----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Here at NYPL we have just sparingly collected airline route maps, usually as they come in with gift boxes of maps culled from the attic or basement storage bins where they have been lovingly saved. Mementos ofthat trip around the world, to the Continent or across the old USA. Which is to say, we have some of these dating back to the 40s and 50s, if not earlier. Not a lot! So are you interested in sample copies of these older airline maps? Not magazines. Earlier on, the map was the treasured p.r. offering. The magazine,I suspect,is fairly recent innovation? You can check the dates and volume numbers to figure that out. But I think for a while there you could get the magazine, and in the same seat pocket, there would be a poster sized folded map also. Ca. 1970s, if memory serves. Looking around for the usual suspects who might have written on this topic, of course there is Dr. Ristow, and several interesting cites from him are listed in the bibliography of his writings in Map librarian in the modern world. The Story of Maps by Lloyd Brown, in the last couple of chapters [ the ones we never got to...] may have something to say about commercial airline cartography. Both Raisz and Harrison put out air-age type atlases in 1938? and I believe the front matter in these discusses the impact of air travel on the look of maps--a little off your track, but these might supply interesting historical nuggets. You might want to figure out where the PanAmerican Airlines archives are located, and plow through their papers and publications. Might be a gold mine. Your return address looks suspiciously like "Princeton"--are you indeed in the wilds of New Jersey? Alice Hudson [log in to unmask]