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  • Map of the Town of Goshen, Litchfield County, Connecticut.

Map of the Town of Goshen, Litchfield County, Connecticut.

  • ARTIST: Edgar Woodford

  • PUBLISHER: Published by Richard Clark, Philadelphia

  • MEDIUM: Stone engraving,

    DATE: 1852.

  • EDITION SIZE: Overall map size including rollers, 34 x 45" (86.4 x 114.4 cm)

  • DESCRIPTION: Wall map on original rollers.<br><br> The charming map depicts the township divided up into and colored by wards. On either side of the main map are focused maps of the villages of Goshen Center and West Goshen. Surrounding that twelve vignette illustrations of prominent residences, churches and a business.<br><br> The town of Goshen is located in Litchfield County, in the northwestern part of Connecticut and contains a large portion of the Mohawk State Forest. First settled in 1738 and incorporated a year later. Primarily a farming community in the 18th century. During the American Revolution the town manufactured musket rifles.<br><br> “A handful of maps of Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine, published in Philadelphia during the early 1850s, bear the name of E. M. Woodford. Edgar M. Woodford was born April 15, 1824, in Avon, Connecticut, where his family had a farm. Self-taught as a civil engineer, Woodford became county surveyor for the County of Hartford. A nephew recalled his Uncle Edgar as “a great strapping man,” who would come “over the hills with his [surveying] instruments over his shoulder, crying for fear his work would not come out right.” Woodford became deeply committed to the Abolitionist cause and in 1856 went West with a group calling themselves “The Connecticut Colony in Kansas.” These settlers were determined to secure Kansas as a free state by moving there in sufficient numbers to outvote the slaveholders. In 1857, he was back in Hartford to encourage other like-minded individuals to join them. When the Civil War broke out, he enlisted in the Seventh Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, under an old friend, Colonel Joseph Hawley. A brief article in the Hartford Daily Courant on October 21, 1862, noted that “Quartermaster Sergeant Edgar M. Woodford, 7th Conn. Regiment from Avon, died recently at Hilton Head of congestive fever, after an illness of less than twenty-four hours.”<br><br> Nancy Finley.

  • ADDITIONAL INFO:

  • CONDITION: Overall in quite good condition for a wall map of the period. Some minor splitting along sheet edges and soft creases.

  • REFERENCE: Thompson "Maps of Connecticut" #140.

  • CATEGORIES: Maps

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