Aaron Arrowsmith & Samuel Lewis
20 x 26 cm
This map of South Carolina was first issued in Aaron Arrowsmith’s and Samuel Lewis’ collaborative work published in Philadelphia in 1804.
Samuel Lewis was heavily involved in the production of the earliest atlas published in the United States by Mathew Carey in 1795. He compiled and supplied many of the very earliest maps of specific states present in that work. Following this success, he embarked on his own publishing career. His “New and Elegant General Atlas” comprised of 63 maps from all over the world and was first issued in 1804 in Philadelphia. To ensure accuracy for the mapping of lands outside the United States, Lewis obtained the collaboration of Aaron Arrowsmith, who was regarded as one of the if not the foremost cartographer of Great Britain during this period.
As with all of the maps of the United States, Samuel Lewis was the compiler of this piece. The engraver was David Fairman, who collaborated with Lewis on several occasions. A point of interest is the area on the extreme western edge of the State named as Washington District. Although it was abolished in 1800, the District is still on this map with an "Indian Boundary" as part of it.
The example offered for sale is from the 1812 edition of the work published in Boston by Thomas and Andrews. [USA9983]

