sanborn maps: a window to the past and a tool for the future
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SANBORN MAPS: A Window to the Past and a Tool for the Future. Talk Outline. I. What are Sanborn Maps? II. History of Sanborn Company III. Details about the Sanborn Maps IV. Uses of the Sanborn Maps V. Understanding the Maps VI. CU’s Collection VII. Accessing CU’s Collection. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
SANBORN MAPS:A Window to the Past and
a Tool for the Future
Talk Outline
I. What are Sanborn Maps?
II. History of Sanborn Company
III. Details about the Sanborn Maps
IV. Uses of the Sanborn Maps
V. Understanding the Maps
VI. CU’s Collection
VII. Accessing CU’s Collection
I. What are Sanborn Maps?
Sanborn Maps
Fire Insurance Maps
Large Scale
Detailed (50 feet to 1 inch)
Date Back to the 1860s
Updated Regularly Until 1950s
Detail of painting from 1666 of the Great Fire of London by an unknown artist. Photo taken from Wikipedia
London was prone to fires throughout its history
Fire Insurance Maps emerged in London in the late 1700s
From: http://www.oldmap.co.uk/detailmaps/londafterfiredetail.jpg
•Mapping companies supplied information to insurance underwriters.
•The American Insurance Industry spurred the growth of mapping companies in the late 1800s
II. The History of the Sanborn Maps
From: http://www.rotograph.org/Fire.jpg
Insurance underwriters were interested in basing their rates according to the relative risk of fires in the commercial districts of American cities.
From: http://www.tombstone1880.com/archives/hotel.jpg
Daniel A. Sanborn founded the Sanborn National Insurance
Diagram Bureau in New York City after
successfully surveying Boston
Portrait of Daniel A. Sanborn from: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/EART/snb-intr.html
Adopted the Name “Sanborn Map Company” in 1902 and Eventually Emerged
as the Leader in the Field
From: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/EART/snb-intr.html
•Richly detailed and comprehensive maps
•Good management practices
The Sanborn Company’s success was due to
•Absorption of other companies
•Highly accurate
•Standardized symbolization
At Sanborn’s peak (1920s):
•employed surveyors in every state
•held a virtual monopoly
Published a system of standards for accuracy in 1905
Surveyors:
-Worked anonymously
-Names never appeared on maps
-Surveyors occasionally gained notoriety or celebrity after leaving the Company
From: Wikipedia
Daniel Carter Beard
“While working for them I not only saw all those places I had heard about but I made maps of them, made diagrams of all the homes in each town and city I visited. I took delight in putting into my records mention of real occupancy, genteel or disreputable. After four or five years of this work I knew a lot about our people, saints and sinners, rich and poor.”
Dan Beard, Hardly a Man Is Now Alive, the Autobiography of Dan Beard (New York, 1939), p. 225
III. Details About the Sanborn Maps
Most Sanborn maps were drawn at a scale of 50 feet to 1 inch until after WW II
Quickbird Satellite Image
“Map of Congested District of Salt Lake City Utah” 1911 The Sanborn Mapping Company (Scale 200ft to 1in)
Maps focus on urban areas
Maps Include:
Details regarding the size, shape, and construction of commercial buildings, dwellings, and structures
Paonia Colorado circa 1908 From ghostdepot.com
Maps Include:
Not just location but the composition of all buildings within a city or town
Stone BuildingFireproof Building
Wood Frame Building
Wood Frame w/ Iron Facade
Maps Include:
Noted strength of fire department and sometimes the number of engines or firefighters at each station
Maps Include:
Location of water and gas mains as well as things like sprinklers, hydrants, and alarms
Maps Include:
Labels on most public buildings:From landmarks to brothels (“Female Boarding”, “FB”, “Ill Fame”, “Bagnios” etc.)
Reno, NV 1899
Maps Include:
Street names, railroad lines, and Indian Reservations
http://www.lakemirabel.com/Railroad/Fishkill/20_Beacon_1921_t_m.jpg
Some maps may included information about prevailing winds and population estimates
Sanborn Company resurveyed quickly after a disaster to note the buildings that had survived or been lost.
For Example it took less than one week following the Chicago Stockyard fire of 1934 to produce updated map
Thematic Map of Chicago Stockyard Produced by the Sanborn Company (date unknown)
Chicago Stockyards 1947
In 1930 Sanborn Co. began to allow correction plates
Corrections and Updates:
The Decline of the Fire Insurance Maps:
•The maps were costly
•1929 stock market crash and depression
•During WWII government placed restrictions on map production and building construction
•Difficulty keeping pace with the post WWII population and development boom
By the 1960s the insurance industry shifted away from using maps to assess risk
IV. Uses of the Sanborn Maps
Urban Morphology
Studies the physical form of a city including• street patterns• buildings sizes and shapes• architecture• population density • patterns of land uses
How does physical form produce or reproduce social forms?
