[First State] Panorama of the Seat of the War Birds Eye View of Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia

$2,200

Cartographer(s): John Bachmann
Date: 1861
Place: New York
Dimensions: 86 x 61 cm (33.8 x 24 in)
Condition Rating: VG

In stock

Bachmann’s dramatic 1861 panoramic view of the central theater of the American Civil War.

Details

This remarkable view, published by John Bachmann amid the Civil War, constitutes a sweeping panorama of a critical theater of the war, where the northern Confederacy and southernmost part of the Union collide. It is centered on the Chesapeake Bay, with Richmond and Fredericksburg at the center.

The mapmaker breathes life into this depiction of a nation divided, using a dramatic perspective to illustrate key places and developments. It was published in New York and met by an audience eager for up-to-date information. The mapmaker’s perspective allows a wide geographical window and a remarkable amount of detail. At the bottom left, ships block the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay, a reference to the Union Blockade, which was then in its first year.

Essential towns, forts, road systems, and events are all depicted. Cities are represented in excellent detail, in a semi-pictorial fashion, including Baltimore, Annapolis, Washington, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Petersburg, Richmond, Fredericksburg, and others.

Crossed swords mark the area of the first major battle of the Civil War, known as the First Battle of Bull Run (Union name) or the First Battle of Manassas (Confederate name). The battle was fought on July 21, 1861 — the same year our view was published — in Prince William County, Virginia, just north of Manassas and about 25 miles west-southwest of Washington, D.C. The Union’s forces were slow to position themselves, allowing Confederate reinforcements time to arrive by rail. Each side had about 18,000 poorly trained and poorly led troops in their first battle. It was a Confederate victory, followed by a disorganized retreat of the Union forces.

This is the first state of the map. In the second state, a depiction of rising smoke was added around Manassas/Bull Run. For the third state, which is dated on the map to 1864, the smoke was removed again.

This view represents an exceptional collector’s item for its beauty, design, and importance as a contemporary document of the Civil War.

Cartographer(s):

John Bachmann

John Bachmann (1814–1896) was a Swiss-born lithographer and artist best known for his bird’s-eye-views, especially of New York City.

His name is attached to a variety of prints, including the well-known “Bird’s Eye View of the Seat of War” series produced during the American Civil War, which show the theater of war in six sections, each a perspective view of entire states or sets of states.

Condition Description

Backed by canvas. Other evidence of restoration.

References

Cf. Stephenson Civil War Maps (1989) 2 & 3 (1st and 2nd states); cf. Stephenson & McKee Virginia in Maps p.239 (2nd state); Rumsey 2817

cf. Reps p.160 ('No finer artist of city views worked in America than John Bachmann").