. English: A fine 1799 map of the West Indies by the English mapmaker Clement Cruttwell. Shows what was then known as West and East Florida, along with the Bahamas Islands, Cuba, Jamaica, Domingo, and Puerto Rico (Porto Rico). Further southeast are the Virgin Islands, the Leeward and Windward Islands. The map also includes parts of Mexico, Honduras, Costa Rica, and the northern portion of South America. Cruttwell pays special attention to reefs, shoals, banks, and other underwater dangers, labeling many by name. He also makes note of the Spanish Main, the common term for A fine 1799 map of th
. English: A fine 1799 map of the West Indies by the English mapmaker Clement Cruttwell. Shows what was then known as West and East Florida, along with the Bahamas Islands, Cuba, Jamaica, Domingo, and Puerto Rico (Porto Rico). Further southeast are the Virgin Islands, the Leeward and Windward Islands. The map also includes parts of Mexico, Honduras, Costa Rica, and the northern portion of South America. Cruttwell pays special attention to reefs, shoals, banks, and other underwater dangers, labeling many by name. He also makes note of the Spanish Main, the common term for A fine 1799 map of the West Indies by the English mapmaker Clement Cruttwell. Shows what was then known as West and East Florida (present day Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana), along with the Bahamas Islands, Cuba, Jamaica, Domingo, and Puerto Rico (Porto Rico). Further southeast are the Virgin Islands, the Leeward and Windward Islands. The map also includes parts of Mexico, Honduras, Costa Rica, and the northern portion of South America. Cruttwell pays special attention to reefs, shoals, banks, and other underwater dangers on this map, labeling many by name. Though generally quite accurate, there are a number of interesting errors. Charlotte Bay, Florida, he expands into a great inland Lagoon called Spiritu Santo. Lake Nicaragua is overly large and suggestive of a practicality of building a canal to the Pacific. He also makes note of the Spanish Main, mainland coast of the Spanish Empire around the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. The Spanish Main was the point of departure for enormous wealth that was shipped back to Spain in the form of gold, silver, gems, spices, hardwoods, hides and other riches; because of this, the area was ripe territory for pirates and privateers. Outline color and fine copper plate engraving in the minimalist English style prevalent in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Mountains and topographical other detail shown by profile. Also makes note of rivers and shoal
Size: 2592px × 1928px
Photo credit: © The Picture Art Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: