Long Iland Sirvaide
PrinterPrinted by
Meriden Gravure Company
(American, 1888 - 1977)
After a work byAfter a work by
Robert Ryder
(English, active 1674 - 1679)
Date1949
MediumCollotype; ink on paper
DimensionsPrimary Dimensions (image height x width): 23 5/8 x 31 1/2in. (60 x 80cm)
Sheet (height x width): 25 1/4 x 33 1/8in. (64.1 x 84.1cm)
ClassificationsGraphics
Credit LineConnecticut Museum of Culture and History collection
Object number2012.312.200
DescriptionReproduction of a seventeenth-century map of Long Island Sound, with the shoreline of Connecticut to the north, the end of Long Island to the west, the Atlantic Ocean to the south, and parts of New York and New Jersey to the west. Around Staten Island, water depth is given. Settlements, mostly along the coast and on Long Island, are labeled and marked with little sketches of houses. The other names mark islands and other natural features. The map is decorated with a 32-point compass and north arrow at the top, a quarter-compass in the lower right, and a flower-adorned scale marker.
Label TextThis facsimile of an early map of Long Island and Long Island Sound was printed by the Meriden Gravure Company of Meriden, Connecticut. Though the Connecticut Historical Society does not own the original map, this facsimile forms part of its collections of fine printing by Connecticut printers. From 1888 until 1977, the Meriden Gravure Company specialized in high-quality image reproduction for academic institutions, museums, and libraries. The Connecticut Historical Society itself was among its customers, and CHS has many other examples of its work in its collections.
NotesCartographic Note: Scale: 5 inches equals 20 milesSubject Note: Robert Ryder's Long Island Sirveide is the first map of Long Island Sound made by an Englishman after the English took over New Amsterdam from the Dutch in 1667.
Status
Not on viewH. F. Sumner & Co.
1833
Joel Knott Allen
1791 or 1792