1831 Map Solar ECLIPSE of SUN US United States
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1831 Map Solar ECLIPSE of SUN US United States America
Original 1831..177-yrs-old...Path of 1831 Solar Eclipse
1831 Map Solar ECLIPSE of SUN US United States America
Start Price USD 419.00
Current Price USD 419.00
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Start Time Wednesday, November 19, 2008
End Time Friday, December 19, 2008
Location Savannah, Georgia

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Description
A Fine Adornment of American History. Impressive on any Home or Office wall. 177-years-old. Extraordinary Map. Imaginative & Historical Gift for Someone Born on February 12th. 1831 Map of the Eclipse of the Sun February 12, 1831 In Its Passage Across The United States Incredible Map. Beautiful Detail. Original 1831. 177-yrs-old. Map is in Very Good/Excellent (A, A+) Condition:  No writings, marks, tears, or fraying. Minimal foxing. Folded as Issued. Not a Reproduction.  Original Map of the 1831 Edition of the American Almanac and Repository of Useful Knowledge for the Year 1831, By Gray & Bowen, Boston, 1831. An Exceptionally Rare Map for the Collector or an Imaginative & Historical Gift for Someone Special. Heavy Parchment Paper and Intricate Detail. Engraved by Gray & Bowen, G. Boynton, Boston, 1831. I sell only Original Maps: No copies or reproductions.  Press Here to View My Entire Collection, and Thank You for Your Interest In My Maps. Map Lists for $825+ on Internet Map Sites. Map Dimensions: 8.4" x 9.25" Impressive on any Home or Office Wall. Map Reads:  "A Map of The Eclipse of Feb. 12th, 1831 In Its Passage Across the United States." Published by Gray & Bowen, Boston, 1831. A Few of the Cites, States, Towns, Indian Tribes, & Other Points of Interest Shown on the Map: Athens, Georgia; Raleigh, North Carolina; Newbern, NC; St. Mary's, Georgia; St. Augustine, Florida; Columbia, South Carolina; Choctaw Indians, Creek Indians, Savannah, Ga; Charleston, SC; Milledgeville, Ga; Knoxville, Tennessee; Charlottesville, Virginia; Annapolis, Maryland; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Long Island, New York; Albany, New York, Portsmouth; Portland, Maine; Boston, Massachusetts; Rhode Island; Hartford, Connecticut; Pittsburg, Pa; Lexington, Kentucky; Huntsville, Alabama; Louisiana; New Orleans, La; Jackson, Mississippi; Edisto Island; Cape Fear; Wilmington, North Carolina; Columbus, Ohio; Vermont; Dover, Delaware; Richmond, Va; Nashville, Tn; Arkansas Territory; Missouri; Illinois; Michigan Territory; Indiana; Northwest Territory; Cherokee Native Americans; Osages; Tallahassee, Florida; Augusta, Georgia; Alleghany Mountains; Lake Michigan; Lake Huron; Cincinnati, Ohio; Frankfort, KY; Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Chickasaw Indian Tribe; Yorktown, Virginia; Williamsburg, Va; Monticello, Mississippi; Nachitoches, Louisiana; Nantucket Island; Martha's Vineyard, Cape Cod; Washington, DC; Alexandria, Va; Georgetown, Va; Petersburg, Virginia; & Many Others. The Pride of Any Collection. 177-yrs-old. Priced $825+ on Internet Map Sites. History of the 1832 Eclipse and An Excerpt from the Book "1831, The Year of Eclipse," By Louis P. Masur:  "Everyone knew it was coming. "THE GREAT ECLIPSE OF 1831 will be one of the most remarkable that will again be witnessed in the United States for a long course of years," alerted Ash's Pocket Almanac. One editor reported that the February 12 eclipse would even surpass historic occasions when "the darkness was such that domestic fowls retired to roost" and "it appeared as if the moon rode unsteadily in her orbit, and the earth seemed to tremble on its axis."  On the day of the eclipse, from New England through the South, Americans looked to the heavens. One diarist saw "men, women and children ... in all directions, with a piece of smoked glass, and eyes turn'd upward." The Boston Evening Gazette reported that "this part of the world has been all anxiety ... towitness the solar eclipse.... Business was suspended and thousands of persons were looking at the phenomena with intense curiosity." "Every person in the city," noted the Richmond Enquirer, "was star gazing, from bleary-eyed old age to the most bright-eyed infancy."  Unlike previous celestial events, thought some commentators, the eclipse of 1831 would not produce superstitious dread that the world would end. "Idle fears and gloomy forebodings of evil formerly raised by the appearance of phenomena caused by the regular operation of natural laws," one writer claimed, "have yielded to pleasing admiration; a change which the march of science and general diffusion of knowledge have largely contributed to effect." Another writer mocked the notion that eclipses were "signs or forerunners of great calamities." Eclipses, he thought, "necessarily result from the established laws of the planetary revolution, and take place in exact conformity with those laws.... Those who entertain the opinion that eclipses of the sun are tokens of the Divine displeasure can produce no warrant from scripture for their irrational belief. If we would look for the signs of the displeasure of God towards a nation, we can see them, not in eclipses, but in national sins and depravity of morals." Rational explanations of atmospheric events, however, offered little solace to most Americans. In many, "a kind of vague fear, of impending danger—a prophetic presentiment of some approaching catastrophe"—was awakened, and "the reasonings of astronomy, or the veritable deductions of mathematical forecast," did little to diminish the anxiety. One correspondent reported that an "old shoe-black accosted a person in front of our office, the day previous to the eclipse, and asked him if he was not afraid. For, said he, with tears in his eyes, the world is to be destroyed to-morrow; the sun and moon are to meet ... and a great earthquake was to swallow us all!—Others said the sun and the earth would come in contact, and the latter would be consumed. Others again, were seen wending their ways to their friends and relations, covered with gloom and sadness; saying that they intended to die with them!" The day after the eclipse, preachers employed Luke 21:25 as the text for their sermons: "there shall be signs in the sun." "In strict propriety of language," one minister observed, "it is not the sun that is eclipsed. Not the slightest shadow is cast upon the least portion of his broad disk. His beams are shot forth precisely the same. It is over us only that the momentary darkness is spread, and it is truly the earth that is eclipsed." Imaginative & Creative Birthday, Christmas, Wedding, or Other Special Occasion Gift. Free Shipping Special. All major Credit & Debit Cards, along with Electronic Checks accepted through Paypal. Please email with any questions. Greetings from Historical Savannah, Georgia; founded 1733. "Some, to beautify their halls, parlors, chambers, galleries, studies, or libraries...liketh, loveth, getteth, and useth maps, charts, and geographical globes."  - John Dee, Advisor to Elizabeth I. Press the Link Below To View Our Entire Collection of Antique Maps. Visit My eBay Store: Davis Jones Antique Civil War Maps   Powered by eBay Turbo ListerThe free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.

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