Map Detail of Passamaquoddy Bay, London, 1776
Map
Published by a prominent London firm, this map illustrates the extent of the British colonies in northern North America at the beginning of the American Revolutionary War. Britain was keenly interested in maintaining control of this region because the exportation of furs and cod fish generated sizable income for merchants back in England. Profitable natural resources were abundant in Canada, as suggested by the placement of a North American beaver atop the cartouche, and the detailed depiction of the fishing banks off the coast of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia. A detail of Passamaquoddy Bay shows the river flowing from the north branch of Cobscook Bay labeled as the River St. Croix, rather than the Dennys River.
A General Map of the Northern British Colonies in America which comprehends the Province of Quebec, the Government of Newfoundland, Nova-Scotia, New-England, and New-York, from the maps published by the Admiralty and Board of Trade, regulated by the astronomic and trigonometric observations of Major Holland, and corrected from Governor Pownall's late map 1776.
Photos for Map