mapsMaps ETC Site map
 Maps ETC > North America > A Regional Map of North America > Oregon Controversy, 1792–1846
Site Map 

Oregon Controversy, 1792–1846

Oregon Controversy


Title: Oregon Controversy
Projection: Unknown,
Source Bounding Coordinates:
W: -135 E: -108 N: 63 S: 40

Main Map Page
Zoomify Version
B/W PDF Version
Color PDF Version
Description: A map of the Oregon Territory between the time of exploration by George Vancouver (1792) and the Oregon Treaty of 1846. The map is color–coded to show the disputed claims of the British and United States, the Russian American line of 1825, the territory of the Louisiana cession of 1803, the British and United States boundary to the east of the territory established in 1818, the proposed boundary by the British to the Columbia River and offer of the Olympic Peninsula, the Spanish (later Mexico) possession to the south established in 1819, and the boundary between British territory and the United States established by the Oregon Treaty. The map shows the natural boundary of the Oregon Country based on the watershed divide of the Rockies, and the exploration routes of Capitan Gray (1792), Mackenzie (1792), Lewis and Clark (1805), and the western portion of the Oregon Trail.
Place Names: A Regional Map of North America, United States, Oregon Country, Canad
ISO Topic Categories: boundaries, inlandWaters, location, oceans
Keywords: Oregon Controversy, physical, political, physical features, country borders, major political subdivisions, boundaries, inlandWaters, location, oceans, Unknown, 1792–1846
Source: Albert Bushnell Hart, LL.D., The American Nation (New York, NY: Harper and Brothers, 1906) 72
Map Credit: Courtesy the private collection of Roy Winkelman
SearchLicensePDF HelpGIS Help Google Earth Help Zoomify Help

 Maps ETC > North America > A Regional Map of North America > Oregon Controversy, 1792–1846
Site Map