72 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



Cartography. 



Also " A colored map of the Post Route between the River St 

 Lawrence thro the Lake Madawaska to the St John's River. " 3 ft. 

 10 in X 1 ft 8 in. scale 2 inches to a league. Also in British Museum. 



1787? Map of the Coasts and Rivers of part of Maine and New Brunswick. 



4 miles to an inch. 



MS. in Public Record Office Case 40, No. 54. It is largely a 

 reduced copy of the Sproule map of 1786, but with some slight 

 additions. 



1788. Sayer, Robert. A new and a correct map of the British Colonies in 

 North America, comprehending Eastern Canada with the Province of 

 Quebec. New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and the Government of 

 Newfoundland London, 26% x 19 inches; scale 60 miles ^ 1 inch. 



1791. Hall, W. Quebec. Map of part of the province comprehending also 

 Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Cape Breton, & New England, showing 

 at one view the 5 great American Lakes. 



MS. in Public Record Office. (Case 42, No. 53). Closely follows 

 Sproule of 1786 and 1787. 



1798. Sotzmann, D. F. Maine, Entworfen von D. F. Sotzmann. Hamburg 

 bey Carl Ernst Bohr. In Ebelings Erdbeschreibung von Amerika. 

 The map is partly in English and partly in German, and is notable 

 for its accuracy, at least in region bordering upon New Brunswick. 



1798. Sproule, George. A Plan of the Rivers Scoodic and Magaguadavic. 



With their principal Branches By George Sproule Esqr. 



Surveyor General of New Bruns^wick, from the actual Surveys of 



those Rivers 1796-7-8. 



Reproduced in Moore's International Arbitrations, 30, and from 

 that reduced in Monograph on Boundaries, 254. 



1799. Campbell, D. Sketch of the Route from Fort Cumberland to Fred- 



ericton. From a Journey performed between the 13th and 23rd 

 December 1799 by H. R. H. the Duke of Kent, Commander in Chief 

 in British N. America &c &c &c. 



MS. in British Museum 34 x 58 inches. An excellent map without 

 much detail. 



1808. Richardson, James. Map of Passamaquoddy Bay from actual survey. 

 Published as the act directs by James Richardson, January 18, 1808 

 Caverhill. 



Probably the same as that in Atcheson's American Encroach- 

 ments, and the one used so often in the Boundary Documents. 



1817. Johnson, John. A map of the boundary line explored in 1817, by John 

 Johnson, U. S. Surveyor. 



i.e. the line from the monument to the Wagan. 9 x 44 inches; 

 scale 2% inches to a mile (nearly). 



Well drawn map, with the St John merely sketched but having 

 several Indian names on its tributaries not elsewhere recorded. 



