RICHMOND: EVOLUTION OF A CITY AS ... - Library of Virginia

[Pages:24]RICHMOND: EVOLUTION OF A CITY AS SHOWN THROUGH MAPS AT THE LIBRARY OF VIRGINIA

The City of Richmond evolved from a trading post at Shockoe Creek to become Virginia's capital city. In 1737 William Mayo, a friend of William Byrd II, completed his survey of the town of Richmond. His plan was one common to the Tidewater, a rectangular town design located east of Shockoe Creek. That year, Byrd held a lottery to sell off town lots. Mayo's original plan included 112 numbered lots, 14 lots designated by letters, and two without any identification. Lots 97 and 98 were set aside for the Henrico Parish vestry, and St. John's Church was erected on them in 1741. In 1742 Virginia's General Assembly granted Richmond a town charter. Byrd's son, William Byrd III, in debt and seeking a way to pay off his creditors, decided to hold a lottery in 1768 to sell additional lots west of Shockoe Creek.

When Virginia's capital moved from Williamsburg to Richmond in 1780, Shockoe Hill was chosen as the site for the new capitol building; it would look over the town of Richmond that had developed on flat land adjacent to the James River. Nine directors, one of whom was Thomas Jefferson, were appointed to plan Virginia's new capital. Jefferson proposed a gridiron plan for Shockoe Hill that would set apart the platted portion of "Richmond Town" from the new capitol. There would be two major connecting streets, Main and Cary, and "Capitol Square" would consist of three buildings. Ultimately, the General Assembly decided to combine all three branches of government into one building, and Jefferson was asked to design a plan for it (as were others). While in France, Jefferson worked with Charles-Louis Clerisseau to design what became Virginia's Capitol Square. One of Richmond's best-known features, it dominated Richmond's skyline for decades.

Early maps of Richmond do not always convey the challenges presented by the area's topographic features; hills, valleys, gullies, and ravines defined early Richmond's topography and made the area difficult to traverse. As the city grew, the topography presented challenges to its development.

Richard Young became the first official surveyor for the City of Richmond in 1805. The Library of Virginia's collections include three of Young's manuscript city plans of Richmond that were drawn in 1809?10 and 1817. His plans "map" Richmond and project the city's future development, but do not provide users with any contour lines or hachures to define Shockoe Hill and Valley. Today, Young's plans are a part of the Richmond City Office of the City Engineer Collection and are still consulted. Tracings and handwritten copies of Young's 1817 Plan of Richmond were created in the early 20th century by city engineers, and his plans have served recently as a resource for individuals researching the location of an early African American burial site that was referenced on Young's 1809 plan.

Micajah Bates was appointed surveyor for the City of Richmond after Young's death, and his 1835 map of the city notes the changes made to Shockoe Creek, the location of "Old Town Richmond," and the city's corporation lines. As the 19th century progressed, antebellum Richmond was the cultural, political, and financial capital of Virginia and served as the hub of the state's developing railroad network as well as an important port, in part, due to the success of the James River and Kanawha Canal. As the city's influence grew, so did its population. Moses Ellyson and other publishers helped shepherd visitors through Richmond by producing city directories that proved to be excellent guides for casual and business travelers. Ellyson's 1856 Richmond City Directory contained a map of the city that listed 95 points of interest, including warehouses, banks, hotels, churches, and meeting places. Richmond's topographical features are shown, as well. It also reveals that the Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad line stopped on Broad Street between 8th and 9th Streets--the Library of Virginia's present location. Ellyson's directory notes that Richmond had a "hilly" terrain.

Richmond and its surrounding area were mapped during the Civil War, and the city remained relatively unscathed until April 1865, when Confederate forces set fire to their own warehouses. The fire spread to other parts of Richmond and was contained before it reached Capitol Square. Richmond's business district was heavily damaged, however, and many businesses never fully recovered. Charles Ludwig's Map of a Part of the City of Richmond showing the burnt districts, published by the Richmond Whig just a few days after the fall of Richmond, shows the areas that were destroyed. The map notes that residents had to rely on a pontoon bridge to travel to the Southside after the bridges connecting Richmond with Manchester were destroyed, and includes a crude sketch of Shockoe Creek.

