Map/Chart > Florida and the Gulf States
George Gauld's Plan of the Tortugas and Part of the Florida Kays
This beautifully detailed plan was the result of nearly four months of painstaking work by the foremost surveyor in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean
Chart Information | |
---|---|
Reference: | A410 |
Date | 1780 |
Hydrographer/Surveyor/Artist: | George Gauld |
Size Of Original: | w 95" x 34" h |
Paper Type | Innova Smooth Cotton 315gsm |
Further Information
This print is available at the following sizes:
Chart ID |
Size |
Dimensions |
Price |
A410 |
Original |
w95" x h34" |
$494 |
A410x |
Half |
w67" x h24" |
$247 |
Please go to the drop down menu to select your choice.
Read the full Chart History here:
As far back as 1769 the newly appointed Commander in Chief at Port Royal Jamaica, Commodore Arthur Forrest, had written to Gauld with regard to his surveying. Both men had known each other from 1760 when Gauld had started a naval career as a teacher of Mathematics aboard Forrest's ship H. M. S. Centaur. Forrest was now writing to Gauld with regard to the Florida keys and the desirability of improving a better knowledge of the Dry Tortugas in particular. "If a good Harbour could be found there, it would be a great service" he wrote. Forest stopped short of commanding Gauld to undertake this work but chose instead to enquire as to what Gauld had been doing. Gauld, at the end of January 1770 dispatched his latest work to Forrest.