The Petersburg Project
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    • Petersburg Panorama 1865
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  • The Mine Explosion and its Crater
  • Petersburg in Pencil and Ink
    • Alfred R. Waud, Special Artist at Petersburg >
      • Waud Drawing of 5th Corps Fortifications
    • William Waud, Special Artist
    • Charles H. Chapin, Special Artist
    • Joseph Becker, Special Artist at Petersburg
    • Edwin Forbes, Special Artist at Petersburg
    • Winslow Homer, Special Artist
    • Edward Mullen, Special Artist at Petersburg
    • Andrew W. Warren, Special Artist
    • Enlisted Artists >
      • Charles Wellington Reed
      • Andrew McCallum
      • Francis Knowles
      • James William Pattison
      • Herbert Valentine
      • Howard A. Camp
  • Petersburg Photographs --So Many!
    • Dimmock Battery 5 Photographs >
      • Working with Photographs
    • City Point
    • City Point Wharf Explosion, Aug. 9, 1864
    • Fort Rice?? We don't think so!
    • Federal Picket Line, Jerusalem Plank Road
    • Egbert Guy Fowx, Photographer at Petersburg
    • Timothy O'Sullivan, Photographer at Petersburg >
      • Harrison's Creek USCT Camps
      • Fort Morton and Baxter Road Group
      • Fort Haskell Panorama and Bomb Proofs
      • Fort Stedman Group
      • Gracie's Salient Group
      • Camp of the 50th N. Y. Engineers
    • David Knox, Photographer at Petersburg
    • William Redish Pywell, Photographer at Petersburg
    • John Reekie, Photographer at Petersburg
    • Thomas C. Roche, Photographer at Petersburg
    • Andrew J. Russell, Photographer at Petersburg >
      • "Fort Mahone" CS Batteries 25 & 27
  • U. S. Military Railroad
    • Terminus of Military R. R. at City Point
    • City Point to Clark's Station
    • Pitkin's Station to Shooting Hill
    • Hancock's Junction/Jerusalem Plank Road
    • Parke's Station
    • Warren's Station
    • Patrick's Station
  • Topographical Engineers -- Our Heroes
    • Grand Medicine Pow-wow
    • Michler's Reports from Topographical Department
    • John E. Weyss, Cartographer
    • William H. Paine, Cartographer
    • Gilbert Thompson
    • Albert Hanry Campbell, C.S.A. Cartographer
  • Confederate Maps
    • Confederate Defenses 1862
    • Gilmer-Campbell Maps, 1864
    • Stevens Map July 1864
    • Fields of Fire
    • Campbell Dinwiddie County 1864
    • Coit's map of the Crater Battlefield
  • Federal Maps
    • Army of the Potomac, Routes of the Corps to Petersburg
    • June 9 1864, Kautz Attack
    • June 18, 1864-Federal Engineers Maps
    • June 18, 1864, 18th Corps
    • June 19, 1864, Engineers Map
    • June 21, 1864, Federal Engineers Maps
    • June 22, 1864. Second Corps at Jerusalem Plank Road
    • June 29, 1864. Dept of VA and NC
    • June 30, 1864 -- XVIII Corps Map
    • June-July, Undated Federal Engineers Map-
    • July 29, 1864, Engineers Map, Annotated
    • July 1864 Map of XVIII Corps Lines
