1855 Jefferson Davis Map of Utah, Salt Lake City, and the Green River Valley - Geographicus - GreenRiverSaltLake-davis-1855

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1855 Jefferson Davis Map of Utah, Salt Lake City, and the Green River Valley - Geographicus - GreenRiverSaltLake-davis-1855

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Summary

This is a rare and important 1855 map of parts of Utah and Wyoming prepared for the Pacific Railroad Survey . Covers from the Great Salt Lake eastward to the Green River Valley and Brown’s Hole. Extends southward as far as Fillmore and northward as far as the Bear River. Shows much of Great Salt Lake, Salt Lake City, the Spanish Trail, and the Emigrant Route to California. Also offers extraordinary topographical detail of the region – mostly attributable to the work of Egloffstien, the expedition’s topographer. This is the first of a series of four maps drawn and surveyed By Captain E. G. Beckwith with the intention of determining the best route for a railroad from the Mississippi to the Pacific. Picking up where his predecessor Gunnison, who died while doing his own survey’s of this region, left off, Beckwith surveyed passages along the both Weber and Timpanagos canyons. He ultimately proposed three possible railroad routes. The northernmost route crosses the Green River near Black's Fork and continues past Fort Bridger (now Wyoming) and along the Weber River to Ogden City where it turns south. The middle route leaves the Wasatch Mountains via Timpanogas Canyon. The southernmost route runs westward from the Oquirrh Mountains. The northernmost route, which was advocated by Beckwith in his report, was chosen and it is roughly along this path that the transcontinental railroad was eventually built. Prepared under the direction of Secretary of War Jefferson Davis by Captian E. G. Beckwtih and F. W. Egloffstein. Engraved by Selmar Siebert in Washington D.C.

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Date

1855
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Source

Geographicus Rare Antique Maps
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Copyright info

public domain

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