The Seven Years War (1756-63)
Manuscript and printed maps and views, correspondence and journals from the first global war
Monongahela River, 1755
1755 or laterBlack and brown ink on paper, laid down on linen | Scale: not stated. 1:1,000,000 approx. | RCIN 731063
A map of the route taken by the British troops between Fort Cumberland and Lake Erie, 1755. French and Indian War (1754-63). Oriented with north-west to top. A rough, small-scale sketch marking the river crossings and settlements along the route.
Anonymous (cartographer)
Watermark: Fleur-de-lys in crowned shield, a '4' suspending the letters L V G below
Mark, stamped: 775
Scale: not stated. 1:1,000,000 approx.
38.8 x 25.4 cm (image and sheet)
Manuscript title:
No title
Additional text:
[bottom left:] NB. The Prick’d Line / from Fort Cumberland / to Lake Erie is the / comon rout of all / Travellers. [Right centre, in red ink:] NB. The Red Lines show where the English / Troops passed and repassed the Monongahela / according to the best advices receiv’d / on the 25th of August 1755.
Annotations:
George III heading: Road between Fort Cumberland and Lake Erie with the passage of the Monongahela in 1755.
Other annotations: (Recto) [top left, some calculations in black pencil]. (Verso) [bottom left, red pencil:] 12/59-2; [bottom left, black pencil:] XV/13. [top left, ink, crossed out in red pencil, obscured by white paper strip:] March Route Erie; [bottom, ink, obscured by linen and illegible.]
George III catalogue entry:
Monongahela A drawn Sketch of the Road between Fort Cumberland and Lake Erie with the passage of the Monongahela River by the English Troops in 1755. [The same entry appears under the headings Cumberland, Fort and Erie, Lake.]
Subject(s)
Pennsylvania, USA
Page revisions
14 March 2024
Current version