    • Crater, Native American Perspective of the Crater
    • August 1864, Michie Map - Bermuda 100
    • August 28, 1864, Michler Map
    • Aug.-Nov. 1864 Two Base Maps
    • September 13, 1864, Recon Map
    • Sept. 13-Oct.25 versions. Redoubts and Batteries
    • September 30, 1864, Warren Map
    • October 1864, Two IX Corps Maps
    • October 20, 1864. Benham's map of defenses of City Point
    • Nov. 2, 1864, Army of the Potomac
    • 1864, Coast Survey Map of Petersburg
    • Michler Map Series 1865-1867
    • 1864-1867, Michler-Weyss, Siege of Petersburg
    • 1865-1867, Manuscript Survey Maps
    • 1871, Map of Recapture of Ft. Stedman
    • 1881, Boydton Plank Road
  • Confederate Forts and Batteries
    • Dimmock Line >
      • Priest Cap
      • French Rifle Pits
    • Fort Clifton
    • "Fort Mahone" CS Batteries 25 & 27
    • Confederate 8-inch Columbiad
    • Leadworks
  • Federal Forts and Batteries
    • Union Battery Ten (X)
    • Fort Alexander Hayes
    • Fort Avery
    • Fort Conahey
    • Fort Davis & Battery XXII
    • Fort Fisher
    • Fort Meikel --Photographic Views
    • Fort Morton
    • Fort Patrick Kelly
    • Fort Sedgwick, better known as Fort Hell,
    • Fort Wadsworth -- the Evolution
    • Fort Willcox or Battery XVI
  • Battlefield Features
    • Aiken House
    • Armstrong's Mill
    • Avery House
    • Bailey/Johnston Farm
    • Blandford Church
    • Broadway Landing, Appomattox River
    • The Crater
    • Cummings House
    • Dams and Inundations
    • WW Davis Farm
    • Dunn House
    • Friend House >
      • View from Friend House toward Gibben complex and Petersburg
    • Gibbons Properties
    • Globe Tavern / Weldon Railroad
    • Gregory House
    • Griffith Farm
    • Gurley House
    • Hare House Hill
    • The "Horseshoe"
    • Jerusalem Plank Road
    • Jones House
    • Jordan House
    • Newmarket Racecourse
    • Pegram's Farm
    • Peebles Farm, Pegrams Farm, Poplar Springs Church
    • Shands House
    • Taylor Farm >
      • The Ice House
      • Surviving Taylor Barn
    • Williams House
  • Signal Towers and Trees
    • Some Operations of the Signal Corps at Petersburg
  • Archeology
    • Geology of the Crater
    • Fieldwork -- Petersburg
    • Civil War Sinks
    • Deserted Confederate Camp
    • Gracie's Countermine
    • LIDAR Forts and Batteries
  • Articles, Papers, Presentations
    • Shiman: A Note on Maps
    • The Siege Landscape: Through Fire and Ice at Petersburg
    • "The Rebel in the Road"
    • "A Strange Sort of Warfare Underground"
    • Lost Trenches of Petersburg: June 17
    • Between the Lines
    • Combat Trenching: An Introduction
    • Lowe -- Post-War Topographical Survey
    • Civil War Maps and Landscapes -- Observations
  • Kittens, Puppies & Ponies
  • Executions!
  • Notes on Leveled Earthworks
  • Depot Hospital at City Point
  • Pontoon Bridges
  • The Great Pontoon Bridge Across James River
  • Captain Robert Davis CSA

