Primary Source Learning: The Places You’ll Go with Maps
The Library of Congress has custody of the largest and most comprehensive cartographic collection in the world and there are so many places you can visit with the Library of Congress’ fabulous digitized map collections. Take a look at the wide variety of maps you can explore in incredible detail and discover engaging primary source lessons and activities. Zoom in now!
- American Revolution Maps & Charts of North America & the West Indies 1750-1789
an important historical record of the mapping of North America and the Caribbean - Cities & Towns
from individual buildings to panoramic views of large urban areas, these maps record the evolution of cities illustrating the development and nature of economic activities, educational and religious facilities, parks, street patterns and widths, and transportation systems
- Civil War Maps
battle, reconnaissance, sketch, and theater-of-war maps taken from diaries, scrapbooks, and manuscripts
- Discovery and Exploration
European discovery and exploration with both manuscripts and published maps, dating from the late 15th-17th century as well as 18th & 19th century maps reflecting the work of Lewis and Clark and subsequent continental interior explorers and surveyors - European Explorations and the Louisiana Purchase
documents from maps to newspapers to cultural artifact that help understand the importance of the Louisiana Purchase and the diversity of cultures who became a part of the emerging nation at the time of the Louisiana Territory acquisition
- General Maps
maps that typically portray the physical environment and a variety of cultural elements for a geographic area larger than a city or town at a particular point in time but do not display a subject that is part of one of the thematic categories
- Hotchkiss Map Collection
cartographic items made by Confederate topographic engineer Major Jedediah Hotchkiss including detailed battle maps primarily of the Shenandoah Valley, several of which have annotations of various military officers; also includes maps made or used by Hotchkiss during his post-war years with information about railroads, minerals and mining, geology and history, most of which focus on Virginia and West Virginia
- Mapping the National Parks
maps dating from the 17th century to the present, reflecting early mapping of the areas that would become four National Parks, as well as the parks themselves
- Maps of Liberia 1830-1870
examples from the American Colonization Society (ACS), organized in 1817 to resettle free black Americans in West Africa showing early settlements in Liberia, indigenous political subdivisions, and some of the building lots that were assigned to settlers; also includes other 19th-century maps of Liberia - Military Battles and Campaigns
campaigns of major military conflicts including troop movements, defensive structures and groundworks, roads to and from sites of military engagements, campsites, and local buildings, topography and vegetation; some were drawn on the battlefield while others were engraved and include annotations reflecting the history of the battle or campaign
- Native American Spaces: Cartographic Resources at the Library of Congress
themes include Indian Maps, Mapping, and Geographic Knowledge; Indian Lands, Village Sites, Tribal Range, Place Names, and Communication Routes; Treaty Boundaries and Cessions; Indian Territory; Reservations and Allotments; Indian Wars; Ethnography, Linguistics, Distribution, and Archeology; Historical Maps and Atlases; Natural Resources - Panoramic Maps
U.S. and Canadian cities and towns during the late 19th and early 20th centuries; although not generally drawn to scale, they show street patterns, individual buildings, and major landscape features in perspective
- Railroad Maps 1828-1900
progress report surveys for individual lines, official government surveys, promotional maps, maps showing land grants and rights-of-way, and route guides published by commercial firms illustrating the growth of travel and settlement as well as the development of industry and agriculture in the United States - Rochambeau Map Collection
cartographic items used by Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau, when he was commander in chief of the French expeditionary army (1780-82) during the American Revolution covering much of eastern North America from 1717 to 1795
- Sanborn Maps
uniform series of large-scale maps, dating from 1867 to the present depicting the commercial, industrial, and residential sections of some twelve thousand cities and towns in the United States, Canada, and Mexico designed to assist fire insurance agents in determining the degree of hazard associated with a particular property; show the size, shape, and construction of dwellings, commercial buildings, and factories as well as fire walls, locations of windows and doors, sprinkler systems, and types of roofs and indicate widths and names of streets, property boundaries, building use, and house and block numbers
- World War II Military Situation Maps
starting with the D-Day Invasion, the maps give daily details on the military campaigns in Western Europe showing the progress of the Allied Forces as they push towards Germany from June 6, 1944 to July 26, 1945 - World Digital Library Maps
PSN featured maps
- American politics and the Tapeworm Party
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
- D-Day The 6th of June
- The Gerry-mander
- Map of New York & Erie Rail Road
- Night lights
- Robertson’s geographic-historical series
- Systema Solare et Planetarium
- The Voyage of the Pequod
Online Exhibitions
- Earth as Art: A Landsat Perspective
- Earth As Art 3: A Landsat Perspective
- Language of the Land: Journeys Into Literary America
- Los Angeles Mapped
- Mapping a New Nation: Abel Buell’s Map of the United States, 1784
- Maps in Our Lives
Interactive presentations
- Maps That Changed Our World story map
- More Story Maps
- Zoom Into Maps
Analyzing Maps
- Analyzing Primary Sources: Learning from Maps guiding questions
- Map Analysis Questions, Arizona Geographic Alliance
Maps: guided primary source analysis activities
- 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition
- Admiral Farragut Enters Mobile Bay
- The Alaska Line
- American Expeditionary Force map
- Eagle map of the United States
- East Coast of Florida Is Paradise Regained
- European Immigration
- Evening Sky Map April, 1912
- Geology of the Solar System
- Grand Canyon Tourist Map
- Kenya 12-69
- The Kingdom of France
- Nicknames of the States
- Plan of my farm
- Republics of the Soviet Union
- Shrinking Glaciers
- The Solar System Displayed
- Virginia by Capt. John Smith
- Women own about one percent of the world’s land
- Women’s Rights National Historical Park
Collection Connections: primary source activity ideas
- Map Collection Connections (from across the collections)
- American Revolution and Its Era: Maps and Charts of North America and the West Indies, 1750-1789
- Civil War Maps
- Mapping the National Parks
- Maps of Liberia, 1830-1870
- Panoramic Maps
- Railroad Maps, 1828-1900
More primary source activities
- Civil War Map Activity: Battle of Nashville (.pdf)
- Maps and MapMakers Activity (.pdf)
- Where Do I Run to? Where Do I Hide?
Primary source lesson plans
- Drake’s West Indian Voyage 1588-1589
- Geography and Its Impact on Colonial Life
- Indian Territory Resettlement
- Journeys West
- Local History: Mapping My Spot
- Marco Paul’s Travels on the Erie Canal: An Educational Voyage
- Mark Twain’s Hannibal
- Waldseemuller’sMap: World 1507
Worlds Revealed: Geography & Maps blog
Teaching with the Library of Congress blog
- Asteroid Impostors and the Planet that Never Was: What’s on Your Diagram of the Solar System?
- Drake’s West Indian Voyage: Primary Source Highlight
- Getting Started with Maps in the Classroom
- Making Interdisciplinary Connections with Maps
- Maps: More Than Just a Tool for Navigation
- The Mind of the Mapmaker: Purpose and Point of View in Maps
- Using Literary Maps in the Classroom
- Verba Incognita: A Guide to Deciphering Latin on Maps
Library of Congress Blog
- Civil War Cartography, Then and Now
- Mapping Slavery
- Millie the Mapper
- O Shenandoah, I Long to Map You
- A Sight to Behold: Migration of the Monarchs
- The “Stars” of Titanic
- The View From 30,000 … Maps!
More Library blogs
- Zooming in On Panoramic Maps Minerva’s Kaleidoscope February 17, 2021
Articles & other resources