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Datei:Johnston et al. Reconnoissances (sic.) of Routes from San Antonio de Bexar to El Paso del Norte 1849 (1850) UTA.jpg

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Beschreibung

Titel
English: Reconnoissances [sic] of routes from San Antonio De Bexar to El Paso Del Norte, & cc., & cc. / by Bvt. Lt. Col. J.E. Johnston, T. Eng'rs., Lt. W.f. Smith, Lt. F.T. Bryan, Lt. N.H. Michler, including the reconnoissance [sic] of Lt. W.H.C. Whiting, U.S. Eng'n. 1849
Beschreibung
English: Following the U.S. War with Mexico, the Army reconnoitered, located and established trails, and conducted scientific surveys in order to defend and consolidate the new state of Texas and the newly acquired territories and facilitate travel and communications. This large, minutely-detailed, lithographed folding map is a compilation of several surveys made in 1849 at the orders of General William Jenkins Worth. Gen. Worth briefly commanded the Eighth Military District, comprising Texas, before dying of cholera in San Antonio on May 7 that year. The surveys were led by U.S. Army Topographical Engineers Brevet Colonel Joseph E. Johnston (the future Confederate General) and Lieutenants W. F. Smith, F. T. Bryan, N. H. Michler, and W. H. C. Whiting.

The compiled map included only topographical features directly observed by the U.S. military surveyors themselves. It stretches from Corpus Christi, Matagorda Bay, to Preston and Fort Washita in present Oklahoma and from the Rio Grande valley in western Texas and New Mexico east to Matagorda Bay. Of particular interest to the military was the so-called "Upper Road" first blazed earlier that year by the federal Indian Agent for Texas, Robert S. Neighbors, and former Ranger, John S. "Rip" Ford, together with Indian guides. This led from the head of the Concho River (near present San Angelo and located at the center of the map) west across the Pecos at Horsehead Crossing, then past the Davis Mountains and Carizzo Pass (near present Van Horn, Texas) to El Paso. Also that year Captain Randolph B. Marcy guided by a Comanche named Manuel and the Delaware Black Beaver had cut east from Dona Ana past the Hueco Tanks and Guadalupe Mountains to Delaware Creek and the Pecos River. Marcy's route, barely acknowledged on this map, then heads east, northeast from the Pecos to the "Big Springs" of the Colorado River to the Red River in the north.

Another route of interest was the "Lower Road", discovered by Whiting and Smith, leading from San Antonio past the Rio Frio west to the San Pedro then up the Pecos near Horsehead Crossing and then over the present Fort Davis area and along the Rio Grande to El Paso. A blue line stretches from the Rio Grande in the south to Preston on the Red River in the north, connecting newly-established Forts Duncan (near present Eagle Pass), Inge (near present Uvalde), Lincoln (camp), Martin Scott (near Fredericksburg), Croghan (near Burnet), Gates (near present Gatesville), and Worth. (This is believed to be the first printed map to show Fort Worth, established on June 6, 1849). These forts protected the settlements along the north-south road just to the east.

Originally, the earlier north-south road to the east developed along an earlier line of trading posts, forts, and settlements established during the Republic of Texas. This eastern road stretched from San Antonio through New Braunfels, San Marcos, Manchac's Spring, Austin, Waco Village, Navarro, Dallas, to Preston and Fort Washita in Indian Territory which roughly corresponds to parts of today's U.S. Interstate 35 and Highway 75. Portions from Austin north to Fort Inglish (near present Bonham) and Fort Towson in Indian Territory were known as Cooke's Military Road (blazed in 1840-1841 by Republic of Texas Army Colonel William Gordon Cooke), but after trader Holland Coffee developed the town of Preston (now under Lake Texhoma) on the Red River, the portion from Dallas (established in 1841) north became known as "Preston Road" (completed in 1843).
Datum
Quelle UTA Libraries Cartographic Connections: Karte / Text
Urheber
Joseph E. Johnston  (1807–1891)  wikidata:Q439669 s:en:Author:Joseph Eggleston Johnston
 
Joseph E. Johnston
Alternative Namen
Joseph Eggleston Johnston; Joseph Johnston
Beschreibung US-amerikanischer Politiker und Heer Offizier
Geburts-/Todesdatum 3. Februar 1807 Auf Wikidata bearbeiten 21. März 1891 Auf Wikidata bearbeiten
Geburts-/Todesort Farmville Washington, D.C.
Wirkungsstätte
Normdatei
creator QS:P170,Q439669
et al.
Anerkennung
English: UTA Libraries Special Collections
 Kartografische Angaben
Ortsbezug Texas
Maßstab 1:1,267,200
Georeferenzierung Bitte hilf mit, diese Karte zu georeferenzieren If inappropriate please set warp_status = skip to hide.
 Bibliographische Angaben
Publikation
Reports of the Secretary of War, with reconnaissances of routes from San Antonio to El Paso. by Brevet Lt. Col. J. E. Johnston; Lieutenant W. F. Smith; Lieutenant F. T. Bryan; Lieutenant N. H. Michler; and Captain S. G. French, of Q'rmaster's Dep't. ... and the report of Lieutenant W. H. C. Whiting's reconnaissances of the western frontier of Texas
Urheber
United States Army Corps of Topographical Engineers
Erscheinungsort Washington, D.C.
Verleger
Union Office
 Archivalische Angaben
institution QS:P195,Q1230739
Maße Höhe: 64 cm; Breite: 93,5 cm
dimensions QS:P2048,64U174728
dimensions QS:P2049,93.5U174728
Technik kolorierte Lithografie auf Papier
artwork-references

Martin, Robert S. „United States Army Mapping in Texas, 1848-50“ in Reinhartz (Hrsg.) The Mapping of the American Southwest, S. 37−56

Goetzmann Army Exploration, 3, S. 225−239

Wheat Mapping the Trans-Mississippi West, Nr. 677 , S. 6, 296

Davis; et al. Going to Texas, Nr. 37 , S. 60−61

Roark, Carol (Fall 2013). "Preston Road: A Highway for the New Republic in 1843". Legacies: A History Journal for Dallas and North Central Texas.

Huseman, Ben W. The Price of Manifest Destiny, Nr. 64 , S. 32


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Public domain

Der Urheber dieses Werks ist 1891 gestorben; es ist daher gemeinfrei, weil seine urheberrechtliche Schutzfrist abgelaufen ist.
Dies gilt für das Herkunftsland des Werks und alle weiteren Staaten mit einer gesetzlichen Schutzfrist von 100 oder weniger Jahren nach dem Tod des Urhebers.


Dieses Werk ist gemeinfrei in den Vereinigten Staaten, weil es vor dem 1. Januar 1929 veröffentlicht (oder beim U.S. Copyright Office registriert) wurde.

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aktuell19:26, 12. Mär. 2022Vorschaubild der Version vom 19:26, 12. Mär. 20223.070 × 2.092 (4,26 MB)Michael Barera== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Map |title = {{en|'''''Reconnoissances {{sic}} of routes from San Antonio De Bexar to El Paso Del Norte, & cc., & cc. / by Bvt. Lt. Col. J.E. Johnston, T. Eng'rs., Lt. W.f. Smith, Lt. F.T. Bryan, Lt. N.H. Michler, including the reconnoissance {{sic}} of Lt. W.H.C. Whiting, U.S. Eng'n. 1849'''''}} |description = {{en|Following the U.S. War with Mexico, the Army reconnoitered, located and established trails, and conducted scientific surveys in order...

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