Manuscript Maps Used to Compile the 8" = 1 mi. Engineers Series Immediately after War's End

These four manuscript maps of the eastern and western fronts of the Petersburg defenses were produced by Federal topographical engineers and surveyors of the Army of the Potomac shortly after the end of the war (1865-1867). Recently identified by the Petersburg Project, these maps are shown here together for the first time. The insets allow you to zoom in fairly closely.

The first map from the Library of Congress, entitled "
Map of defenses of Petersburg, Virginia, showing the position of General Lee and his staff during the attack on Fort Stedman, March 25, 1865", depicts the area south of the Appomattox River to Baxter Road near the Crater, east of Jerusalem Plank Road, and west of the main Federal line of siegeworks. The X marking the location of "General Lee and his staff" (lower left center) was secondary to the purpose of the map, which was to capture in detail the Confederate defenses. Many detailed maps of Federal defenses were produced during the war. Confederate defenses, on the other hand, could not be mapped until evacuated for obvious reasons. This map was finished in India Ink with contour intervals drawn in in red ink. Many pencil lines indicate the locations of survey stations and sight lines, as well as obscure details such as mines and countermines. 

The second manuscript map shown here from the National Archives was filed with another manuscript and labeled "Untitled Virginia County - Norfolk Stage Road, Norfolk Rail Road, and Virginia Main Line." This map continues coverage from the Baxter or Norfolk Stage Road south to Fort Davis on the Jerusalem Plank Road. Of special interest is the area around Union Fort Sedgwick and Confederate Fort Mahone, "Forts Hell and Damnation," toward the center of the page. This map represents an intermediate step in transferring raw data from the surveyors' notebooks onto a larger, coherent map. Features are measured and drawn in on graph paper. The map includes the draftsman's scale bar and annotations, each small square on the page being 33 feet and each larger square being 330 feet. Earthworks are shown in detail. Contours are drawn in with red ink in the same hand as that of the first map.
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The third and fourth manuscript maps show here from the National Archives were entitled simply "Petersburg and Vicinity." Number three continues the coverage west of Jerusalem Plank Road, including the city of Petersburg in meticulous detail and extends south past Fort Davis, curiously leaving out the area around Federal Fort Sedgwick that is shown on the above map. Number four abuts the city sheet on the west and continues coverage down Boydton Plank Road. These maps are drawn in pencil. All of the Union and Confederate lines are shown in great detail.

These are four of a number of preliminary maps that were incorporated into an 8 inch = 1 mile map series that covered the areas of Petersburg and Richmond in 28 sheets. This series, compiled under the direction of Nathaniel Michler, is found at NARA RG77: G 204-33 through G204-60. We are pleased to have these maps as they show details that are not found elsewhere. These documents represent simply the finest surveying of the war at Petersburg. As the maps are in various stages of completion, the series provides a record of the process used by the military topographers to go from the ground survey to the finished product.
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[Mss Map 1]. National Archives, "Map of Defenses of Petersburg, Virginia." Preliminary map compiled by Engineers Department, Army of the Potomac, 1865-1867.
LC Map Collection G3884.P4S5 1865 .P3 Vault : CW 607.2; Digital ID 3884p cw0607200

Recently Identified Manuscript Map

The National Archives is in the process of scanning high-resolution images of its extensive Civil War holdings in Record Group 77 Records of the Office of the Chief Engineer. The map below joins the map above at the Baxter or Norfolk Stage Road, the companion piece of the same survey, apparently by the same team. There are similarities in style, lettering, and inks, such as using red lines to represent contour intervals on both maps. Also both maps are works in progress, crisscrossed with surveyed lines connecting stations. The map above is the more finished work, having been transferred from graph paper to plain paper for the sake of clarity. Unfortunately, the map below suffered from the lesser quality paper and some type of exposure. The original is barely legible in places. This version was rotated 90 degrees counterclockwise and tweaked in PhotoShop to bring out the ink and pencil lines showing the main features of earthworks, roads, and terrain. It was necessary to reduce the size of the image to reproduce it here. Please consult the links to view the original image.
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[Mss Map 2]. NARA Z 412A_01. "Norfolk Stage Road, Norfolk Rail Road, and Virginia Main Line." Map extends from the Baxter Road (just south of the Crater) and Battery XVI to Fort Davis in the south. Fort Sedgwick or "Fort Hell" is more or less at the center of the page. This map has few annotations.

Two More Identified Manuscript Maps from the Michler Post War Series in the National Archives

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[Mss Map 3]. "Petersburg and Vicinity, Virginia." This manuscript map from RG77 covers the area from the Jerusalem Plank Road west, including the city of Petersburg, and south along Weldon Railroad to the Union siegeworks at Fort Wadsworth. The next map abuts this one on the left (west). Both maps are contained in the same link at NARA.
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[Mss Map 4]. "Petersburg and Vicinity, Virginia." This manuscript map from RG77: Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers continues coverage from the edge of the city west at Fort Gregg and south to the "Fish Hook Line" at Fort Fisher. This map contains many penciled notations.

Last Updated 10/14/2021 DWL
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