1465

Placer County MTP Map Book (Incl Tahoe), Hand Drawn Maps, c1863, Original [170606]

Currency:USD Category:Books / Antiquarian & Collectible Start Price:2,000.00 USD Estimated At:4,000.00 - 10,000.00 USD
Placer County MTP Map Book (Incl Tahoe), Hand Drawn Maps, c1863, Original    [170606]

Shipping is billed separately. Pay your auction invoice early as purchases are packed in the order payments are received. Pick-up must be scheduled 24 hours in advance when you receive your shipping preference email after the auction. Invoices will go out immediately after the auction ends.

This is a remarkable discovery - an original hand drawn MTP book found within the W & P Nichols Estate, Duth Flat bankers from the1860s to past 1900. 13 x18", Gilt label on front cover: Map of Revenue District No. 3, Placer County. 24pp, thus about 24 townships that each carry 36 sections. The acronym "MTP" means "Master Township Plat" in today's title lingo.This remarkable group of maps is entirely hand drawn with ink and hand colored, showing rivers, lakes, prominant features, camps, mining towns, timber camps, other communities, such as "Murderer's Bar" etc. Most of the land is unsurveyed. It appears the data gathering stopped about 1868-1870.
Of particular interest to Tahoe Collectors and historicans are the twonships along the shore, and nearby Tahoe. The MTP(16N 16E) that contains Squaw Valley (yes, that is the original name) contains the town plats for Claraville and Knoxville along the Truckee River above and below the junction of Squae Creek. This may be the only factual record extant on their specific locations. BTW, thes two communities are NOT listed in the big California Place Names book, nor are many of the "communities." such as Wisconsin Hill, Damascus, Indian Springs, Independence Hill.
Nicolls was a major banking firm that controlled the northern and eastern parts of Placeer County. Most of these maps contained land under their perview, so it makes complete sense that they would have such a book because of the need for information on all forms of land deals in which th bank might be involved. Since the data entry appears to stop about 1870, it may be surmised that the Placer County Courthouse in Auburn took over hte data gathering after that point, as railroads were built (the great CPRR had just been completed), there were better roads, better communication (telegaph lines) and so forth.
This is an exceptional original historical record. Auburn California