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Item #41221 Cape Hatteras to Charleston Light. South Carolina, North Carolina.

Cape Hatteras to Charleston Light

Washington D.C. Published by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, November 1921. Large folding nautical chart, printed on heavy paper stock. Colored with minor wear including soiling and foxing. Sheet size: 33 1/4 x 46 inches.

A rare original coastal survey of the border area between North and South Carolina including James Island, Folly Island, Charleston, Sullivans Island, Isle of Palms, Pawleys Island, Myrtle Beach, Bald Head Island, Wilmington, Wrightsville, Jacksonville, Emerald Isle, Morehead, Beaufort, New Bern, and Cape Hatteras.

Established by President Thomas Jefferson in 1807 as the Survey of the Coast, the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey was the United States' first civilian scientific agency. This agency has followed its mission to survey the U.S. coastline, create nautical charts of the coast, and help increase maritime safety since its founding, and has often played fascinating roles in significant chapters of U.S. history. It served in all theaters of the Civil War in the service of the Union Army and Navy, pioneered acoustic exploration in the wake of the sinking of the Titanic, and during WWI it worked to detect enemy submarines. In addition, this agency worked to survey and produce detailed maps and renderings of the U.S. coast. These nautical survey maps (commonly referred to as "T-sheets") provide fascinating insights into the history of the United States coastline, which has and will continue to shift. These maps are the most important data source for understanding the physical and ecological characteristics of the U.S. shoreline. The present map is a highly detailed and accurate sea chart of the coasts of North and South Carolina from Cape Hatteras to Charleston, and an important historical view of the developing states.

Item #41221

Price: $300.00

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