-------- Original Message --------
Subject: USCGS 1860 slave map
Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2010 03:53:15 -0800
From: Virginia R Hetrick PhD <[log in to unmask]>
To: Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship <[log in to unmask]>
Has anybody successfully downloaded and opened the 29+MB file of the
full map from the NYT? I'm curious to know before I start complaining
as my Acrobat Pro is fully patched to the most current level of v.9.
Thanks for any light anybody is able to shed.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Virginia R. Hetrick, here in sunny California
Email: [log in to unmask]
"There is always hope."
My fave: http://www.washington.edu/cambots/camera1_l.gif
There's no place like: 34N 8' 25.40", 117W 58'5.36"
if you can't be at: 48N 6' 59.9" 122W 59' 54.2"
-------------------------------------------------------------
> Date: Mon, 13 Dec 2010 08:28:18 -0600
> From: Angie Cope <[log in to unmask]>
> Subject: Visualizing Slavery (UNCLASSIFIED)
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Visualizing Slavery (UNCLASSIFIED)
> Date: Mon, 13 Dec 2010 07:39:49 -0600
> From: Hadden, Robert L AGC <[log in to unmask]>
> To: Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship <[log in to unmask]>
>
>
> Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
> Caveats: NONE
>
> There is an interesting article in the NY Times about a map on
> slavery done in 1860, "Visualizing Slavery," by SUSAN SCHULTEN, printed on
> December 9, 2010, on the Opinion page.
> "The 1860 Census was the last time the federal government took a
> count of the South's vast slave population. Several months later, the United
> States Coast Survey-arguably the most important scientific agency in the
> nation at the time-issued two maps of slavery that drew on the Census data,
> the first of Virginia and the second of Southern states as a whole. Though
> many Americans knew that dependence on slave labor varied throughout the
> South, these maps uniquely captured the complexity of the institution and
> struck a chord with a public hungry for information about the rebellion.
> The map uses what was then a new technique in statistical
> cartography: Each county not only displays its slave population numerically,
> but is shaded (the darker the shading, the higher the number of slaves) to
> visualize the concentration of slavery across the region. The counties along
> the Mississippi River and in coastal South Carolina are almost black, while
> Kentucky and the Appalachians are nearly white."
> Read more about it at:
> http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/09/visualizing-slavery/
>
> Lee Hadden
>
> R. Lee Hadden, BA, BS, MLS
> Geospatial Information Library (Map Library)
> Army Geospatial Center
> 7701 Telegraph Road
> Alexandria, VA 22315
> (703) 428-9206
> [log in to unmask]
>
>
>
> Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
> Caveats: NONE
|