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Cheshire County: The Early maps, 1753-1816
Map 4 1784 Cheshire County
(example of map text)
The booklet describes each map and the history it
reveals. Here is the complete text for Map 4, a
portion of the noted 1784 "Holland" map.
Although dated 1784, this map actually depicts Cheshire County a decade
earlier, on the eve of the American Revolution. The large map of New Hampshire
from which it is drawn was prepared from surveys compiled in 1774. The mapmaker
was Samuel Holland, British Surveyor General for the northern colonies. Holland
left New Hampshire, with his notes, before the outbreak of hostilities.
On the map, we see a remarkable amount of detail. Many cultural and
geographical features are named, and town boundaries are accurately shown. The
depiction of housesites is unusual for such an early New Hampshire map. In some
towns, the names of prominent individuals are supplied. A new town, Surry,
appears for the first time on this map. It was carved out of Gilsum and
Westmoreland in 1769. Most of the towns have their modern names now, the
exceptions being Limerick (Stoddard), Packersfield (Nelson and parts of
Harrisville, Rox-bury and Sullivan), and Oxford (Troy and Marlborough (the
origin of the name Oxford is uncertain).
Although the symbols used on the map are not identified in a key, their
meanings can be assumed. The black squares indicate dwellings, and the church
symbols the central village of each town. The flagged squares probably represent
schools. The waterwheel symbols identify mill sites.
Several more roads appear on the 1784 map than on the previous one,
but, strikingly, some towns lack any detail. Note the absence of information for
Richmond or Gilsum. The Holland map was a compilation, and the mapmaker probably
had no working maps of these towns. This lack would explain the abrupt end of a
Keene road at the Gilsum town line. Imprinted on the original map is a
disclaimer stating that "[omissions] must be attributed to the necessary
materials for describing them not having been sent in: Which is also the reason
that some Townships appear more completely laid out than others that are perhaps
as well settled." There is a lesson in Samuel Holland's candor; omission of
information from a document does not mean that the information does not exist.
These shortcomings do not diminish the map's historical value. This document
provides a wealth of information about pre-Revolutionary Cheshire County. |
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