Abstract

This paper is the culmination of a semester's worth of research and work conducted at the Burns Library at Boston College as a part of Dr. Sylvia Sellers-Garcia's "Making Hisotry Public" course in the Spring of 2014. This class focused on cartography from the early modern era, and this article focuses on an incredible atlas that was published in 1775 entitled <em>The West India Atlas</em>. The atlas, which is a detailed example of colonial-era cartography, was published by an assistant to a Mr. Thomas Jeffreys, who was the geographer to King George III at the time of his death in 1771. This remarkable text features not only accurate maps and representations of the Caribbean islands, but also vivid descriptions of the various territories and their histories. Both the economic contexts at the time that the atlas was published and how Jeffreys and his assistants chose to represent these contexts within the various maps through symbols and references to navigational resources were examined and analyzed.

Highlights

  • As a region of tropical islands and countless waterways, the Caribbean represented far more than just a picturesque landscape for exploration to those who lived there during the eighteenth century

  • One can refer to the system that characterized the increase in trade and growth on an economic basis as mercantilism, and the method in which this system operated as the triangular trade

  • With islands occupied by the Spanish, French, Dutch, and British, the Caribbean embodied this exoticism during the colonial times

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Summary

Introduction

As a region of tropical islands and countless waterways, the Caribbean represented far more than just a picturesque landscape for exploration to those who lived there during the eighteenth century.

Results
Conclusion

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