[1216] James Maury in 1756, referring to Evans’ map, says, “It is but small, not above half as large as Fry and Jefferson’s, consequently crowded. It gives an attentive peruser a clear idea of the value of the now contested lands and waters to either of the two competitor princes, together with a proof, amounting to more than a probability, that he of the two who shall remain master of Ohio and the Lakes must in the course of a few years become sole and absolute lord of North America.” Maury’s Huguenot Family, 387. T. Pownall’s Topographical description of such parts of North America as are contained in the (annexed) map of the British middle colonies, etc., in North America (London, 1776) contains Evans’ map, pieced out by Pownall, and it reprints Evans’ preface (1755), with an additional preface by Pownall, dated Albemarle Street (London), Nov. 22, 1775, in which it is said that the map of 1755 was used by the officers during the French war, and served every practicable purpose. He says Evans followed for Virginia Fry and Jefferson’s map (1751), and that John Henry’s map of Virginia, published by Jefferys in 1770, enabled him (Pownall) to add little. For Pennsylvania Evans had been assisted by Mr. Nicholas Scull, who in 1759 published his map of Pennsylvania, and for the later edition of 1770 Pownall says he added something. As to New Jersey, Pownall claims he used the drafts of Alexander, surveyor-general, and that he has followed Holland for the boundary line between New Jersey and New York. Pownall affirms that Holland disowned a map of New York and New Jersey which Jefferys published with Holland’s name attached, though some portions of it followed surveys made by Holland. What Pownall added of New England he took from the map in Douglass, correcting it from drafts in the Board of Trade office, and following for the coasts the surveys of Holland or his deputies. Pownall denounces the “late Thomas Jefferys” for his inaccurate and untrustworthy pirated edition of the Evans map, the plate of which fell into the hands of Sayer, the map publisher, and was used by him in more than one atlas.
[1217] Sparks, Franklin, iv. 330.
[1218] This deed is in Pownall’s Administration of the Colonies, London, 1768, p. 269.
[1219] Evans’ map of 1755 is held to embody the best geographical knowledge of this region, picked up mainly between 1740 and 1750. The region about Lake Erie with the positions of the Indian tribes, is given from this map, in Whittlesey’s Early Hist. of Cleveland, p. 83. This author mentions some instances of axe-cuts being discovered in the heart of old trees, which would carry the presence of Europeans in the valley back of all other records.
There are stories of early stragglers, willing and unwilling, into Kentucky from Virginia, after 1730. Collins, Kentucky, i. 15; Shaler, Kentucky, 59. A journey of one John Howard in 1742 is insisted on. Kercheval’s Valley of Virginia, 67; Butler’s Kentucky, i., introd.; Memoir and Writings of J. H. Perkins, ii. 185.
[1220] Five Nations.
[1221] Administration of the Colonies.
[1222] Sparks, Franklin, iv. 326.
[1223] This has been reprinted as no. 26 of the Fergus Hist. Series, “with notes by Edward Everett;” certain extracts from a notice of the address, contributed by Mr. Everett to the No. Amer. Review in 1840, being appended. A recent writer, Alfred Mathews, in the Mag. of Western History (i. 41), thinks the Iroquois conquests may have reached the Miami River. Cf. also C. C. Baldwin in Western Reserve Hist. Tracts, no. 40; and Isaac Smucker in Mag. of Amer. Hist., June, 1882, p. 408.
J. H. Perkins (Mem. and Writings, ii. 186) cites what he considers proofs that the Iroquois had pushed to the Mississippi, but doubts their claim to possess lands later occupied by others.