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{{POTD {{{1|{{{style|default}}}}}} |
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|image=USPostRoadMap1804.jpg |
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|image=USPostRoadMap1804.jpg |
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|size=450 |
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|size=550 |
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|title=] |
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|title=] |
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|texttitle=Abraham Bradley Jr. |
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|texttitle=Abraham Bradley Jr. |
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''']''' (1767–1838) was an American lawyer, judge, and ] who served as Assistant Postmaster General for 30 years during the earliest history of the ]. He was responsible for moving the federal government's post office from ], to the new capital at ], and briefly hosted the national post office in his own home. The continuity brought by Bradley's long employment during the tenures of five ] helped establish the budding postal service as a reliable provider; he also drew detailed and innovative postal route maps that built the office's efficiency. In 1796, he drew one of the first comprehensive maps of the United States; it "represented the first clear cartographic break in European-dominated map making and introduced a new, more distinctly American style of cartography to the United States". Bradley drew this map of American ]s and ]s in 1804, spanning the ] (now ]) in the southwest to ] in the northeast. The hand-colored map measures 98 by 132 centimetres (39 in × 52 in). |
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''']''' (1767–1838) was an American lawyer, judge, and ] who served as Assistant Postmaster General for 30 years during the earliest history of the ]. He was responsible for moving the federal government's post office from ], to the new capital at ], and briefly hosted the national post office in his own home. The continuity brought by Bradley's long employment during the tenures of five ] helped establish the budding postal service as a reliable provider; he also drew detailed and innovative postal route maps that built the office's efficiency. He drew one of the first comprehensive maps of the United States in 1796; it "represented the first clear cartographic break in European-dominated map making and introduced a new, more distinctly American style of cartography to the United States". In 1804, Bradley drew this map of ]s and ]s in the United States, spanning the ] (now ]) in the southwest to ] in the northeast. The hand-colored map measures 98 by 132 centimeters (39 in × 52 in). |
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|credit=Map credit: ] |
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|credit=Map credit: ] |