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Rediscovering Hand-Drawn Maps from the American Revolution and the Duke Who Collected Them

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Authors: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Historic Era: Era 3: Revolution and the New Nation (1754-1820s)

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Summer 2019 | Volume 64, Issue 3

Alnwick Castle near the Scottish border in Northumberland, England, houses one of the greatest collection of maps of the American Revolution.
Alnwick Castle near the Scottish border in Northumberland houses one of the greatest collection of maps of the American Revolution. Phil Thomas

Alnwick (pronounced "Ań-nick) is best known as the castle where the Harry Potter movies were filmed, where Hogwarts students learned to fly broomsticks and play Quidditch among its high castellated towers. 

click hereBegun in 1096 in the far northeast corner of England, Alnwick Castle helped guard the frontier against incursions by Scottish clans. Today, some 800,000 visitors each year come to enjoy jousting, archery contests, and court jesters, as well as various Harry Potter-themed events and games, including lessons in broomstick-riding. Other visitors, more inclined to the fine and decorative arts, can view one of the most important private collections in the U.K., with paintings by Titian, Van Dyck, and Canaletto, and ceramics by Meissen, Sèvres, and Minton. The gardens on the grounds are also considered some of the finest in England.

But, for Americans, the real treasures at Alnwick are its one-of-a-kind maps of the American Revolution, drawn by hand during or just after important battles such as Lexington, Concord, Bunker Hill, Long Island, and Fort Washington. 

The 11th Duke of Northumberland invited American Heritage to help catalogue his priceless collection of hand-drawn maps of the Revolution.
The 10th Duke of Northumberland invited American Heritage to help catalogue his priceless collection of hand-drawn maps of the Revolution.

In 1969, the 10th Duke of Northumberland, the owner of Alnwick, invited a team of researchers from American Heritage, Elizabeth and William Cummings, to help him catalogue his maps, which had lain largely forgotten in an old metal box. Some of the most important maps they found were published for the first time in our August 1969 issue.

See the entire original article Treasures of Alnwick Castle by Elizabeth and Matthew Cumming

 

Hugh Percy, joined the British Army as a teenager and rose to the rank of Lieutenant General by the time he joined the forces occupying Boston in 1775.
Hugh Percy joined the British Army as a teenager and rose to the rank of lieutenant general by the time he joined the forces occupying Boston in 1775. When Percy returned to England a few years later, he took his collection of maps with him. Many were drawn by various army officers during or right after key battles such as Concord and Long Island.

Hugh Percy (1742–1817) joined the British Army as a teenager and rose to the rank of lieutenant general by the time he commanded some of the forces occupying Boston in 1775. Later a British peer and the 2nd Duke of Northumberland, he fought at the battles of Lexington, Concord, Long Island, and