Entry Page  Index of Images  I

Entry Page
Bird’s Eye Views of Maine including Transportation Maps
Urban Maps
English County Maps
WWI & II Maps and Case List
School Geographies
--a. How Geography was Taught
--b. Illustration Methods
--c. Astronomy in the 19th Century Classroom
--d. Races and Societies
--e. National and Regional Identity
--f. Climatic Zones
--g. Globes in the Classroom
Road Maps
--a. New England Regional Imagery
--b. Ideal Family
--c. Gas Station Experience
--d. Race and Ethnic Groups
--e. War Maps
Wall Maps

Osher Map Library Home Page
TREASURES III
A Tenth Anniversary Celebration of the Osher Map Library and Smith Center for Cartographic Education

October 2, 2004 - June 30, 2005

 

War Maps

 

World War I and II Maps

 

Foret d’Argonne

In March 1918, after years of trench-war stalemate on the WWI Western Front in France and Belgium, the German Army made a sudden breakthrough of the Allied lines. They made rapid advances but these were essentially a last-gasp effort of an exhausted army. By July of 1918, (the date of the map), they were retreating, although in good order and still fighting fiercely. The map shows the general theater of operations in these last crucial four months of what, up to then, was the largest and deadliest war in human history.

A key factor in the changed situation was the entry into the war by the USA. The US Army, under six-star General John Pershing, was especially involved in the last battles of this terrible conflict. This included the engagement called, variously, the Battle of Meuse-Argonne or the Argonne Forest. This conflict lasted from September 16th to November 11th 1918; at which latter date, an Armistice was declared, (“All Quiet on Western Front”), and the war effectively ended.

More than 1,000,000 Americans participated in these battles, among them, Harry Truman, an artillery captain and later the President of the United States, and the great American hero, Sergeant Alvin York, a famed marksman, who won his Congressional Medal of Honor on October 8th, for single-handedly neutralizing an entire German battalion and taking 132 prisoners.

1. France, Armée Groupe de canevas de tir.
Foret D’Argonne
108 x 77 cm.
Printed at Base Printing Plant 29th Engineers U.S. Army, 1918 (full map, left; detail, right)

2. Rand McNally
War Map of the French Front Northern Section Strategic Map of the Battle Ground in Northern France
57.5 x 83 cm.
Chicago: Rand McNally & Co., ca. 1918 (full map, left; detail, right)

3. Strabenkarte von Nordostfrankreich, Blatt 3
Arras-Mezieres
Photolithograph
“Copied from a French (Michelin) map 1938
Photolithographed at War Office 1941”

Richard Edes Harrison: Look at the World Map

Richard Edes Harrison was a Yale architecture graduate who was a gifted illustrator. His graphic talents eventually became centered on cartography and he published his first map for Time magazine in 1932. He worked, variously as a freelance artist, a staff-member for national magazines, as a government cartographic consultant and a visiting lecturer at several universities.

His most noteworthy cartographic talent was his innovative use of global perspectives. His ingenuity lay in compiling these viewpoints by combining, in various ways, geometry, geography and imagination, plus his own individual approach to selective exaggeration. The overriding notion was to serve the map-reader. That is, to give them a new, stimulating and, ultimately greater understanding of geographical and political situations.

His work came to notable fruition in a series of maps made for Fortune magazine, starting in 1940 before the US entry into war. His characteristic signature was his expansion of the bird’s-eye view format to worldwide settings. In particular, his use of novel orientations and the so-called over-the-horizon approach could be quite startling for an audience wedded to “north is up” conventions. His maps were well-received and the best were published as a noted collection in 1944 as, “Look at the World: The Fortune Atlas for World Strategy”

image not available 5. Richard Edes Harrison
A Fortune Map
Orthographic Series III
Ortographic Projection
1942
6. C.C. Petersen Advertising
Dated Events War Map
Orthographic projection, 45 x 98 cm.
Printed by Shaw-Barton, Inc., Coshocton, Ohio
Copyright: 1942
  Case List:

7. Ubootshandbuch der Ostkuste der Vereinigten Staaten von Nordamerika…
24 x 16.5 cm.
Berlin, 1943
Gift of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute

8. Ubootshandbuch der Ostkuste der Vereinigten Staaten von Nordamerika…
43.5 x 31 cm.
Berlin, 1943
Gift of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute
9. Careless Talk
WWII poster Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, ca 1943
Long-term loan: Pres. Richard Pattenaude
10. C.S. Hammond
Hammond’s Self-Revising World Atlas And Gazetteer War Edition
New York, 1940
Story Collection
11.Gilbert Grosvenor
Map Service of the National Geographic Society
National Geographic Society
Washington, D.C.
Copyright 1947
  Items Not Displayed

Selection of Silk Maps, WWII, Pacific Theatre
Silk Map with Pouch
Part of an “escape kit” issued to aircrews in England during WWII
Source unknown
Publisher unknown, WWII era
Smith Collection
  Next: School Geographies

 
 
Contact: oml@usm.maine.edu
  ©2005 Osher Map Library
  University of Southern Maine