Urban Morphology
Dr. Vaselka used Sanborn maps to examine how the the design and placement of courthouse squares in Texas affected sense of community.
Quickbird Satellite Image of Denton, TX “Courthouse on the Square”
The development of the Barrio Libre Neighborhood, Tuscon
1886190119191948
Historical Sociology
Studies the past to find out how societies work and change
Example: Washington DC “alley life”
Photo fromhttp://www.economist.com
Alley Dwellings
After the Civil War small dwellings were built in the allies that ran between many city blocks in D.C.
The most common residents of these allies were poor or African American.
Public perception of allies and inhabitants:• filthy• squalid• crime ridden• drunken• rampant immorality and disease
Louse Alley
Investigations into these “red light districts” were conducted in the early 1900s.
Louse alley was considered one of the worst offenders.
View of Louse Alley published in Charles Weller's 1909 expose Neglected Neighbors.
“Bawdy houses” and “alley dwellings” were abolished during early twentieth century Reform Movements
Louse Alley, then renamed Armory Place, was reconfigured as a minor street.
Armory Place was demolished in the 1930s as an attempt to further rid the city of “alley dwellings” and as part of a “beautification” campaign
Temporary housing was erected after WWII and for a time part of the area was used as dedicated open space.
Louse Alley
Louse Alley Currently the American Indian Museum stands on part of the site of Louse Alley.
Before the Museum was built intensive archeological investigations of Lots 11 and 12 of Louse Alley were conducted in Reservation C
Louse Alley
-Mary Anne Hall’s Brothel (Lot 12)
- Adjacent parcel theorized to be a trash dump for the brothel and location of a boarding house (Lot 11)
Corks, foil and wire from champagne
bottles
Fine pottery
Louse Alley
Sanborn maps guided the
excavation and are one of the few
records of both “alley life” and “alley dwellers”
http://www.si.edu/oahp/madam/index.html
http://www.si.edu/oahp/nmaidig/
All references and photos used were taken from the Smithsonian Institute:
Louse Alley
Archeology
As evident from the Louse Alley example the Sanborn maps frequently aid archeologist.
From Footprint of a Sawmill:Archeological Investigation Into the Nurre Sawmill in Williamsburg, KY (by Grant, Keit, and Mauck)
Historic Preservation
“The process of preserving part of a community, from an individual building or part of a building to a whole neighborhood (including roadways and waterways), because of its historical importance.” (from urbanplan.org)
Taos square in historic Georgetown awaits restoration
Historic Preservation
Since the maps contain such rich details regarding the size, shape, and construction of commercial buildings, dwellings, and structures they are an excellent resource for historic preservation.
From: http://saahp.rwu.edu/saahp_gallery/cms-files/historicpreservation/01.jpg
Genealogy
The study or investigation of ancestry and family history.
Campbell of Glenorchy Family TreeGeorge Jamesone, 1635.Scottish National Portrait Gallery
Genealogy
Sanborn’s generally do not contain family names so they are often used when the address of an ancestor is known.
Since the Sanborn maps only cover urban areas they are best for research city dwelling ancestors
Treasure Hunting
Bottle hunters and individuals who use metal detectors to find treasure often use the Sanborn maps to locate privy or outhouse sites.
Compliments of “Digger” from “bottlebooks.com
V. Understanding the Maps
Understanding Sanborn Maps
Sanborn maps contain a rich amount of information and detail
In order to understand and interpret the maps you must make use of a complex legend
VI. CU’s Collection
•Largest collection of Colorado Sanborn maps outside of the Library of Congress
•Presented as a gift by the Library of Congress in the late 1960s
•The collection includes over 567 color maps produced between 1883 – 1931
CU’s Complete Collection
The holdings include a nearly complete collection of what was mapped in Colorado
More mapping was conducted in regions that were more populated or had significant mining activity in the late 19th and early 20th centuries*
CU’s Complete Collection
* Leadville’s peak number of map sheets date from the late 1800sThe collection also includes some “ghost towns”
Maps can be accesses from 9-5 M-F Jerry Crail Johnson Earth Sciences and Map LibraryWebsite: http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/map/
Contact the library staff in advance Via email: [email protected]
Via phone: 303-492-7578
Accessing Paper Maps
•Sanborn maps do not circulate
•Cannot photocopy the maps
•Digital photographs are permitted
•Some maps are also available on microfiche* and can be printed out
Accessing Paper Maps (Cont’d)
Scanned collection includes:• 346 maps on 2,385 sheets, • 79 cities • 52 counties • spans 1883-1922
VII. Accessing CU’s Digital Collection
A Quick overview of CU’s interface
Digital Collection can be accessed at http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/sanborn/