Talcott Survey


Sketch with Camera Lucida, ca. 1841

Sketch with Camera Lucida, ca. 1841
Item 17395   info
Maine Historical Society

"Sketch with Camera Lucida -- from Hill in front of Tachereaux House."

The Talcott survey, headed by Capt. Andrew Talcott, was sent out to map the northern boundary of Maine after hostilities broke out in 1839 between settlers in the Madawaska region around the St. John River. This scene was likely created around the headwaters of the Connecticut River between the New Hampshire and Canadian border.

"Artists accompanied the survey and used an apparatus called a camera lucida. Suspended over a sheet of drawing paper, the camera lucida, by means of a prism, projected an exact outline of a particular view onto the paper, which could then be traced. Later, the line drawings were embellished with watercolor."- from Barry, William and Geraldine Tidd Scott. "Charting a wilderness. Rare drawings of the trackless North Woods resurface after 150 years." Downeast Magazine, June 1995. p. 59-60.

The original painting is held at the National Archives, Washington, D.C.

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