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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 14, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Monday, February 14, 2005
Studying Antique Maps of Pelham Using Online Services That Provide High
Resolution Scans -- Part I
There are a tremendous number of online resources that offer high
resolution images of important maps showing Pelham and surrounding areas
from the 17th century to the present. Any serious student of local history
can find important historical maps that can be magnified to sizes larger
than the original. Often free software tools may be used to maintain the
scale of the original map as the image is resized so that important
distances may easily be determined. For genealogists, many of these old
maps reflect the owners of properties depicted on the maps.
This posting will be the first in a series of postings that will describe
how to access and utilize such maps from online services such as those
offered by The Library of Congress, The New York Public Library and many
other sites such as DavidRumsey.com. Part I will address the map
collections maintained by The Library of Congress in its online "American
Memory Collection".
The Library of Congress American Memory map collection may be found at
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/browse/ListSome.php?category=Maps. It
contains seven categories of maps including civil war maps (1861-1865),
Liberia maps (1830-1870), maps (generally - 1500-2004), National Parks
maps, Panoramic maps (1847-1929), Railroad maps (1828-1900) and
Revolutionary Era maps (1750-1789). For students of Pelham history, I have
found the Maps (general, 1500-2004) and Revolutionary Era maps (1750-1789)
collections to be particularly good, although there are relevant materials
in some of the other categories as well.
We will use the Maps (general, 1500-2004) collection as an example. By
clicking on that link on the American Memory maps page, you will be taken
to the following location:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/gmdhome.html There you can browse
maps by category, although I prefer to search for maps. At the bottom of
that page you will see a link entitled "Search by Keyword". By clicking on
that link and following the simple instructions on the search screen, you
will be able to perform keyword searches. Try "Westchester", for example.
You should see a set of 8 search results returned including some important
early maps of Westchester County that show the area surrounding Pelham.
Don't limit yourself to searches for Pelham and Westchester. Searches for
"New York" and even browsing the collections for early maps of the
Atlantic cost of North America reveal important early maps that show
Pelham and surrounding areas.
Most important is the technology offered by the Library of Congress for
studying the maps you have found. Click on any of the search result links
to look at a map of Westchester. You will notice that you are first taken
to a bibliographic page providing information about the map you have
selected as well as a thumbnail image of the map. If you click on the
image of the map, you will be taken to a page with a "Zoom View" and a
"Navigator View" of the map. You can easily magnify the map and select
portions that you wish to analyze more carefully. Don't stop there,
however.
Notice that at the very bottom of the page there are links entitled
"Download MrSID image" and "View more information about the MrSID
compression technology". The Library of Congress and many other such
institutions use an image compression technology known as the MrSID
compression technology for delivering images of maps online for academic
analysis. The technology allows users, using ordinary home computers, to
magnify images of maps to many times their original size, to export high
resolution images of all or any portion of the map for printing or other
purposes, and to preserve the original scale of the map no matter what
size is viewed (among many other things). Most interestingly, this can all
be done offline simply by downloading a free copy of the MrSID image from
the Library of Congress Web site and also downloading a free copy of the
MrSID compression technology software available from a company known as
LizardTech available via links on each map page in the Library of Congress
American Memory map collections. To learn more about the free MrSID
browser plugin offered by LizardTech, you can go directly to
http://www.lizardtech.com/download/dl_download.php?detail=geo_expressview_plugin&platform=win
and downoload it from there.
Once you have downloaded the MrSID software, you can save from any of the
map pages on the Library of Congress site a high resolution copy of the
map(s) in which you are interested by clicking on the links entitled
"Download MrSID Image" and, when prompted, instructing your system to
"Save" to a location of your choice on your computer hard drive (e.g.,
your "My Documents" file). Once you have done so, open the MrSID software
and select file > open then browse to the map file you saved and open it.
Using the button that looks like a magnifying glass you can begin
magnifying and browsing the map you have selected whether you are online
or not. The software is rich in its functionality, so you will have to
explore it for its features. You can use it, however, to find Pelham and
its roads, properties and topography during a host of different times from
the 17th to the 20th centuries.
During the next few days I will blog about some of the additional online
map collections where important maps of Pelham and surrounding areas may
be found and analyzed using the MrSID software.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
10:00 AM
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