1827 Finley Map of Alabama is a photograph by Paul Fearn which was uploaded on October 18th, 2013.
1827 Finley Map of Alabama
Beautiful example of Finley's important 1827 map of Alabama. Depicts the state with moderate detail in Finley's classic minimalist style. Shows river... more
by Paul Fearn
Title
1827 Finley Map of Alabama
Artist
Paul Fearn
Medium
Photograph
Description
beautiful example of Finley's important 1827 map of Alabama. Depicts the state with moderate detail in Finley's classic minimalist style. Shows river ways, roads, canals, and some topographical features. Offers color coding at the county level. Finley's map of Alabama is particularly interesting and important due to its portrayal of the rapidly changing American Indian situation in the eastern part of the state. In 1827 a substantial part of northeastern Alabama was a confined territory assigned to the Upper Creek and Cherokee nations. Finley's map details several contracting borders to this territory noting the Indian Boundary, the New Indian Boundary, and the New Cherokee Line. Also notes numerous American Indian villages and missionary stations within the Upper Creek and Cherokee territories. Just four years after this map was made the Creek and Cherokee would forcibly relocated westward in the infamous Trail of Tears. This map is also of interest as it details a territorial dispute between Alabama and Georgia. Early surveying errors attributed the same territory to both states. Shortly before this map was made, the territorial dispute was settled on behalf of Georgia. Title and scale in lower right quadrant. Engraved by Young and Delleker for the 1827 edition of Anthony Finley's General Atlas .
Uploaded
October 18th, 2013