on the Hudson and East rivers from the Battery to 13th St., New York, 1855

Perris, W. Maps of the City of New York. v.1, 1857

Unknown Publisher. Maps of the Wharves & Piers from the Battery to 61st Street on the Hudson River and from the Battery to 41st Street on the East River New York, 1860

Perris, William, Maps of the city of New York, 1857-62

Dripps, Matthew, Plan of New York City, 1867

Perris & Browne. Insurance Maps of The City of New York, v.2, 1868

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, 1897

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, 1898-99

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, 1911

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, v.4, 1916

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the borough of Manhattan, Desk Ed., 1916

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, 1920-22

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, v.2, 1920

N.Y.C. Parks Department, Topographical survey of portion of Central Park, 1939-48

Queens

Wolverton, Chester, Atlas of Queens County, Long Island, 1891

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Queens, Jamaica and Rockaway, 1907 (1912)

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Queens, Long Island City and Newtown, 1908 (1912)

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Queens, Long Island City, 1908 (1913)

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Queens, Long Island City and Newtown, 1903

New! Hyde, E. B., Atlas of the Borough of Queens, Flushing, 1908 (1913)

Bromley, G.W., Atlas of the city of New York, borough of Queens, 1909

Staten Island

Beers, F.W., Atlas of Staten Island, Richmond County, New York, 1874

Borough of Richmond, Topographical Survey, Staten Island, N.Y. 1:1,800, 1906-1913

Robinson, E. Atlas of the Borough of Richmond, City of New York, 1907

Bromley, G.W. Atlas of the City of New York, Borough of Richmond, 1917

Multiple Boroughs

Beers, F.W., Atlas of New York and vicinity, 1868

Beers, F.W., Atlas of Long Island, New York, 1873

Viele, Egbert L., Topographical atlas of the city of New York, 1874

Robinson, Elisha, Atlas of the city of New York, v.5, 1883

Robinson, Elisha, Atlas of the city of New York, 1885

NYC, Board of Estimate and Apportionment. Area District Map [Zoning], 1916

NYC, Board of Estimate and Apportionment. Height District Map [Zoning], 1916

NYC, Board of Estimate and Apportionment. Use District Map [Zoning], 1916

New York, N.Y. Engineering Bureau, Sectional aerial maps of the City of New York, 1924

New York City Zoning Maps

Researchers who visit the Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division are interested, more often than not, in our resources on New York City history. If they don’t know about them before they arrive, our readers quickly become familiar with names like Perris, Bromley, Robinson, Sanborn, and Hyde for the fire insurance and real estate maps, showing buildings block by block, that they published over the years. Without doubt, we will write more about these maps and use them to illustrate our postings about neighborhoods (e.g., Five Points) and related topics of local interest.

Here, however, because of several recent requests, we’d like to focus on another type of map in our collection that shows the changing character of the city in a different way and at a different scale. Zoning maps, district by district and street by street, show plans by the city to control and develop types of uses as well as heights and areas of buildings. While these uncolored line maps, with relatively obscure symbols, lack the charm of the large-scale, colorful old fire insurance maps with user-friendly labels on well-known landmarks, they convey meaningful history to the initiated.

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Five Points

Five Points was a neighborhood area in Lower Manhattan, northeast of City Hall, at the intersection where Baxter [formerly Orange], Worth [formerly Anthony], Park Street [formerly Cross] came together to form a five point intersection. The area was made famous in the book, The Gangs of New York, by Herbert Asbury, 1928, and the screenplay to the 2002 movie. Matthew Dripps’ 1852 map, pl. 2, has the original street names, and notes the presence of the Pirnics Distillery, but not the Mission or House of Industry.  read more »

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