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    1. [BUNKER] Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps Now Online
    2. 808. Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps Now Online Posted: 31 May 2017 12:10 PM PDT [If you have been using the great collection of Sanborn/Biast maps for Indianapolis on the IUPUI website, you will be glad to see the following collection go live.] Press Contact: Donna Urschel (202) 707-1639 | Jennifer Gavin (202) 707-1940 Public Contact: Colleen Cahill (202) 707-8540 Website: Sanborn Maps The Library of Congress has placed online nearly 25,000 Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps, which depict the structure and use of buildings in U.S. Cities and towns. Maps will be added monthly until 2020, for a total of approximately 500,000. The online collection now features maps published prior to 1900. The states available include Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Alaska is also online, with maps published through the early 1960s. By 2020, all the states will be online, showing maps from the late 1880s through the early 1960s. In collaboration with the Library’s Geography and Map Division, Historical Information Gatherers digitized the Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps during a 16-month period at the Library of Congress. The Library is in the process of adding metadata and placing the digitized, public-domain maps on its website. The Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps are a valuable resource for genealogists, historians, urban planners, teachers or anyone with a personal connection to a community, street or building. The maps depict more than 12,000 American towns and cities. They show the size, shape and construction materials of dwellings, commercial buildings, factories and other structures. They indicate both the names and width of streets, and show property boundaries and how individual buildings were used. House and block numbers are identified. They also show the location of water mains, fire alarm boxes and fire hydrants. In the 19th century, specialized maps were originally prepared for the exclusive use of fire insurance companies and underwriters. Those companies needed accurate, current and detailed information about the properties they were insuring. The Sanborn Map Company was created around 1866 in the United States in response to this need and began publishing and registering maps for copyright. The Library of Congress acquired the maps through copyright deposit, and the collection grew to 700,000 individual sheets. The insurance industry eventually phased out use of the maps and Sanborn stopped producing updates in the late 1970s. The Library’s Geography and Map Division is among the world’s largest map collections, holding some six million cartographic items in various languages dating from the 14th century to the present. Some of its most important collections are available online at loc.gov/maps/collections/. Further information about the Geography and Map Division can be found at loc gov/RR/geogmap/.   Sally Rolls Pavia [email protected] List Owner: [email protected] Archives: http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/index "Soldiers do not die until they are forgotten." "Do not regret growing older. It is a privilege denied to many.”

    06/02/2017 02:22:23
    1. Re: [BUNKER] Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps Now Online
    2. Bette Bunker Richards
    3. The Sanborn maps are a great tool but you should know they do NOT list the name of the owner of the property and in many cases the addresses have changed as the town expanded so the same house may have been 123 Main St. in 1880 but in 1900 it is 537 Clark Ave. Even so, they are so much fun. They show all the wells because the water sources needed to be known. They also usually show where the privies were. Using them in conjunction with property deed searches will give you a lot of information about your ancestor's house. On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 8:22 AM, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote: > 808. Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps Now Online > Posted: 31 May 2017 12:10 PM PDT > [If you have been using the great collection of Sanborn/Biast maps for > Indianapolis on the IUPUI website, you will be glad to see the following > collection go live.] > > > Press Contact: Donna Urschel (202) 707-1639 | Jennifer Gavin (202) > 707-1940 > Public Contact: Colleen Cahill (202) 707-8540 > > Website: Sanborn Maps > > The Library of Congress has placed online nearly 25,000 Sanborn Fire > Insurance Maps, which depict the structure and use of buildings in U.S. > Cities and towns. Maps will be added monthly until 2020, for a total of > approximately 500,000. > > The online collection now features maps published prior to 1900. The > states > available include Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Iowa, Kentucky, > Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, > Wisconsin and Wyoming. Alaska is also online, with maps published through > the early 1960s. By 2020, all the states will be online, showing maps from > the late 1880s through the early 1960s. > > In collaboration with the Library’s Geography and Map Division, Historical > Information Gatherers digitized the Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps during a > 16-month period at the Library of Congress. The Library is in the process > of adding metadata and placing the digitized, public-domain maps on its > website. > > The Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps are a valuable resource for genealogists, > historians, urban planners, teachers or anyone with a personal connection > to > a community, street or building. The maps depict more than 12,000 American > towns and cities. They show the size, shape and construction materials of > dwellings, commercial buildings, factories and other structures. They > indicate both the names and width of streets, and show property boundaries > and how individual buildings were used. House and block numbers are > identified. They also show the location of water mains, fire alarm boxes > and fire hydrants. > > In the 19th century, specialized maps were originally prepared for the > exclusive use of fire insurance companies and underwriters. Those > companies > needed accurate, current and detailed information about the properties they > were insuring. The Sanborn Map Company was created around 1866 in the > United > States in response to this need and began publishing and registering maps > for copyright. The Library of Congress acquired the maps through copyright > deposit, and the collection grew to 700,000 individual sheets. The > insurance > industry eventually phased out use of the maps and Sanborn stopped > producing > updates in the late 1970s. > > The Library’s Geography and Map Division is among the world’s largest map > collections, holding some six million cartographic items in various > languages dating from the 14th century to the present. Some of its most > important collections are available online at loc.gov/maps/collections/. > > Further information about the Geography and Map Division can be found at > loc > gov/RR/geogmap/. > > > >   > Sally Rolls Pavia > [email protected] > List Owner: [email protected] > Archives: http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/index > "Soldiers do not die until they are forgotten." > "Do not regret growing older. It is a privilege denied to many.” > > ***************************** > If you wish additional information about the Bunker Family Association, > please visit http://www.bunkerfamilyassn.org. > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    06/02/2017 06:26:36