List of Illustrations

Emerson W. Baker, The Archaeology of 1690: Status and Material Life on New England’s Northern Frontier

Fig. 1. Coastal Northern New England in the late seventeenth century.

Fig. 2. Silver spoon from the Chadbourne site, made by John Hull and Robert Sanderson. 7½ inches in length. Old Berwick Historical Society Collection, South Berwick, Me.

Fig. 3. Brass spur from the Chadbourne site. Old Berwick Historical Society Collection.

Fig. 4. Brass harness boss with Tudor Rose medallion from the Chadbourne site. 1½ inches in diameter. Old Berwick Historical Society Collection.

Fig. 5. English lobed delft plate with chinoiserie decoration, burned and broken in the destruction of the Hitchcock homestead in 1690. Saco Museum Collection, Saco, Me.

Fig. 6. Broken cocks head door hinge from the Chadbourne site. 8¼ inches in length. Old Berwick Historical Society Collection.

Patricia Johnston, Depicting Geographic Knowledge: Mariners’ Drawings from Salem, Massachusetts

Fig. 1. Title Page to Atlas du Voyage de La Pérouse. Paris: L’Imprimerie de la Republique, 1797. Designed by J. M. Moreau le Jeune; engraved by Ph. Triere and L. Aubert. Courtesy of David Rumsey Map Collection.

Fig. 2. Detail of Title Page to Atlas du Voyage de La Pérouse.

Fig. 3. Detail of Title Page to Atlas du Voyage de La Pérouse.

Fig. 4. Detail of Title Page to Atlas du Voyage de La Pérouse.

Fig. 5. Luther Dana. Appearance of Cape Babel Mandel as you come from the Westd. Log of the Recovery, Salem to Mocha, 1800–1801. East India Marine Society papers MH-88, Volume 1, p. 620. Courtesy of the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

Fig. 6. Nathaniel Bowditch. Longitude and Latitude of Trinidad. Log of the Astrea, Salem to Lisbon, Madeira, and Manilla, 1796–1797. East India Marine Society papers, MH-88, Volume 1, p. 255. Courtesy of the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

Fig. 7. William Haswell. Plan of the Bay of Manilla in the Isle of Lucona. Logs of the Elizabeth, Charlotta, and Pallas, 1801–1803. Courtesy of the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

Fig. 8. William Haswell. Appearance of the Entrance of Manilla Bay. Logs of the Elizabeth, Charlotta, and Pallas. 1801–1803. Courtesy of the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

Fig. 9. William Haswell. Palanquin and Bearers. Logs of the Elizabeth, Charlotta, and Pallas, 1801–1803. Courtesy of the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

Fig. 10. Benjamin Carpenter, A View of Gingeram on the Malabar Coast. Log of the Hercules, Salem to Calcutta, 1792–1793. Courtesy of the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

Kevin Muller, Navigation, Vision, and Empire: Eighteenth-Century Engraved Views of Boston in a British Atlantic Context

Fig. 1. Attributed to William Burgis, A North East View of the Great Town of Boston. London, ca. 1723. Photograph Courtesy of the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass. Object ID #1163.

Fig. 2. John Harris after William Burgis, A South East view of ye Great Town of Boston in New England in America, London, 1725. I. N. Phelps Stokes Collection, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations, New York, N.Y.

Fig. 3. Headpiece engraved by James Turner from The American Magazine and Historical Chronicle, Boston, 1744. Courtesy, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.

Fig. 4. Paul Revere. A View of Part of the Town of Boston in New-England and Brittish Ships of War Landing Their Troops! Boston, 1770. Courtesy, American Antiquarian Society.

Fig. 5. William Burgis. To His Excellency William Burnet, Esqr., this plan of Boston in New England. [Boston: Sold at the Crown Coffee House, 1728]. Detail. Boston Athenaeum, Boston, Mass.

Fig. 6. “Chart of Cape Esperanza” from John Seller’s Atlas Maritimus. London, 1675. Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University, Providence, R.I.

Fig. 7. Johannes Kip. “Plymouth,” plate 57 from volume two, part one of Nouveau Theatre de la Grande Bretagne. London: David Mortier, 1716. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, New Haven, Conn.

Fig. 8. John Harris after William Burgis, A South Prospect of ye flourishing city of New York in the Province of New York in America. London, ca. 1719. Print Collection, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

Kevin D. Murphy, Buildings, Landscapes, and the Representation of Authority on the Eastern Frontier

Fig. 1. Jonathan Fisher, A Morning View of Bluehill Village September 1824, oil on canvas, 25⅛˝ x 52¼˝, 1824–25. Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, Me. Museum purchase, 1965.1465.134.

Fig. 2. Jonathan Fisher House, Blue Hill, Maine, showing 1814 addition. Tad Goodale photo.

Fig. 3. Coventry Hall, York, Maine (1794–6) and the Judge Jonas Clark House, Kennebunk, Maine (addition, 1800–03), from William E. Barry, Pen Sketches of Old Houses (1874).

Fig. 4. Montpelier, Daguerreotype, c. 1865. Collections of Montpelier, the General Henry Knox Mansion, Thomaston, Me.