Two years later, in 1867, the City of Richmond annexed 2.5 square miles of surrounding Henrico County, including the islands in the James River, neighborhoods in Union and Chimborazo Hills, and a section of Church Hill that faced Broad Street. Two new wards were created in 1867, Marshall and Clay, and a third, Jackson Ward, was added in 1871. In the decades following the Civil War, several publishing firms created atlases for American cities including the Beers (1877) and the Baist (1889) atlases for the City of Richmond. The F. W. Beers Company published maps of cities and towns and often collaborated with local surveyors. In 1877 F. W. Beers, with assistance from James T. Redd, published Map of Richmond, Manchester and Suburbs..., which includes political divisions for Richmond City and Henrico County and the names of several property owners.

Archives Reference Services | 800 East Broad Street | Richmond, Virginia 23219-8000 | 804.692.3888 | lva.

RICHMOND: EVOLUTION OF A CITY AS SHOWN THROUGH MAPS AT THE LIBRARY OF VIRGINIA

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Other structural materials include fire insurance maps published by the Sanborn Fire Insurance Company in the second half of the 19th century and throughout the 20th century. These large-scale maps show commercial, industrial, and residential sections of a city or town. Overall, thousands of cities in the United States, Canada, and Mexico were mapped. Designed to assist fire insurance agents, they are incredibly detailed, showing property boundaries, house and block numbers, fire alarm boxes, hydrants, and other minute details. The first Sanborn maps for Richmond were published in 1886.

Richmond expanded in 1892 and again in 1906. Maps produced after this date show new wards: Clay, Lee, Henry, and Marshall. Jackson Ward no longer existed. In 1910 the city annexed the City of Manchester and expanded again in 1914. The city's continued growth, the significant changes brought by the advent of the automobile, and technological advances in general parallel the Richmond City Department of Public Works' increased publication of Richmond City maps. One example of the department's work is Map Showing the Territorial Growth of Richmond, where color is used to show annexations by Richmond up to 1914. The department published several maps throughout the 20th century and many are listed in this bibliography.

Richmond's first master plan, published in 1946, "attempted to put the city's development in perspective and required 85 map plates".1 The maps "map" the distribution of Richmond's population, the number of buildings erected, population density, and other socioeconomic information.

The Library's Richmond City Local Government Records Collection includes many plats, surveys, and maps that are not a part of the Library's historical map collection, but are valuable resources, nonetheless. A complete list of microfilmed Richmond City records can be found at lva.public/local. Other helpful archival collections are the Richmond City Office of the City Engineer, Accession 34886a-b; the T. Crawford Redd & Bros. Plats and Surveys, 1786?1952, Accession 35211; and the W. W. LaPrade & Bros. Records, 1803?2001, Accession 43183. Comprehensive finding aids are available online for the Richmond City Office of the City Engineer and W. W. LaPrade & Bros. collections. An in-house finding aid for the T. Crawford Redd & Bros. Collection is accessible for researchers in the Library's Archives Reading Room.

Listed in this bibliography are manuscript and published maps of Richmond that span more than two hundred years. The maps listed are available for research in the Library's Archives, Maps, and Special Collections Reading Rooms. The bibliography is divided by the following categories: Maps of Richmond in the Maps Reading Room, Maps of Richmond Arranged by Subject in the Map Reading Room, Civil War Maps of Richmond, Topographic

1 Marianne Withers, "Complete in Every Part; Select Maps of the City of Richmond," Virginia Cavalcade, Spring 1986, Volume 35, Number 4, pp. 162-170.

Maps, Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Company Atlases, Maps of Richmond in Atlases and in General Master Plans in General Library Collection, Atlases of Richmond in Special Collections, Cadastral Surveys and Maps of Richmond in Local Government Records Collections, City of Richmond Local Government Records Collection ? Manuscript and Original Maps, and the Chesapeake and Ohio Collection. Researchers should note that this bibliographic work is not comprehensive; it is not a complete list of maps of Richmond in the Library of Virginia's collections.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Brown, Elsa Barkley and Gregg D. Kimball. "Mapping the Terrain of Black Richmond" in Journal of Urban History. Vol. 21, No. 3, March 1995: 296?346.

Chesson, Michael B. Richmond After the War 1865?1890. Richmond: Virginia State Library, 1981.

Dabney, Virginius. Richmond: The Story of a City. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1990.

Kimball, Gregg D. American City, Southern Place: A Cultural History of Antebellum Richmond. Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia Press, 2000.

. "The Working People of Richmond: Life and Labor in an Industrial City, 1865?1920" in Labor's Heritage. Vol. 3, No. 2, April 1991, p. 42?65.

Mordecai, Samuel. Richmond in By-Gone Days. Richmond: The Dietz Press, 1946.

Ristow, Walter. American Maps and Mapmakers. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1985.

Reps, John. Tidewater Towns: City Planning in Colonial Virginia and Maryland. Williamsburg, Va.: The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 1972.

Ruggles, Jeffrey. The Burial Ground: An Early African-American Site in Richmond. December 2009.

Withers, Marianne McKee. "Complete in Every Part: Selected Maps of the City of Richmond," in Virginia Cavalcade. Vol. 35, No. 4, Spring 1986, pp. 162?171.

MAPS OF RICHMOND IN THE MAP READING ROOM

A Plan of Richmond Col. William Mayo and James Wood Manuscript, Pen and Ink February 12, 1736 G3884.R5G46 1736 B89, Digital Image No.: 07_1332

RICHMOND: EVOLUTION OF A CITY AS SHOWN THROUGH MAPS AT THE LIBRARY OF VIRGINIA

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An Exact Copy of the Town of Richmond which Appears to be Taken in the Lifetime of William Byrd the Elder... William Byrd/Robert Boyd Manuscript, Pen and Ink 1787 G3884.R5G46 1787. B9

An Exact Copy of a Plan of the Town of Richmond William Byrd Richmond: Richmond Times Dispatch Printed 1930 G3884.R5G46 1787 .B93

A Plan of Richmond... American Bank and Trust Company Richmond Printed 1932 G3884.R5 1737 .M3 1933

An Exact Copy of a Plan of the Town of Richmond which Appears to be Taken in the Lifetime of William Byrd the Elder Ithaca, New York: Historic Urban Plans Facsimile 1974 755.44 1736/1737 1974

Copy of a Plan of Richmond with the Names of the Takers up of Lots in the hand writing of William Byrd the elder, supposed to be as it stood at his death in the year 1742 William Byrd Richmond Blueprint 1926 755.44 1742? 1926

Richmond 1782 Matthew White Richmond Printed 1987 755.44 1782 1987

This is a Map of the Town of Manchester Copied from a Map Belonging to the Office of the Superior Court of Chancery for the Richmond Chancery District for Mr. Archibald Freeband Joseph Mayo Richmond Photoprint 755.44 1790? 1820?

Plan of part of the City of Richmond, shewing the Situation of the proposed Building Benjamin Henry Latrobe Facsimile 1967 G3884.R5 1798 .L3 1967

Plan of part of the City of Richmond, showing the Situation of the proposed building Benjamin Latrobe. Ithaca, N.Y.: Historic Urban Plans Facsimile 1970 G3884.R5 1798 .L3 1970

A Plan of the City of Richmond in Henrico County, State of Virginia R. B. James September 24, 1804 Photoprint 755.44 1804 6 pts.

A Plan of the City of Richmond by Richard Young Richard Young 1809? Negative Photostat G3884.R5 1809 .Y68 (Photostat made in V.S.L. from original loaned by H. A. Blankenship, Dept. of Public Utilities, June 1963)

A Plan of the City of Richmond by Richard Young Richard Young 1809? Computer Printout G3884. R5 1809 .Y68, Digital Image No.: 09_1282_02 Young 1809

A Plan of the City of Richmond Richard Young/Traced from the Original in the City Engineer's Office, May 6, 1916 by William J. Moll Negative Photostat on Paper 1916 G3884.R5 1809 .Y68 1916

A Plan of the City of Richmond Richard Young 1932 Photoprint This map was pantographed and redrawn by the Department of Public Works, Bureau of Survey and Design, April 14, 1932, from a lithographic reproduction of Young's map of Richmond about 1809 755.44 1809? 1932

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Map of the City of Richmond and its Jurisdiction, including Manchester, to which is attached the 100 acre Lots drawn as prizes in Byrd's lottery ... by Richard Young Copy of the original by Frank T. Bates Positive Photoprint of Manuscript Map in Richmond Department of Public Works 755.44 1817 6 pts.

Map of the City of Richmond and its jurisdiction, including Manchester, to which is attached the 100 acre lots drawn as prizes in Byrd's lottery ... by Richard Young Copy of the original by Frank T. Bates Black and White Photographic Reproduction G3884. R5 1817 .Y68

City of Richmond, Virginia from the Hill Above the Waterworks Published by Lewis P. Clover, New York 1834 Aquatint G3884.R5A35 1834 .B46 Voorhees Collection, Digital Image No. Voorhees041.tif

Plan of the City of Richmond, drawn from Actual Survey and Original Plans, by Micajah Bates, 1835 Micajah Bates 1835 Printed Map G3884.R5 1835 .B37, Digital Image No.: 1000636885 1835 Bates.tif.

