1862 Map of Africa by A. J. Johnson

$245.00 Maine State Tax

Original, hand-colored map depicting the entirety of Africa. Dated 1862 and Published by Johnson and Ward. It includes the Mediterranean sea and portions of Southern Europe. The map features popular trade routes of the period, and includes an inset of St. Helena, a crucial stop for sailors rounding Cape Horn. Measures 17 1/4″ x 24 1/2″. Archivally matted with acid free materials and shrink wrapped for protection. Ready for framing. It will ship flat.

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History of A. J. Johnson

Alvin J. Johnson entered into the business of publishing atlases in 1860.  Having previously been a book canvasser who sold maps and atlases for the well-known map and atlas publisher, J.H. Colton, Johnson was introduced to the profitability of atlases as a reference book.  Whether he originally planned to start his book publishing business with atlases or not is unknown.  It does appear that, when he came to New York City in 1857, he began to support Colton in the publishing of his atlases and maps.  In 1859, Colton’s General Atlas was published by the firm of Johnson & Browning, and the next year he published the first edition of his own atlas, titled, Johnson’s New Illustrated (Steel Plate) Family Atlas, With Descriptions Geographical, Statistical and Historical.  The early editions of the Family Atlas, as it is most commonly referred to, was comprised of maps developed by the Colton firm, and the title page announces that the publishers, Johnson & Browning, are “formerly (successors to J.H. Colton and Company…”  However, rather than successor, Johnson became a competitor of the Colton firm, and the Family Atlas became a competitor to the atlases of both Colton and S. Augustus Mitchell, the other prominent atlas publisher of the day.