
United States
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The mission church around which this California town began to grow is a prominent feature in this fine, toned lithograph by Kuchel and Dresel.
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| Size: 12¼" x 19¾" - Color, Text Weight Paper: $10.00 |
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Lt. Joseph de Urru-tia's manuscript survey of the capital of New Mexico is the earliest known plan of this Spanish colonial town founded more than a century and a half earlier. The delicate colors of the original in The British Library are faithfully duplicated in our attractive facsimile.
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| Size: 14½" x 18½" - Color, Cover-stock Paper: $27.50 |
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Lt. Joseph de Urru-tia's manuscript survey of the capital of New Mexico is the earliest known plan of this Spanish colonial town founded more than a century and a half earlier. The delicate colors of the original in The British Library are faithfully duplicated in our attractive facsimile.
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| Size: 14½” x 18½” - Color, Text Weight Paper: $10.00 |
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This manuscript in the National Archives was drawn when American troops occupied Santa Fe during the Mexican War. It shows the central plaza reduced in size from its original design and the gradual development of the street pattern on the plan established early in the 17th century. The facsimile reproduces the gray and blue color washes used by the cartographer to emphasize buildings and streams.
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| Size: 21¼" x 26¼" - Color, Cover-stock Paper: $30.00 |
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This manuscript in the National Archives was drawn when American troops occupied Santa Fe during the Mexican War. It shows the central plaza reduced in size from its original design and the gradual development of the street pattern on the plan established early in the 17th century. The facsimile reproduces the gray and blue color washes used by the cartographer to emphasize buildings and streams.
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| Size: 17” x 20¾” - Color, Text Weight Paper: $10.00 |
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The Old Spanish capital of New Mexico was carefully planned according to the Laws of the Indies. The rectangular street pattern and central plaza can be clearly seen in this Beck and Pauli view published more than two and a half centuries after its founding.
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| Size: 12" x 18¾" - Black & White, Cover-stock Paper: $27.50 |
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Planned shortly after the gold rush began, Santa Rosa developed as a market town in the Sonoma Valley. It was here that Luther Burbank carried out his famous experiments in plant breeding at his gardens at Santa Rosa Ave. and Tupper St.
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| Size: 20¼" x 26" - Black & White, Cover-stock Paper: $32.50 |
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Peter Gordon's view of Savannah the year after its founding is one of the rarest of American urban prints. It shows how James Oglethorpe laid out the town in four wards, each consisting of forty house lots and four sites for public buildings around open space.
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| Size: 15¾" x 21¾" - Black & White, Cover-stock Paper: $27.50 |
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Peter Gordon's view of Savannah the year after its founding is one of the rarest of American urban prints. It shows how James Oglethorpe laid out the town in four wards, each consisting of forty house lots and four sites for public buildings around open space.
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| Size: 14¼” x 12¼” - Color, Text Weight Paper: $10.00 |
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Shown on this map is Oglethorpe's regional plan for the Savannah area. It was published in Halle by Samuel Urlsperger in his Ausfuhrliche Nachricht von den Saltzburgischen Emigranten.
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| Size: 14¼" x 15½" - Black & White, Cover-stock Paper: $25.00 |
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