Plan of the City of Richmond 1838 Manuscript G3884.R5 1838 .P53, Digital Image No.: 11_0418_002

Plan of Richmond, Henrico County, Manchester and Springhill, Virginia Charles Morgan 1848 Photostat G3884.R5 1848 .M6, Digital Image No.: 17_0124

Plan of Richmond, Henrico County, Manchester and Springhill, Virginia Charles Morgan 1849? Printed Map G3884.R5 1849 .M6, Digital Image No.: 17_0771_006 and 007.tif

Map of the City of Richmond, Henrico Co., Virginia W. Sides. Baltimore: S. A. Sandys, Printer Printed 1856 G3884.R5 1856 .S54, Digital Image No. 08_1354_02

Map of the City of Richmond, Henrico Co., Virginia W. Sides 1960 Facsimile G3884. R5 1856 .S54 1960

Map of the City of Richmond, Henrico County, Virginia W. Eugene Ferslew 1859 Negative Photostat Reprinted by "The Virginia Guardsman" May 1935 755.44 1859 1935

Richmond, Henrico County, Manchester and Springhill Chesterfield Co. T. Ettling 1861 Inkjet Print 755.44 1861 Spalding Collection,

Richmond, Henrico County, Manchester and Springhill Chesterfield Co. T. Ettling From Illustrated London News Printed 1861 G3884.R5S5 1861 .E8, Digital Image No.: LVA00128

Map of the City of Richmond Virginia from a survey by I. H. Adams, Assist. U.S. Coast Survey I. H. Adams Washington, D.C.: Published by C. Bohn 1864? Positive Photostat of Map in Library of Congress 755.44 [1864?]

Map of a part of the city of Richmond showing the burnt districts C. L. Ludwig Richmond: Published by Wm. Ira Smith, proprietor, Richmond Whig Printed 1865 G3884. R5S5 1865 .L8, Digital Image No.: LVA00012

Richmond, Virginia, from Surveys by Capt. Peter S. Michie, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers... Richmond: Richmond Civil War Centennial Committee Published with permission of the National Archives 1865 Facsimile G3884.R5 S5 1865 .M5

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Office Map of the City of Richmond, Va. and Surrounding's, 1873 F. Geese Richmond: Published by J. F. Z. Caracristi Printed 1873 G3884.R5 1873 .C37, Digital Image No.: 11_0418_001

Gray's New Map of Richmond, Henrico County, Virginia 1872?1882 Negative Photoprint 755.44 1873?82?

Map of the City of Richmond, Va. J. F. Zeilinger Caracristi Richmond: F. Geese, Lith. Printed 1874 755.44 1874

Illustrated Atlas of the City of Richmond F. W. Beers Richmond?: F. W. Beers Printed 1876 G1294 .R5B4 1876 755.44 1876 Copy 3--Negative Photostat

Map of Richmond, Manchester and Suburbs from Surveys by Jas. T. Redd, county surveyor, Henrico Co., Va. F. W. Beers Richmond: Published by F. W. Beers Printed 1877 755.44 1877, Digital Image No.: 17_0771_001 and 2.tif

Gray's New Map of Richmond, Henrico County, Virginia Jacob Chace Philadelphia: O. W. Gray & Son. Printed 1877 755.44 1877 (1) Digital Image No. 16_0128_001

Map of Richmond, Virginia 1881 From Murphy, Daniel, Richmond Va.: A Guide Richmond: J. W. Randolph & English Printed 1881 755.44 [1881]

Cities of Richmond and Manchester, Va. Printed 1886? 755.44 1886?

Horsecar Lines: Richmond and Manchester, Virginia, 1887 Julian W. Tarrant Glendale, Calif.: Interurban Press, 1986 Printed 1887/1986 G3884.R5P33 1887 .T3

Map of the City of Richmond, Va. Richmond: Published by Cooke, Howard & Co. Printed 1888 755.44 1888

Map of the Richmond Union Passenger Railway Equipped by the Sprague Electric Railway and Motor Company G. H. Glover New York 1888 Negative Photoprint 755.44 1888(1)

Plan of "Riverview" Adjoining the West End City Parks James T. Redd, Surveyor of Henrico County Richmond: For sale by R. B. Chaffin & Co. Real Estate Auctioneers, 10th Street between Main & Bank Streets Printed 1888 G3884 .R5G46 1888 .R4

