Harvard Map Collection

Harvard Map Collection The Harvard Map Collection, founded in 1818, houses one of the largest collections of maps, atlases and digital data in North America.

As part of the Harvard Library, we support learning and research into all things geospatial Since its inception almost two centuries ago, the Harvard Map Collection has grown to encompass 400,000 maps, 6,000 atlases, and 5,000 reference books. The library's collections include rare editions of Mercator, Ortelius, and Ptolemaic atlases, as well as large-scale current topographic maps for geographic

areas throughout the world. The collection also includes early state maps, county maps, and town maps from the mid-19th century. While these maps are often located among random local repositories, they are seldom found in such numbers in a centralized research collection. One of the most notable sections of the collection is its strong holdings of New England maps. Among these maps is the very rare 1753 "Plan of the British Dominions of New England" published by Boston physician William Douglas, which became the source for the very popular Jefferys "Map of the Most Inhabited Part of New England," published two years later. The collection also includes examples from one of New England's most notable cartographers, Osgood Carleton. His published maps for Boston, Maine, and Massachusetts are represented in the collection, as well as a Maine map in manuscript. The Sotzmann maps and a unique series of early state maps drawn by such cartographers as Samuel Holland, James Whitelaw, Amos Doolittle, and H.F. Walling, are among the first examples of American cartography, representing the new republic's definition of its boundaries and transportation systems. Another signal strength of the Harvard Map Collection lies in its holdings of early railroad maps. Included are railroad plans and surveys for railroads that grew far beyond New England, along with many that either went out of business prematurely or were never developed beyond the planning stage. A small sampling of this collection includes the 1828 survey for a railroad from Boston to the Connecticut River; an 1838 plan for the Boston and Worcester Railroad; an 1845 railroad route from Boston to Lake Champlain; an 1845 Vermont Central Railroad map; an 1845 Portsmouth and Concord Railroad map; an 1850 European and North American Railroad map; and an 1850 proposed railroad from Boston to Burlington. The Massachusetts collection is by far the largest, and includes a rare manuscript map of the state dating from the mid-18th century. A unique collection of unpublished county maps by H.F. Walling are extant as publisher's proofs and many of the early 1830s Massachusetts town surveys and plans of individual towns are also included. Numerous maps, some in manuscript, of Boston and Cambridge from the colonial period will also be found. Harvard's New England map collection is complemented by extraordinary book and manuscript collections in American history, colonial history, and New England history. The Harvard College Library's local history sources are well developed and include a significant collection of pamphlet materials dealing with individuals and New England history. The printed materials documenting New England are also chronologically comprehensive.

We finished our Hondius 1630 world map puzzle just in time for the new semester, but, gah: one piece missing!
01/29/2025

We finished our Hondius 1630 world map puzzle just in time for the new semester, but, gah: one piece missing!

We think we have just acquired our longest map: a 1962 river  guide of the Colorado passing fully through the Grand Cany...
12/10/2024

We think we have just acquired our longest map: a 1962 river guide of the Colorado passing fully through the Grand Canyon, ca. 45'. Mapmaker, Les "Buckethead" Jones.

Are you going to a shopping mall this Black Friday? Instead, why not make a map of all the malls in your vicinity? The H...
11/29/2024

Are you going to a shopping mall this Black Friday? Instead, why not make a map of all the malls in your vicinity? The Harvard Map Collection’s map making tutorials include step-by-step instructions for how to download geographic data for commonly tagged locations, such as malls and shops. Head over to our website and give yourself the gift of

So proud to have a map from our collection displayed in Prof. Soto Laveaga's wonderful exhibit, Measuring Difference htt...
10/17/2024

So proud to have a map from our collection displayed in Prof. Soto Laveaga's wonderful exhibit, Measuring Difference https://chsi.harvard.edu/measuring-difference If you haven't been yet, make time to visit Harvard's Collection of Historic Scientific Instruments!

Laying out all our Rhine panoramas as we make final choices for the upcoming Rivers and Roads exhibit
09/30/2024

Laying out all our Rhine panoramas as we make final choices for the upcoming Rivers and Roads exhibit

As our cartographic peregrinations change course, we bid a fond adiós/adeus to the southern Americas; here in a 1562 map...
02/26/2021

As our cartographic peregrinations change course, we bid a fond adiós/adeus to the southern Americas; here in a 1562 map by Paulo di Forlani, with an almost rectangular presentation and an appended Tierra del Fuego, impressively vast and still indistinct.

In this detail of a 1630 Mercator/Hondius strike, a Patagonian colossus strides across the unknown region (at least to t...
02/24/2021

In this detail of a 1630 Mercator/Hondius strike, a Patagonian colossus strides across the unknown region (at least to the Spanish) where Chile and Argentina now meet; a testament to Magellan and his crew's conviction that the Tehuelche people were giants.

While two right whales (?) frolic offshore, the great Andean mountain range is bathed in the light of a setting sun as s...
02/23/2021

While two right whales (?) frolic offshore, the great Andean mountain range is bathed in the light of a setting sun as shadows cloak the eastern slopes; in this strikingly elegant 1630 presentation of , by the estimable shop of Willem Janszoon Blaeu.

  returns us far north of the equator, to espy a fabled sea-unicorn breaking the waters near the fabled Northwest Passag...
02/22/2021

returns us far north of the equator, to espy a fabled sea-unicorn breaking the waters near the fabled Northwest Passage; where the equally fabled region of gold, Quivira, is located a bit too far west by de Jode on this 1593 map.

Lingering over the headwaters of the   to further consider the display of mountains; this 1780 missionary map by Petrus ...
02/19/2021

Lingering over the headwaters of the to further consider the display of mountains; this 1780 missionary map by Petrus Parcar has developed pictorially into tightly bunched soft serve ice cream swirls, providing a greater sense of mountainous heft.

A 1719 map of   by de Fer, with the majestic   looking more like molehills than mountains; along with a fine title carto...
02/18/2021

A 1719 map of by de Fer, with the majestic looking more like molehills than mountains; along with a fine title cartouche, where, at the top, a pair of hard-working llamas ignore two miners descending a shaft via a rope/pulley/crank system.

Address

Cambridge, MA
02138

Opening Hours

Monday 10:30am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 10:30am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 10:30am - 4:30pm
Thursday 10:30am - 4:30pm
Friday 10:30am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+16174952417

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