“The first significant collection of charts exclusively of the American coasts to be published in England”
The English Pilot The Fourth Book.
Describing the West-India Navigation, from Hudson's Bay to the River Amazones [sic.] …
London,
Printed for Mount & Page, on Tower Hill,
1784.
Folio atlas (290 by 320mm), title, text pp.[3–]68, folding engraved general map with letterpress text on flaps attached to the left and right margins, 25 engraved maps and charts (of which six are double-page, 14 folding, and five within text), with numerous woodcut illustrations, coastal profiles and harbours (including half-page 'Draught of the Bay of Homda'), contemporary sheep, roll-tool in blind to outer margins of boards, expertly rebacked and neat repairs to corners and extremities.
1039
notes:
'The English Pilot', in five separate books, was the first major sea atlas published in England. 'The Fourth Book' was the first wholly English sea atlas of American waters.
With one of the most complex and longest running publication histories of any atlas, the 'Pilot' was first envisaged by John Seller in 1671 as a five volume work that would cover all the major navigations of the world. However, the project soon ran into financial difficulties and it was not ...
With one of the most complex and longest running publication histories of any atlas, the 'Pilot' was first envisaged by John Seller in 1671 as a five volume work that would cover all the major navigations of the world. However, the project soon ran into financial difficulties and it was not ...
bibliography:
Barber, Peter, 'British Cartography', in 'The Age of William III and Mary II', eds. Maccubbin & Hamilton-Phillips, 1988, pp. 95–104); Phillips, Atlases, 1171; Verner, [facsimile] The English Pilot The Fourth Book (London: 1689); Cumming, William P., 'British Maps of Colonial America', Chicago & London 1974, p.39.
provenance:
Se. Pearse (inscription 'Se. Pearse's Booke 1789' on title).