1890 Map of Richmond, Manchester and Suburbs F. W. Beers Richmond: J. Thompson Brown & Co., 1113 Main Street Printed 1890 G3884.R5 1890 .B4

Richmond Chamber of Commerce Map of Cities of Richmond and Manchester, and Adjacent Territory Extending Five Miles Out of the State Capitol, the Distances Being Shown by One-Quarter Mile Circles James. T. Reed and Son 1890 Negative Photostat 755.44 1890

Map of the City of Manchester, Va., and surrounding territory James T. Redd and Son, Surveyors and Engineers Richmond: A. Hoen & Co. Printed 1893?1898? 755.44 1893?1898?

J. L. Hill Printing Co.'s Map of Richmond, Va. and Surroundings Arthur Schrivener Printed 1896 755.44 1896

RICHMOND: EVOLUTION OF A CITY AS SHOWN THROUGH MAPS AT THE LIBRARY OF VIRGINIA

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Richmond and Manchester, Virginia George F. Cram Chicago: George F. Cram Printed 1899 755.44 1899

Map of the Principal Business Section of Richmond, Virginia Henning & Baker, Publishers Richmond: Henning and Baker, 1105 E. Main Street Printed 1899 G3884.R5 1899 .H4? Original 755.44 1899 (1) ? Negative Photostat

New Map of Richmond, Va. Baltimore, Md.: Published by A. E. Lytle, mgr., 126 Calhoun St. Printed 1901 G3884.R5 1901 .U5

New Map of Richmond, Va. Baltimore: A. E Lytle Printed 1901 755.44 1901

Map of the City of Richmond, Va., Showing Present War and Precinct Boundaries H. P. Beck, Civil Engineer Richmond: Clyde W. Saunders Printed 1904 755.44 1904

Map of Richmond with Inset Showing Battlefields From Official Encyclopaedic Guide to Richmond and Vicinity. 1906 Negative Photostat 755.44 1906

Map of the City of Richmond, Va., Showing Present Corporation Lines as Established Dec. 6, 1906, also Old Ward Boundaries Richmond: Clyde W. Saunders Printed January 15, 1907 755.44 1907, Digital Image No.: 17_0771_008 and 009.tif

Brookland Park Plan Richmond 1909 Blueprint G3884.R5G46 1909 .B3 Carlton Collection

Map of Richmond, Virginia, Showing the Seven Hills 1912? Negative Photostat 755.44 1912?

Richmond, Va. C. Addis Richmond: C. W. Saunders? Printed 1912 G3884.R5 1912 .R534

Information Map of the city of Richmond and Guide to Points of Interest Compiled and Published by Bolton, Clarke & Pratt, Incorporated, Civil Engineers Richmond: Bolton, Clarke & Pratt, Inc., 737 East Main Street Printed 1914 755.44 1914

Map of Richmond Virginia Clyde W. Saunders Richmond Printed 1914 755.44 1914 (2)

Plat of a Section Traced from a Map with the following title: This is a Map of the Town of Manchester copied from a Map Belonging to the Office of the Supreme Court of Chancery for the Richmond Chancery District for Mr. Archibald Freeland Jos. Mayo, Surveyor Traced by J. S. Potts, Jr. 1915 755.44 1915

Map of Richmond, Virginia and Surrounding Territory T. Crawford Redd & Bro. Richmond: Clyde W. Saunders. Printed 1919 755.44 1919

Clarke's Guide Map Richmond and Suburbs E. C. C. Clarke Richmond: Published by E. C. C. Clarke Printed 1920 755.44 1920

Clarke's Guide Map Richmond and Suburbs E. C. Clarke Richmond: E. C. Clarke 1920 [Printed 1925] 755.44 1920 1925

RICHMOND: EVOLUTION OF A CITY AS SHOWN THROUGH MAPS AT THE LIBRARY OF VIRGINIA

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City of Richmond and Environs Showing Location of Colored Population Richmond: Department of Public Works Printed 1923, Revised to Feb. 1, 1925 755.44 1923 1925; Digital Image No.: 16_0651_001 Richmond Map

Map showing Valentines Indian lore at the site of Richmond, Va., 1600?1700, Dec. 20, 1924 Emmett C. Clarke Richmond: E. C. Clarke? Printed Diazo Type G3884.R5S2 1924 .C53

Map of Richmond, Va. E. C. Clarke Richmond: A. Hoen & Co. Printed 1925 755.44 1925 (1) FRAGILE: DO NOT SERVE

