A profound statement of England’s designs for dominance of the North American continent; at a time when colonial control of North America was by no means certain

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A Map of the British Empire in America with the French and Spanish settlements adjacent thereto.

POPPLE, Henry; and Clement LEMPRIERE
London,
Engraved by Will.m Henry Toms,
1733, [but 1734].
20 printed engraved mapsheets (15 double-page, five single-page), that, if joined, form a large engraved wall map 2500 by 2300mm (98.5 by 90.5 inches), contemporary hand-colour in full. The single-page maps comprise bird's eye views and harbour plans which appear on the right smarbledide of the map, from top to bottom, with 20 of the 22 views and plans appearing on these five sheets, the last two views appear on sheet 1, in the upper left corner of the map), plate 10 in Pritchard State 3, plate 20 in Pritchard State 4; with two contents leaves: "The Contents of Mr. Popple's Map of America", mounted on front pastedown, and "The Contents of each sheet of the twenty plates of Mr. Popple's Map of America", mounted on conjugate of the keymap; contemporary marbled paper boards, rebacked in calf to style.
2500 by 2300mm (98.5 by 90.5 inches).
17510

To scale:

notes:

notes:

A magnificent example of Popple's twenty-sheet 'Map of the British Empire in America', with superb vibrant original hand-colour in full.

One of the two most important maps of North America published in the eighteenth century on a grand scale: along with John Mitchell's 'Map of the British & French Dominions in North America', Popple's map was a profound statement of England's designs for dominance of the North American continent; at a time when colonial control o...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Babinski; Brown; cf. Cumming, 216, 217; Lipman, 22; Pritchard and Taliaferro, 24, state 4 (but with engraved number to sheet 1); McSherry Fowble, 6, 7; cf. Goss, 55 (key map only); Graff, 3322; Howes, P481, "b"; Lowery, 337 and 338; McCorkle [Emergent], 21; Phillips [Maps], 569; Sabin, 64140; Schwartz and Ehrenberg, 151; Streeter Sale, 676; Stephenson and McKee, map II-18A-B.

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance:

1. With the engraved armorial bookplate of George Garnier, of Rookesbury, 1703–1763, Physician to HRH Duke of Cumberland and in 1735 Apothecary General to the Army. One of his oldest and closest friends was Lord Chesterfield and George Garnier regularly entertained celebrities such as Hume, Hogarth, Churchill, the poet, Gibbon and David Garrick the actor in the old house at Rookesbury. After George's death in 1760, his son George Charles Garnier took over the post of Apothecary to the Army and continued his father's friendship with Garrick and other celebrities. He married Margaret Miller in 1766 and became High Sheriff of Hampshire in 1776.

2. twentieth century library label of William G. Mather ("Michigan Collection Accession No. 38" label).

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