[ganong] additions TO MONOGRAPHS 73 



Cartography. 



1842. Bell-Renwick. Map of the Green River [of St. John] with the 



sources of Rimouslvi Mistigougueshe and the Grand Fourch of 

 Ristagouch [Katawamkedgwick] Surveyed in the years 1841 and 

 1842 under the direction of James Renwick, LL.D. 24 x 44i/4 inches 

 to a miles. 



MS. in the Library of the Department of State, Washington. 



A very detailed and beautifully drawn map. First published on 

 Graham's map of 1843. 



1843. Map to illustrate the Boundary line established by the Treaty of Wash- 



ington of the 9th of August, 1842, between Her Majesty's Colonies of 

 New Brunswick and Canada and the United States of America. 

 16 X 14 in.; 30 miles = 1 inch (about) 



In British Blue book of 1843, and the same, differently coloured, 

 in Blue Book of 1845. 



1843. Graham, J. D. Map of the Boundary Lines between the United States 

 and the Adjacent British Provinces from the mouth of the River 

 St. Croix to the intersection of the parallel of 45 degrees of North 

 Latitude.. ...... 



Published originally in Congressional Documents, 27th Congress, 

 III Session, Document 31. and also in Moore's International Arbitra- 

 tions, 149. 27 X 22 in.; 16 miles = 1 inch. 



A map of the utmost importance which became the type map 

 of its region, only improved subsequently by the addition of materials 

 from new surveys by the International Commission, and others. 



1843-1844. Estcourt-Smith. [Maps of the International Boundary from the 

 Monument at the source of the St Croix to Glazier Lake on the St 

 Francois.] Made under the direction of the Commissioners J. B. B. 

 Estcourt and A, Smith, Commissioners for surveying the Interna- 

 tional Boundary. 



MS. maps beautifully executed, in many sheets; preserved in the 

 proper government department in England. Scale 4 inches to the 

 mile, with some portions (as described in Richardson's Messages 

 of the Presidents, Vol. IV, page 175) on a larger scale. 



A complete set of these maps, of the entire boundary, was litho- 

 graphed by the United States Government under direction of Major 

 J. D. Graham. A set is in the Library of the Department of State at 

 Washington, and there is a set in the possession of each State touch- 

 ing upon the boundary. (On this compare " The First International 

 Railway" by L. E. Poor, New York, Putnams 1892, pp. 20-24). They 

 are of the greatest local interest, not only geographically, because 

 of their great accuracy, but also historically because they give the 

 locations of all settlers, etc., along the river. 



1845. Crawley, H. O. Plan of the Ground between Cumberland Basin and Bay 

 Verte, with three other plans. In his " Report on a Survey of a Line 

 for a canal to unite the Bay of Fundy with the Gulf of St Lawrence, 

 in 1842. " In " Papers on subjects connected with the duties of the 

 Corps of Royal Engineers," Vol VIII, 1845, 186-193. 