City of Richmond and Environs Richmond Department of Public Works Richmond: Department of Public Works, 1923 Printed Revised to Feb. 1, 1925 G3884.R5 1925 .R5, Digital Image No.: 100063611

Situation Plan C&O Ry. Tunnel Beneath Church Hill, Richmond, Virginia Richmond: Department of Public Works Trace from original made January 5, 1927? Brownline Print G3884.R5P33 1925 .R53; Digital Image No.: 08_0696_13.tif

Map of Richmond, Va. E. C. Clarke Richmond: A. Hoen & Co. Printed 1926 755.44 1926

Map of Richmond, Va. E. C. Clarke Richmond: E. C. Clarke Printed 1926 755.44 1926 (1)

Commercial Map of Richmond, Virginia, and Vicinity V. C. Ancell Richmond: R. F. Bower Printed 1926 755.1926 (2)

Wagner's Complete Map of Richmond Cincinnati: A. C. Wagner Co. Printed 1927 G3884.R5 1927 .A3

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Richmond: Department of Public Works Printed 1927 G3884.R5 1927 .R5 Carlton Collection

Map of Richmond, Va. E. C. Clarke Richmond: A. Hoen & Co. Printed 1928 755.44 1928

Ashburn's Map of Richmond, Virginia J. Foster Ashburn Printed 1930 755.44 1930

Map of Richmond, Va. E. C. Clarke Richmond: A. Hoen & Co. Printed 1930 755.44 1930 (1)

Map of Richmond, Virginia and Suburbs Verner C. Aurell Printed 1931 755.44 1931

Map of Richmond, Virginia and Suburbs Verner C. Aurell Printed 1931 755.44 1931 Copy 2

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs, Revised to Jan. 1, 1933 Richmond: Department of Public Works Printed 1933 G3884.R5 1933 .R5

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Department of Public Works, Bureau of Survey and Design Washington, D.C.: the Columbia Planograph Co. Printed Issue of 1933 755.44 1933

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Points of Interest in and Around Richmond, Virginia W. F. Beamon Printed April 1933 755.44 1933 (1)

R. F. Bower's Commercial Map of Richmond, Virginia and Suburban Area. M. W. Richwine, Jr. Richmond: R. F. Bower Printed 1939 755.44 1939

R.F. Bower's Commercial Map of Richmond, Virginia and Suburban Area M. W. Richwine, Jr. Richmond: R. F. Bower Printed 1940 755.44 1940

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Department of Public Works, Bureau of Survey and Design, 1941 Zoning Memoranda by City Planning Commission September 15, 1942 Printed 1942 755.44 1942

District Map, City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Department of Public Works, Bureau of Survey and Design Printed Issue of 1943 755.44 1943

Polyconic Projection Map of the Greater Richmond and Vicinity Ben F. Busby and Henry N. Clark Detroit, Mich.: Hearne Brothers Printed 1945 755.44 1945

Indexed Street Map of Richmond, Virginia Acme Map Company Huntington, W.Va.: Acme Map Company Printed 1946 755.44 1946

Ward and Precinct Map, City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Richmond Department of Public Works Richmond: Office of General Registrar Printed 1946 G3884.R5F7 1946 .R5

Premier Map of Richmond, Virginia Featuring House Numbers, Transit Lines, Playgrounds, Etc. Alexander Gross New York: Geographia Map Co. Printed Ca. 1947 755.44 ca. 1947

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Department of Public Works Richmond: Richmond Chamber of Commerce, 1304 State-Planters Bank Building Printed 1947 755.44 1947?

Map of Richmond Showing Bus Lines Virginia Transit Co. Printed 1950 755.44 1950

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Department of Public Works, Bureau of Survey and Design Richmond: Bureau of Survey and Design Printed 1950 G3884.R5 1950 .R5 Carlton Collection

Map of a Portion of Richmond Near Monroe Park Showing Old Scuffletown Road Printed 1951 755.44 1951

Lord's Indexed Street Map of Greater Richmond, Virginia Newton, Mass.: Harry D. Lord and Son Printed 1954 G3884.R5 1954 .H3

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Richmond Bureau of Engineers Richmond: Prepared and Distributed by Richmond Chamber of Commerce, 15 North Street Printed 1954 G3884.R5P2 1954 .R53 Carlton Collection

City of Richmond, Virginia and Environs Department of Public Works Richmond: Richmond Chamber of Commerce 616 East Franklin Street Printed 1958 755.44 1958

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