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  1. waters.' Much of this new data is seen on Reading Howell's map of 1792, and a map prepared by John Adlum and John Wallis the same year. The men who participated in these surveys were much sought after by the speculators to act as their agents. These were the inducements that made Pennsylvania's back

    • Norman B. Wilkerson
    • 1953
  2. OCLC:39673413. 1860. Map of Northampton Co. Pennsylvania, by G. M. Hopkins, Jr., published by Smith, Gallup & Co., Phila. 6 parts, 20 x 28 ea. col. ; 148 x 145 cm. Scale 1 5/8 in = 1 mi. County map is surrounded by 36 maps of villages and towns in the county, and 4 drawings of Easton in the corners of the map.

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  4. Apr 8, 2024 · The entire collection has over 20,000 scanned maps. University of Alabama - Historical maps of Pennsylvania pre 1850-1925. University of Alabama has scanned many Pennsylvania maps. Collection includes geologic survey maps, county atlases and some city atlases of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. New York Public Library.

    • Heather Ross
    • 2015
  5. Maps Map Collections in the State Archives. Archives Map Collection - A guide to Manuscript Group 11, which describes over 1,000 maps. The maps are grouped into seven sections: Colony and Commonwealth; Counties; Townships; Cities and Boroughs; Boundaries, Topography, Geology, Parks; Transportation (including Indian trails, roads and turnpikes, rivers and streams, canals, railroads, air routes ...

  6. On Sunday, September 1, 1793, Samuel Powel, Speaker of the Pennsylvania Senate, penned a hurried note to Dr. Benjamin Rush, asking his opinion on a spreading “putrid fever” making its way through the city of Philadelphia. A prominent local physician and politician, Dr. Rush was considered the foremost expert on the matter.

  7. 5. New Orleans; Summer 1853; 8000 or more dead. This outbreak illustrated a racial disparity in yellow fever mortality; 7.4% of white residents died, but only 0.2% of blacks. 6. Norfolk; June-Oct ...

  8. May 30, 2023 · 11. Bedford. Nestled in the Allegheny Mountain Range, Bedford is a small mountain town in Pennsylvania. From a stately resort in Bedford, a town historically known for its medicinal mineral springs, President James Buchanan sent the first Transatlantic cable message to Queen Victoria of England in 1858.

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