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Connecticut: Ruth Taylor White, 1935

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  • Title: Connecticut
  • Author: Ruth Taylor White
  • Date: 1935
  • Condition: Excellent
  • Inches: 12 x 9 [Paper]
  • Centimeters: 30.48 x 22.86 [Paper]
  • Product ID: 308456

This map of Connecticut is a vibrant pictorial “cartograph” published in Boston as part of her celebrated series for Our USA: A Gay Geography. The map is filled with whimsical illustrations and lively colors, depicting Alabama’s cities, agricultural products, historical sites, and local culture in a playful, engaging style.

Background on Creator

Ruth Taylor White (born March 1896, sometimes cited as 1899; date of death unknown) was a pioneering American pictorial mapmaker celebrated for her whimsical, colorful, and highly detailed “carto-graphs” created between the late 1920s and 1940s. Born in Oregon to painter John S. Taylor, Ruth was part of a creative family that included her sister Della Taylor Hoss, also a noted pictorial cartographer, and her brother Frank Taylor, an author with whom she frequently collaborated. Ruth’s early work included illustrations for Frank’s popular books about U.S. national parks, such as ’Oh, Ranger!’ and Grand Canyon Country.

Her distinctive style—marked by lively characters, humorous commentary, and vibrant landscapes—came to define the golden age of pictorial mapping. She gained widespread recognition for her commissioned maps, notably a series for the Hawaii Tourist Bureau in 1930, which captured the islands’ culture and attractions and were distributed to visitors. Her most famous publication is Our USA: A Gay Geography (1935), an atlas of all U.S. states and territories filled with her signature cartographic illustrations, produced in collaboration with her brother Frank.

White’s career was marked by adventurous travel, including flights across the U.S. and trips to Hawaii, Japan, the Philippines, and India, experiences that inspired many of her works. She also produced notable maps for events like the Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco. Despite her prolific output and growing popularity among collectors today, Ruth Taylor White’s personal life remains relatively obscure, with few biographical details available and no confirmed date of death, though she was reportedly still active as late as 1997. Her legacy endures through her playful, engaging maps that continue to charm and inform audiences worldwide.