Fire Insurance Maps
In the Library of Congress
Plans of North American
Cities and Towns Produced by the Sanborn Map Company
A Checklist
Compiled by the Reference and Bibliography Section
Geography and Map Division
1981
|
Tracing the development
and growth of cities and towns has been a popular study in recent
years. Fortunately for the researcher on such a quest, the cartographic
collections of the Library of Congress contain thousands of maps and
atlases of urban areas, dating from as far back as the sixteenth century
up to the present. Of particular note among the Library's holdings
is an extensive collection of maps of American cities and towns, giving
detailed, accurate information about their buildings and other structures.
The Sanborn Map Company of Pelham, New York, produced many such maps.
The Sanborn map
collection consists of a uniform series of large-scale maps, dating
from 1867 to the present and depicting the commercial, industrial,
and residential sections of some twelve thousand cities and towns
in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The maps were designed to
assist fire insurance agents in determining the degree of hazard associated
with a particular property and therefore show the size, shape, and
construction of dwellings, commercial buildings, and factories as
well as fire walls, locations of windows and doors, sprinkler systems,
and types of roofs. The maps also indicate widths and names of streets,
property boundaries, building use, and house and block numbers. They
show the locations of water mains, giving their dimensions, and of
fire alarm boxes and hydrants. Sanborn maps are thus an unrivaled
source of information about the structure and use of buildings in
American cities.
The Sanborn collection
includes some fifty thousand editions of fire insurance maps comprising
an estimated seven hundred thousand individual sheets. The Library
of Congress holdings represent the largest extant collection of maps
produced by the Sanborn Map Company. The majority of the maps were
acquired by the Library through copyright deposit, but the collection
was substantially enriched in 1967 when the Bureau of the Census transferred
to the Library of Congress a complete set of Sanborn maps. The 1,899
loose-leaf binders transferred were particularly noteworthy because
they included later editions than those previously acquired by the
Library. The Bureau of the Census set of maps had been regularly updated
by printed, paste-on corrections supplied by the Sanborn Map Company,
whereas the Library of Congress copies were retained in the form in
which they were copyrighted.
A checklist of
the maps was compiled between 1974 and 1978 by staff members of the
Reference and Bibliography Section of the Geography and Map Division,
with the assistance of several summer employees assigned to the section
in 1976 and 1977. The checklist describes the entire collection of
Sanborn fire insurance maps, including bound and unbound maps as well
as microfilm reels, in the custody of the Geography and Map Division.
Entries are arranged alphabetically by state and by the name of the
principal city in the map title. Following the state lists are citations
to special maps produced by the Sanborn Map Company to show whiskey
warehouses in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia,
Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois and sugar warehouses
at principal ports in Cuba and citations to fire insurance maps of
cities in British Columbia and Mexico.
In four columns
the checklist records: (1) entry number, (2) city, county, and date
of edition, (3) number of sheets, and (4) comments. In the last column
are the "500" and "000" series numbers that identify
the volumes acquired from the Bureau of the Census, additional place
names cited by the publisher in map titles, and other distinctive
features of the map. The standard map is colored and measures sixty-five
by fifty-five cm. Variations are noted in the comments column. Editions
issued by the company in atlas format are here described as "bound."
There is an index
to entries, arranged by state and county, and an alphabetical index
that records some twelve thousand cities and towns cited in the body
of the work. The numbers given in the indexes refer to entries, not
to pages.
The following
persons contributed to the compilation of this checklist:
Geography and
Map Division (present staff members)
-
Thomas
G. DeClaire
-
Patrick
E. Dempsey
-
Gary
L. Fitzpatrick
-
James
A. Flatness
-
Andrew
M. Modelski
-
Richard
W. Stephenson
Geography and
Map Division (former staff members)
-
John
R. Herbert, Hispanic Division, Library of Congress
-
Michael
H. Shelley, MARC Editorial Division, Library of Congress
-
Maynard
H. Yost
Special Project
Personnel (1976)
-
Franklin
Hawkins, Appalachian State University
-
Paula
Johnson, Gustavus Adolphus University
-
Claren
Kidd, University of Oklahoma
-
John
Manton, Youngstown State University
-
Karl
Proehl, State University of New York, Stony Brook
(now at the Pennsylvania State University)
Special Project
Personnel (1977)
- Susan McMahon,
Michigan State University
- Dennis Quillen,
Eastern Kentucky University
|
Source
document publication information:
United States.
Library of Congress. Geography and Map Division.
Washington, D.C. : 1981
Superintendent
of Documents number: LC 5.2:F51
International Standard Book Number (ISBN): 0-8444-0337-7
Library of Congress Card Number (LCCN): 80-607938
|
|
| "Sanborn",
"Sanborn Map", "Sanborn Map Company", and "Sanborn
Fire Insurance Maps" are recognized trademarks of the Sanborn
Map Company, a subsidiary of Environmental
Data Resources, Inc. (EDR). The presentation of historic Sanborn
Fire Insurance Company maps of Florida on this site is in no way connected
with either the Sanborn Map Company or Environmental Data Resources, Inc. |
|