- Title: Preliminary Chart of San Luis Pass Texas
- Author: A. D. Bache
- Date: 1853
- Medium: Hand-colored engraving
- Condition: Very Good Plus - wear along issued folds
- Inches: 18 3/4 x 15 3/8 [Paper]
- Centimeters: 47.63 x 13.65 [Paper]
- Product ID: 222035
(Sketch I No. 4) Preliminary Chart of San Luis Pass Texas
From a Trigonometrical Survey under the direction of A. D. Bache Superintendent of the Survey of the Coast of the United States
Triangulation by James S. Williams Assistant, Topography by J. M. Wampler Sub-Asst., Hydrography by the Party under the command of H. S. Stellwagen Lieutenant U. S. Navy
Published in 1853
Scale 1/20,000
Map of San Luis Pass, a strait off the south-west end of Galveston Island, Texas. Includes data regarding currents, tides, and geographic coordinates, as well as instructions for sailors.
Surveyor, scientist, and pioneering oceanographer A. D. Bache (1806-1867) served as the 6th Superintendent of the U.S. Coast Survey. Born in Philadelphia, he came from a prominent political family, and was the great-grandson of Benjamin Franklin. Under his leadership, the Coast Survey’s operations grew significantly, expanding from nine to seventeen states as it surveyed the Gulf and West Coasts. Bache ran meticulous studies relating to ocean currents, tides, and the earth’s magnetic field, endeavors which provided in-depth knowledge about U.S. coastal geography. Thanks to Bache, the Coast Survey evolved into an immense resource for the U.S. government and one of the foremost scientific institutions in the country leading up to the Civil War.