Maps (documents)
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
Scope Note: Use the singular form Map for Digital Object titleFound in 462 Collections and/or Records:
Map of Oxford Furnace Iron-Ore Veins. Warren County
Map shows the Oxford Furnace Iron Ore vein in Warren County, New Jersey.
Map of Pennsylvania, Prepared Expressly for Smull's Hand Book
Map shows the state of Pennsylvania, divided into counties, and showing roads, railroads, and canals.
Map of Pocahantas Coal Fields
Map shows Pocahontas Coal Field, with index of mines and their owners. Map is bordered by images of the mines listed on the map.
Map of Portion of West Blacksburg
Blueprint map shows West Blacksburg, Virginia, and contains a legend identifying locations of interest.
Map of Portsmouth
Map is blueprint of Portsmouth layout. The 1921 map was revised in October 1923 showing recent changes in street names
Map of Present Richmond (reproduction),
Map's full title reads: Map of Present Richmond, showing important Civil War battle-grounds, fortifications, roads and points of historical interest within a twenty-five mile area." At the top corners are photographs of Generals Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee.
Map of Property Belonging to Exchange Building Co. [Radford, Va.]
Blueprint map shows a city block in Radford, Virginia, and it contains a note on restrictions.
Map of Pulaski County, Virginia
Small map shows towns and rivers in Pulaski County, Virginia. Size of map obscures road names.
Map of Pulaski, Pulaski County, Virginia
Map shows land in Pulaski, Virginia, owned by The Pulaski Land Co. and The Iron Belt Land, Mining, and Development Company. It contains an illustration in the upper left.
Map of Rappahannock County, Virginia
This map is a large map that shows the geographic layout of Rappahannock County. Full title reads, "Map of Madison County, Virginia. Prepared under the direction of Brevet Brig. Gen. P. S. Michie, Chf. Eng. Dept. of Va. by Jed. Hotchkiss Top. Eng. Staunton Va. March 1866. Published by authority of the Hon. the Secretary of War, Office of the Chief of Engineers U. S. Army. 1875."