- Title: South America
- Author: Thomas Bradford
- Date: 1835
- Medium: Hand-colored engraving
- Condition: Very Good - age toning, foxing
- Inches: 8 1/2 x 10 3/4 [Image]
- Centimeters: 21.59 x 27.31 [Image]
- Product ID: 222031
Map of the continent of South America by Thomas Bradford.
The map is from A Comprehensive Atlas: Geographical, Historical & Commercial (pub. 1835) by Thomas G. Bradford (1802-1887). It was one of the first American atlases to include extensive geographical descriptions to supplement the maps, with sections on the physical view of the world, North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and ancient history and geography. The atlas also included interesting charts, such as "Dwellings of Different Countries" and "Distribution of Vegetables, and Snow Line," and a great comparative chart of mountains and rivers.
Thomas Gamaliel Bradford (1802-1887) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, where he worked as an assistant editor for the America Encyclopedia before entering the field of atlas publishing. Bradford's first major cartographic work was his revision and subsequent republication of an important French geography by Adrian Balbi, published in America as Atlas Designed to Illustrate the Abridgement of Universal Geography, Modern & Ancient, Boston, 1835. The atlas is extremely scarce, with only two known institutional copies, at Harvard and the University of Chicago. The maps are the same as in Bradford's more well known Comprehensive Atlas, except for the coloring of the map borders.
Bradford focused his atlases on the United States and dispensed with the ornamental decoration common in European atlases in favor of a more informational approach, perhaps inspired by the efforts of the S.D.U.K. Bradford revised and expanded the Comprehensive Atlas into his own important contribution to American cartography, the 1838 An Illustrated Atlas Geographical, Statistical and Historical of the United States and Adjacent Countries.