Showing posts with label Maps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maps. Show all posts

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Froiseth's 1871

     In the waning weeks of the "Utah Drawn" exhibit at the Utah state capitol, my wife was kind enough to go take some cell phone shots of the rare, private collection, maps that are on display.  Of particular interest is the 1871 Froiseth map of Utah, authorized by the territorial legislature.  This is the oldest know (to me) map listing Honeyville.


Froiseth's 1871 map of Utah (angle due to glare) taken August 2017 at Utah State capitol

This map became the basis for many maps that were published very the following decade.  I wish I could get my hands on a good quality digital image, but the ones held by public universities are too fragile to scan.

Honeyville is near the center of this photograph of the 1871 Froiseth Map of Utah

There it is.  Honeyville was listed as a city on maps in 1871, seen on train time tables in 1872, and referenced in journals as Honeyville about the same time.
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Monday, September 28, 2015

Fun with Google Earth

Want to have some fun using Google Earth to see what structures or roads have changed over the past 50 to 80 years?  You can download historical aerial imagery from the USGS website and overlay it in Google Earth, get it aligned, and then use the transparency slider to go back and forth between old and new.

I will post 3 preset overlays which you can use to try it out.  Download the KMZ files and open them with Google Earth.  If you do not have Google Earth you can download it here:
Google Earth

Once you have Google Earth you should be able to double-click the KMZ file and it will open right up. Once it is opened you will see it as a "Temporary Place", right-click on that particular temporary place and select properties.  It will bring up a dialog box which has a transparency slider and you can slide back-and-forth between old and new.
Temporary Places is underlined in red. The dialog box opens (shown on right) and you will get the transparency slider, circled in red.
1938 Overlay
1946 Overlay
1953 Overlay
                               
 If you would like to look at more historical imagery check out the Utah Geological Survey.

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