To his Excellency Sir Henry Moore Bart. Captain General and Governour… This plan of the city of New York is most Humbly Inscribed by…Bernd. Ratzen
[London,
(?) Thomas Jefferys,
1769].
Engraved map printed on two sheets, joined, a few marginal nicks and tears, some dust-soiling.
580 by 840mm. (22.75 by 33 inches).
14248
notes:
The extremely rare first state of one of the most important colonial maps of New York City.
"Made just prior to the Revolution, the Ratzer plan is the most accurate an useful survey of New York then circulating" (Deak).
The map is usually referred to as the "Ratzen Plan" due to the misspelling of the mapmaker's name in the title. It was the work of Bernard Ratzer, British engineer, and was a result of the Stamp Act Riots of 1765. Fearing that the cit...
"Made just prior to the Revolution, the Ratzer plan is the most accurate an useful survey of New York then circulating" (Deak).
The map is usually referred to as the "Ratzen Plan" due to the misspelling of the mapmaker's name in the title. It was the work of Bernard Ratzer, British engineer, and was a result of the Stamp Act Riots of 1765. Fearing that the cit...
bibliography:
Deak, 'Picturing America, 120; Cohen & Augustyn, 'Manhattan in Maps', pps. 73-77; Haskell, 'Manhattan Maps', 319; Stokes, 'Iconography of Manhattan Island', Vol. I, pl. 42; Cumming, 'The Montresor-Ratzer-Sauthier Sequence of Maps of New York City', 'Imago Mundi', 31, pp. 55-65.
provenance: