




In the 1850s, Congress authorized and funded five railroad surveys to determine the most practical route for a transcontinental railroad through the western frontier. The northernmost survey, headed by Maj. Isaac Stevens, was the most successful, both scientifically and geographically. Along with the data assembled by numerous scientists and surveyors was the work of two artists, John Mix Stanley and Gustavus Sohon. Their illustrations graphically documented the physical and cultural geography of the northern Great Plains and Pacific Northwest, with a particular eye for Native American life.
Eye of the Explorer: Views of the Northern Pacific Railroad Survey reproduces all seventy of the lithographs that appeared with Stevens’s final congressional report, published in 1860, as well as twelve of the lovely watercolor images from which the final prints were prepared.
These views depict landscapes of undisturbed wilderness, scenes from the explorers
journey, and glimpses of settlements in the initial throes of development. The accompanying
text tells the story of the survey party s adventures, struggles, and day-

238 Pages
10.5” x 10”
4 B&W Photographs
55 Color Photographs
82 Color Lithographs
65 Color
Maps
12 B&W Illustrations
10 Color Illustrations
ISBN 978-
Paul D. McDermott
taught geography and cartography for thirty-
Ronald E. Grim
worked in the Cartographic and Architectural Division at the National
Archives and Records Service and in the Geography and Map Division at the Library
of Congress. He is currently the curator of maps at the Norman B. Leventhal Map Center
at the Boston Public Library.
Phillip Mobley
a professional cartographer, is an adjunct professor of geography at
George Mason University and has also taught cartography and geography courses at
Montgomery College and George Washington University.





Fine Art Prints are all 12” x 18” which includes a white border. The width of the border is variable depending upon the interior image.
Images will be provided on a Matte surface unless other arrangements are made with Professor McDermott.