Fig. 5. Ruggles House, Columbia Falls, Maine (1818), Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Cervin Robinson, Photographer October 1960.

Fig. 6. East Front and Office Wing, “Woodlawn,” Ellsworth, Maine (1824–28), Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress, Allen L. Hubbard, Photographer April 30, 1936.

Katherine Rieder, “The Remainder of Our Effects We Must Leave Behind”: American Loyalists and the Meaning of Things

Fig. 1. Edward Winslow, Sugar Box. Boston, 1702. Silver. Gift of Henry Francis du Pont. Courtesy, Winterthur Museum, Winterthur, Del.

Fig. 2. Desk-and-Bookcase, attributed to John Welch (carver). Boston, ca. 1756. Mahogany. Private collection. Courtesy, Sotheby’s New York.

Fig. 3. John Singleton Copley. Mrs. Roger Morris (Mary Philipse). 1771. Oil on canvas. Courtesy, Winterthur Museum.

Fig. 4. John Singleton Copley. Colonel William Fitch and His Sisters Sarah and Ann Fitch. 1800/1801. Oil on canvas. National Gallery of Art. Gift of Eleanor Lothrop, Gordon Abbott, and Katharine A. Batchelder. Image courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Fig. 5. John Singleton Copley. The Copley Family. 1776–1777. Oil on canvas. National Gallery of Art. Andrew Mellon Fund. Image courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Fig. 6. John Singleton Copley. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Izard (Alice Delancey). 1775. Oil on canvas. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Mass. Edward Ingersoll Brown Fund.

Catherine E. Kelly, The Color of Whiteness: Picturing Race on Ivory

Fig. 1. Susan Anne Livingston Sedgwick, Portrait of Elizabeth ‘Mumbet’ Freeman (c.1742–1829). Watercolor on ivory, 1811. © Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, MA, USA/ The Bridgeman Art Library.

Fig. 2. Elizabeth Way Champlain, unfinished self portrait. Watercolor on ivory, n.d. Courtesy of Ramsay MacMullen.

Fig. 3. John Hoskins, miniature portrait of a man, perhaps Sir John Wildman. Watercolor on vellum, 1647. Photo © Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Eng.

Fig. 4. Richard Cosway, miniature portrait of an unidentified woman. Watercolor on ivory, 1798. Photo © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Fig. 5. Edward Greene Malbone, Mrs. Richard Sullivan (Sarah Russell) (1786–1831). Watercolor on ivory, 1804. Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Conn., Lelia A. And John Hill Morgan, B.A. 189. LL.B. 1896, M.A. (Hon.) 1929, collection.

Fig. 6. “Flesh Palette,” from L[éon Larue] Mansion, Letters upon the art of miniature painting (London: R. Ackermann, 1822). Courtesy, The Winterthur Library: Printed Book and Periodical Collection, Winterthur, Del.

Fig. 7. Edward Greene Malbone, Mrs. Richard Sullivan (Sarah Russell) (1786–1831), detail. Watercolor on ivory. Yale University Art Gallery, Lelia A. And John Hill Morgan, B.A. 189. LL.B. 1896, M.A. (Hon.) 1929, collection.

Fig. 8. Elizabeth Way Champlain, unfinished portrait of an unidentified sitter. Watercolor on ivory, n.d. Courtesy of Ramsay MacMullen.

Katherine Stebbins McCaffrey, Hares Haeredem: The Spectator Through Samuel Dexter’s Spectacles

Fig. 1. John Johnston. Samuel Dexter (1726–1810). Oil on canvas, 1791. Courtesy, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.

Fig. 2. Gold temple spectacles, ca. 1785, and gold-plated spectacle case, ca. 1810 belonging to the Dexter family. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Mass.

Fig. 3. Chart showing sales of spectacles and number of customers buying spectacles in Daniel Henchman’s Boston bookshop, 1712–1749. Based on the Daniel Henchman account and day books. Microfilm at the American Antiquarian Society.

Fig. 4. Map showing cities and towns with one or more shops selling spectacles from the 1760s to the 1780s. From top to bottom, the cities and towns are: Portsmouth and Spring Hill, N.H.; Boston, Newburyport, Salem, Marlboro, Mass.; Newport and Providence, R.I.; New London, New Haven, Norwich, Wethersfield, Conn.; New York, N.Y.; Chatham and Morristown, N.J.; Philadelphia, Penn.; Baltimore, Md.; Norfolk, Williamsburg, Gloucester, Smithfield, Va.; Charleston, S.C.; and Savannah, Ga. The Daniel Henchman records suggest single shops may have served customers within a radius of 100 miles or more. Based on advertisements collected in three electronic sources—Digital Evans, Past Portal (Colonial Williamsburg), and the digital edition of the Pennsylvania Gazette—and checked against the Prime file at Winterthur Museum, Winterthur, Del. Map by author.

Fig. 5. Unknown. Leather spectacles attributed to Esak Hopkins. United States, ca. 1770. RHi X4 276. Iron, glass, leather, and silk ribbon. Personal Gear. Museum Collection. 1921.1.47. Courtesy, the Rhode Island Historical Society.

Fig. 6. Wire-rimmed spectacles, owner unknown, 18th century. Gift of Mrs. Carl W. Noren, Connecticut Historical Society Collections. Courtesy, the Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford, Conn.

Fig. 7. Edward Scarlett Trade Card (mid-eighteenth century). Courtesy of the Science & Society Picture Library, a division of the National Museum of Science and Industry, London, England.

Fig. 8. James Ayscough Trade Card (ca. 1750). Courtesy of the Science & Society Picture Library, a division of the National Museum of Science and Industry, London, England.

Fig. 9. Temple spectacles (ca. 1800). Photograph by the author. Courtesy, Rokeby Museum, Ferrisburgh, Vt.

Fig. 10. Temple spectacles (ca. 1810) Photograph by the author. Courtesy, Rokeby Museum, Ferrisburgh, Vt.

Fig. 11. Gold-plated spectacle case belonging to the Dexter family, ca. 1810. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Steven C. Bullock, “Often concerned in funerals”: Ritual, Material Culture, and the Large Funeral in the Age of Samuel Sewall

Fig. 1. Nathaniel Emmons. Samuel Sewall. Oil on canvas, 1728. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Boston, Mass.

Fig. 2. A Neighbor’s Tears. Boston, 1710. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Fig. 3. John Charmion. AE. M. S. Eximij Pietate, Eruditione, Prudentia Viri D. Ebenezrae Pembertoni. [Boston, 1717]. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Fig. 4. John Charmion. Sacred to the Lasting Memory of the Reverend, Mr. Ebenezer Pemberton. [Boston, 1717]. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Fig. 5. Upon the Death of the Virtuous and Religious Mrs. Lydia Minot. Cambridge, 1667. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Fig. 6. Mourning ring. 1766. Courtesy, Historic New England, Boston, Mass.

Fig. 7. Gloves given at a Connecticut Funeral, 1765. Courtesy, Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford, Conn.

Fig. 8. John Winthrop. Oil on canvas, ca. 1630–91. Courtesy, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.

Martin Brückner, The “New England” Cartouche: Tablets, Tableaux, and Theatricality in Eighteenth-Century Cartography

Fig. 1. John Seller, New England & New York. London, 1703. Rare Books Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations, New York, N.Y.

Fig. 2. John Smith, New England. London, 1627. Rare Books Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

Fig. 3. John Speed, A Map of New England and New York. Engraved by Francis Lamb. London, 1676. The Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

Fig. 4. Thomas Jefferys, Map of the most Inhabited part of NEW ENGLAND. London, 1755. Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

Fig. 5. John Seller, A Chart of the Sea-Coasts of New England. London, 1680. Lawrence H. Slaughter Collection, The Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

Fig. 6. Johannes Blaeu, Theatrum Orbis Terrarum. 1635. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

Fig. 7. Samuel Thornton, A New Chart of the Sea Coast of New-Fund Land, New Scotland, New England. 1702. The Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

Fig. 8. Robert Morden and William Berry, A Map of New England, 1676. Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University, Providence, R.I.

Fig. 9. Homann Erben, Nova Anglia. 1750. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Fig. 10. William Douglass, This Plan of the British Dominions of New England. 1753. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Fig. 11. Jan Van Kessel. America. 1666. Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz/Art Resource, NY.

Fig. 12. Detail from Thomas Jefferys, Map of the most Inhabited part of New England. London, 1755. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Fig. 13. “Habits of a Flemish Gentleman in 1620,” from Thomas Jefferys, A Collection of Dresses, 1757–1772, Vol. 2, 62. HEW 14.7.6, Harry Elkins Widener Collection, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.

Fig. 14. “Habit of an Ottawa, an Indian Nation of North America,” from Thomas Jefferys, A Collection of Dresses, 1757–1772, Vol. 4, 114. HEW 14.7.6, Harry Elkins Widener Collection, Harvard University.

Fig. 15. “Liberty,” from Thomas Jefferys, A Collection of Dresses, 1757–1772, Vol. 4, 156. HEW 14.7.6, Harry Elkins Widener Collection, Harvard University.

Wendy Bellion, New England’s Ends

Fig. 1. “Astonishing Invisible Lady, (Wilmington, De., 1804), broadside. Courtesy, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.

Fig. 2. The Invisible Lady. 1807. Engraving from the Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, and the Arts, XVI (1907), Plate 2, opposite 80. Courtesy, The Library Company of Philadelphia.

Fig. 3. “The Philosophical and Mechanical Museum, Is Now Opened . . . ,” Salem Gazette, Dec. 7, 1804, page 3, column 4. Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Mass.

Fig. 4. “Acoustic Temple” and “Magnetic Penetrating Spy-Glass.” Relief print from William Pinchbeck, The Expositor; or, Many Mysteries Unravelled (Boston, 1805). Courtesy, American Antiquarian Society.

Fig. 5. Joseph Blackburn, Elizabeth Browne Rogers. 1761. Oil on canvas. Courtesy, Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.