A presentation copy of the last gasp for Edmund Halley’s theory for the determination of longitude by magnetic declination

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To George Washington President of the United States of America this Magnetic Atlas or Variation Chart is humbly inscribed by John Churchman.

[together with:] An Explanation of the Magnetic Atlas, or Variation Chart, hereunto annexed; projected on a plan entirely new.

CHURCHMAN, John
Philadelphia,
1790
Engraving, with original wash colour, a few creases flattened, some areas of restoration to upper and lower sheet edges not affecting printed image, [together with:] 8vo. x, [3], 14-46, 5, [1]pp., 2 folding charts, minor foxing to text, faint damp stain affecting portion of first four leaves, and minor chips to edges.
609 by 609mm. (24 by 24 inches).
12157

To scale:

notes:

notes:

The Mapmaker

John Churchman (1753-1805) was an American mathematician, surveyor, mapmaker, and self-propagandist who held the official post
of surveyor for Chester, Delaware and parts of Berks and Lancaster Counties, Pennsylvania. He first came to prominence for his 'Map of the Peninsula between Delaware & Chesapeak Bays' (1778).

Some time in the mid-1780s Churchman became consumed by the problem of finding longitude at sea, which had challenged ...

bibliography:

bibliography:

ESTC W32217; Evans 22406 (pamphlet with map frontis); Phillips, p.1094 (pamphlet with map frontis); Sabin 13026; Wheat and Brun 6 and References 86 (pamphlet with map frontis). Numerous (and confusing) entries in OCLC, a summary of which can be provided on request. Background on Churchman's project and life from Charles H. Cotter, "John Churchman and the Longitude Problem", Navigation 27 (1980) pp.217-225; Phillip Lee Phillips, Virginia Cartography: A Bibliographical Description (Washington: Smithsonian Institute, 1896) pp.58-59; Margaret Beck Pritchard and Henry Taliaferro, Degrees of Latitude: Mapping Colonial America (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2002) pp.232-235; Ben Smith and James Vining, American Geographers 1784-1812 (Westport: Praeger, 2003) pp.34-35.

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance

Presented to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences by the Author, Cambridge MA, in 1791.