Battle of Middle Boggy Depot

Page contents not supported in other languages.

Original file(2,665 × 2,205 pixels, file size: 9.74 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Title
English: A Map of the Indian Territory, Northern Texas and New Mexico Showing the Great Western Prairies
Description
English: Santa Fe trader and historian Josiah Gregg's map was arguably the best to depict the southwestern prairies in its time. It shows various routes of the Santa Fe and Chihuahua traders, including Gregg's own treks, between and through Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, and Indian Territory. There are, for examples, Gregg's Route to Santa Fe in 1839, Gregg's route in 1840, and the "Route of the Santa Fe Caravans" (all variations on the Santa Fe Trail). Gregg also compiled information from other maps. For example, there is "La Jornado del Muerto" (i.e., the Journey of Death along the middle Rio Grande in New Mexico dating back to the Spanish era and earlier), the "Route of Capt. Pike", "Capt. Pike's Route in 1806," the "Route of Maj. Long 1820", the "Route of Texan Santa Fe Expedition 1841" including the split with "Route of Col. Cooke's Division" and "Route of main division with wagons", "Capt. Boone in 1843" (sic, a reference to Captain Nathan Boone who was part of the U.S. First Dragoon expedition in 1834), "Route of the Oregon Emigrants" (the Oregon Trail), "Military Road" between Ft. Smith and Ft. Towson, and roads between Chickasaw Depot and Ft. Smith, and from Ft. Smith to Ft. Gibson. The routes of the "Caravan from Chihuahua to Arkansas" in 1839 and back "from Arkansas to Chihuahua" in 1840 are also depicted. Often identified with Missouri physician and prominent merchant Henry C. Connelly, this "Chihuahua Expedition" was a cooperative effort between local officials and merchants in Chihuahua to open a more direct trade with Arkansas that bypassed Santa Fe.


The map carefully denotes towns, settlements, pueblos, forts, trading posts, camps, springs, rivers, creeks, wooded areas such as the Cross Timbers, sandy regions including parts of the Canadian River valley, mountains and escarpments such as the "Wichita Mts" and the edges of the "Llano Estacado or Staked Plains". The map depicts the ranges and hunting grounds of Indians such as the Comanche, Kiowa, Pawnee, Kanza, Oto, and other peoples. But it also shows lands allotted to more agriculturally settled tribes recently removed from the east such as the Seminole, Cherokee, Osage, Shawnee, Delaware, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Waco. Even lands allotted to "Half Breeds" turn up on this map, which was printed in two colors by cerography, a new wax engraving transfer process, by the firm of Morse and Breese. The map and Gregg's book went through multiple editions, both in English and German.
Date
Source UTA Libraries Cartographic Connections: map / text
Creator
Josiah Gregg  (1806–1850)  wikidata:Q3186042
 
Josiah Gregg
Description American explorer, lawyer, journalist and naturalist
Date of birth/death 19 July 1806 Edit this at Wikidata 25 February 1850 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth Overton County
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q3186042
Credit line
English: The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections
 Geotemporal data
Map location Indian Territory
Bounding box
N: 41.6377676°N
W: 109.8978075°W E: 92.8710243°W
S: 30.9841065°N
Georeferencing View the georeferenced map in the Wikimaps Warper
 Bibliographic data
Publication
Commerce of the Prairies: or, The Journal of a Santa Fe Trader…
Author
Josiah Gregg  (1806–1850)  wikidata:Q3186042
 
Josiah Gregg
Description American explorer, lawyer, journalist and naturalist
Date of birth/death 19 July 1806 Edit this at Wikidata 25 February 1850 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth Overton County
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q3186042
Place of publication New York City
Publisher
H. G. Langley
Printed by
Sidney Edwards Morse  (1794–1871)  wikidata:Q7509038
 
Sidney Edwards Morse
Alternative names
Sidney E. Morse
Description American-British geographer, journalist and inventor
Date of birth/death 7 February 1794 Edit this at Wikidata 24 December 1871 / 23 December 1871 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Charlestown New York City
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q7509038
Samuel Livingston Breese  (1794–1870)  wikidata:Q14567487
 
Samuel Livingston Breese
Alternative names
Samuel L. Breese; Samuel Breese
Description American military officer
Date of birth/death 6 August 1794 Edit this at Wikidata 17 December 1870 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Utica Mount Airy
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q14567487
 Archival data
institution QS:P195,Q1230739
Dimensions height: 33 cm (12.9 in); width: 40 cm (15.7 in)
dimensions QS:P2048,33U174728
dimensions QS:P2049,40U174728
Medium colored cerograph
artwork-references

Gregg, Josiah (1954) Commerce of the Prairies, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press "Reprint intro. by Max L. Moorehead, ed."

Streeter, Thomas W. (1983) Bibliography of Texas 1795-1845: 2nd edition Revised and Englarged by Archibald Hanna with a Guide to the Microfilm Collection (reprint ed.), Woodbridge: Research Publications, Inc., no. 1502–1502F , pp. 473–475

Davis, Marty, et al. (2007) Going to Texas: Five Centuries of Texas Maps, Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press, pp. 58–59

Allen, John Logan (1987) "Patterns of Promise: Mapping the Plains and Prairies, 1800-1860" in Luebke, Frederick C., Frances W. Kaye, and Gary E. Moulton , ed. Mapping the North American Plains, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, p. 51

Wheat, Carl I. Mapping the Trans-Mississippi West, 2, no. 482 , pp. 186–188, 264

Goetzmann, William H. (1959) Army Exploration in the American West, New Haven: Yale University Press, pp. 110, 126, 127

Huseman, Ben W. (2008) Revisualizing Westward Expansion: A Century of Conflict in Maps, 1800-1900, Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington, no. 16 , p. 19

Huseman, Ben W. (2018) Paths to Highways: Routes of Exploration, Commerce and Settlement, Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington, no. 37 , p. 26

Licensing

Public domain

The author died in 1850, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

captured with

Nikon D200

exposure time

0.04 second

f-number

8

focal length

38 millimetre

ISO speed

400

MIME type

image/jpeg

instance of

photograph

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current14:56, 17 July 2019Thumbnail for version as of 14:56, 17 July 20192,665 × 2,205 (9.74 MB)Michael Barera== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Map |title = ''A Map of the Indian Territory, Northern Texas and New Mexico Showing the Great Western Prairies'' |description = {{en|Santa Fe trader and historian Josiah Gregg's map was arguably the best to depict the southwestern prairies in its time. It shows various routes of the Santa Fe and Chihuahua traders, including Gregg's own treks, between and through Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, and Indian Territory. There are, for examples, Gregg's Route...
The following pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed):

Global file usage

The following other wikis use this file:

Metadata