Sketch of the Public Surveys in New Mexico
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This finely detailed survey of the New Mexico Territory was compiled by John A. Clark, Surveyor General, to accompany his 1863 Annual Report. The map captures federal efforts to organize the ‘Wild West’ into a structured grid during a period of profound upheaval, as the Union sought to secure the territory following the recent Confederate invasion. The progress of the rectangular survey system closely hugs the Rio Grande Valley, anchoring the map around the vital water sources supporting Taos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque. Beyond the burgeoning townships, the image depicts the critical Santa Fe Trail and other wagon roads that served as lifelines for both commerce and military reinforcements. By labeling military forts alongside Indigenous territories, Clark’s map illustrates the contested nature of the frontier in 1863 – a landscape where federal authority was confirmed by the surveying process.
U.S. Southwest