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  • 19th Century Survey Prints
  • About the Surveys

19th Century Survey Prints

About the Surveys

American History Museum

The United States and Mexico Boundary Survey

The United States and Mexican Boundary Survey (1848-1855) was an exploring expedition commissioned by the U.S. Congress and conducted under the auspices of the Department of the Interior by the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers. It determined the exact U.S.-Mexican border west of El Paso, Texas (the terminus point of the natural border provided by the Rio Grande River), after the conclusion of the U.S.-Mexican War (1846-1847). Prompted by vague wording in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the annexation of Texas several years earlier, the boundary survey was extended to include the Gadsden Purchase of 1853, and ultimately, by 1855, explored parts of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Led by Major William Emory, the boundary survey also documented the resources of the land in question, recording the new territory’s geography, mission settlements, the flora and fauna, and the American Indian tribes, knowledge critical to fixing a beneficial boundary line for the United States. The survey’s findings were published in three volumes between 1857 and 1859.

The United States Naval Astronomical Expedition to the Southern Hemisphere

The United States Naval and Astronomical Expedition to the Southern Hemisphere (1849-1852) was a scientific and exploring expedition commissioned by the U.S. Congress and conducted by the Department of the Navy to gather astronomical data in Santiago, Chile. The South American city’s map coordinates approximately mirror the latitude and longitude of the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. Corresponding observations of Mars and Venus in both the Southern and Northern Hemispheres were hoped to measure solar parallax and provide a definitive Earth-Sun distance by observing Mars and Venus. Though this was the expedition’s primary goal, leader Lieutenant James Gilliss dispatched Lieutenant Archibald MacRae to explore the area from Uspalatta Pass to Buenos Aires in 1852-1853, where he collected scientific and anthropological artifacts. The expedition’s findings were published in four volumes between the years 1855 and 1856.

The United States Pacific Railroad Survey

The United States Pacific Railroad Surveys (1853-1855) were commissioned by the U.S. Congress and conducted by the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers to map routes for a transcontinental railroad line through what had become the American West. The competition of Congressional interests, relating to home constituencies, decided the many different exploratory routes. The surveys comprised several expeditions and routes from the central part of the country to the west, and north and south along the west coast. Some of the parallel (and horizontal) lines of latitude across the country were used as directional guides to the surveying expeditions. Along with topographic information about these routes the survey participants also prepared studies of the natural history and the ethnology of these areas. The survey findings were published in twelve volumes between 1855 and 1860 titled the Reports of Explorations and Surveys, to ascertain the most practicable and economical route for a railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean. The Pacific Railroad line, after the work of the surveys, ran close to the 38th parallel, through the center of the country.


Chromolithograph of "Colorado Desert and Signal Mountain"

Chromolithograph of "Fort Massachusetts at the Foot of the Sierra Blanca Valley of San Luis"

Chromolithograph of "Great Basin from the Summit of Tejon Pass"

Chromolithograph of "Los Angeles"

Chromolithograph of "Metamorphic Rocks-Borders of the Desert"

Chromolithograph of "Mirage on the Colorado Desert"

Chromolithograph of "Mission and Plain of San Fernando"

Chromolithograph of bird species "Euphonia Rufiventris adult male and Chlorophonia Occipitalis adulte male"

Chromolithograph of bird species "Phalacrocorax Brasilianus"

Engraving of fish and frog species "Trichomycterus Maculatus, Cheiroden Pisciculus, Cystignathus Taeniatus, and Phyllobates Auratus"

Engraving of fish species "Anguilla tyrannus"

Engraving of fish species "Belone scrulator"

Engraving of fish species "Caragnus esculentus, Doliodon carolinus, Chorinemus lanceolatus, Chloroscombrus cambraeus, Argyreiosus capillaris, Vomer setapinnis"

Engraving of fish species "Ictiobus tumidus, Pytchostomus albidus, Luxilus leptosomus"

Engraving of fish species "Moniana rutila, Moniana formosa, Moniana gibbosa, Moniana aurata, Moniana frigida, Moniana couchi"

Engraving of fish species "Nematoenys inermis"

Engraving of fish species "Otolithus drummondii"

Engraving of fish species "Pomotis heros, Pomotis fallax"

Engraving of fossilized "Mastodon Andium"

Engraving of frog species "Batrachyla longipes, Heloecetes clarii, Ylarana fusca, Acris archeta"

Engraving of lizard species "Cnemidophorus Presignis"

Engraving of lizard species "Crotaphylus wislizenii"

Engraving of lizard species "Phrynosoma regale, Doliosaurus m'callii"

Engraving of lizard species"Euphryne obesus"

Engraving of snake species "Crotalus molossus"

Engraving of snake species "Dryophis vittatus"

Engraving of snake species "Elaps nigrocinctus"

Engraving of toad and salamander species"Scaphiopus couchii, Amblystoma proserpina, Amblystoma texana"

Lithograph of "Cascades of the Columbia"

Lithograph of "Indian Antiquities" pottery artifacts

Lithograph of "South End of S. Inez Mountains & S. Buenaventura Valley"

Lithograph of bird species "Buteo calurus"

Lithograph of bird species "Buteo elegans"

Lithograph of bird species "Carpodacus cassinii and Melospiza fallax"

Lithograph of bird species "Centurus uropygialis"


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