Historic Map - St. Louis, MO - 1873

Code:
1W-MO-SL-1873
Starting at $34.00

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Description

St. Louis

Reproduction panorama map of the city known as St. Louis, MO, published by Geo. Degen in 1873. St. Louis was called "Gateway to the West". Its steamboat era began in 1817. Steam engines had been developed to propel ships in the late 18th century, but weren't widely used until the early 1800's, when western expansion and calm river currents helped the steamship to replace the sailing ships that had been used to carry commercial goods along rivers to lakes. Steamships used steam power as a primary method of propulsion to drive propellers or paddlewheels. They enabled goods to be traded efficiently. The boats were very dependable, as they could navigate as easily upriver, against the current, as downriver. Rapids north of St. Louis made it the northernmost input for many of the large boats.

After the Civil War trade declined to about one-third the previous average in St. Louis. Trade with the south dwindled. The city lost its prominent north and south trade status. The first road and railway bridge to cross the Mississippi River, Eads Bridge, was completed in 1874. The bridge, named after designer James B. Eads, was the longest arch bridge in the world at that time with a length of 1,964 meters. It was the first time true steel had been used in bridgework. The ribbed steel arch spans were supported by cantilever methods and used pneumatic caissons. The new technology was tested by a borrowed elephant before a cheering crowd on June 14, 1874 and two weeks later was running trains back and forth between St. Louis and East St. Louis, Illinois.

Materials

Archive Paper

Archive Paper

Premium fine art paper that provides accurate color reproduction with high-contrast, high-resolution print output and maximum image permanence. A high-quality print ready for framing.

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  • Museum quality paper for high-quality fine art.
  • Ultra smooth, neutral white matte finish.
  • Heavy-weight 230 gsm, 9.5 mil thickness.
  • Printed with pigment inks for longer print life and enhanced fade resistance.
  • Pigment based Canon LUCIA inks provide smooth tones and rich colors in fine, precise detail.
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Our wall map products are designed and printed on demand by our small team in Seattle, WA using high quality materials and fine art giclee printing.
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