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Henry Mouzon — An Accurate Map of North and South Carolina With Their Indian Frontiers



An Accurate Map of North and South Carolina With Their Indian Frontiers An Accurate Map of North and South Carolina With Their Indian Frontiers

Works Of
Henry Mouzon


An Accurate Map of North and South Carolina With Their Indian Frontiers
Published:  London  1775
Medium:  Engraving with original hand color
Dimensions:  Two sheets, each app. 21 x 55 inches

Henry Mouzon's landmark map of the Carolinas was the primary source for the American, English and French
armies during the Revolutionary War. George Washington's copy of the map, folded and backed on cloth so it
could be safely transported in his saddlebag, is today in the collection of the American Geographical Society. The
example owned by Lieutenant General J.B.D. de Vimeur Rochambeau, who with his French troops marched
alongside Washington to Yorktown, is in the Library of Congress, and the copy owned by the British general Henry
Clinton is in the William L. Clements Library in Ann Arbor. That the foremost figures of the War for
Independence relied on this map does not begin to indicate its importance and influence. For over fifty years,
Mouzon's map was the source for information about the geography and topography of the Carolinas, and was
copied frequently by other mapmakers for its amazing detail and accuracy.
Mouzon based his map on years of personal surveying experience, as well as over a decade spent critically assessing
and incorporating previous information. For North Carolina, Mouzon inserted for the first time Tryon County,
Pelham County (later called Sampson), and the topography west of the Catawba River is more detailed and accurate
than on any previous map. Mouzon also advanced beyond earlier maps in his inclusion of rivers, streams, roads,
and physical features like "White Oak or Tryon Mountains" and "Kings Mountain." For South Carolina, Mouzon
added rivers and Indian settlements west of the Cherokee Indian boundary lines, and his depiction of the eastern precincts was
more sophisticated than anything that had come before. Besides details of natural features, Mouzon's map depicts
forts, parishes, bridges, roads, Indian paths, and boundaries, and includes insets of Charleston and Port Royal
harbors. This is truly a landmark map. Its excellence above preceding depictions of the vast Carolinas was
recognized by all countries involved in the Revolutionary War, and it remained unrivaled well into the 19th
century. This example, included in Thomas Jefferys’s landmark “American Atlas” in 1775, is particularly notable
for its striking, full original color. Most surviving examples of this map were colored only in outline, if at all, and
the quality of color on this map is exceptional.
 

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