Paddock_Fort-Worth,_Tex.,_and_Rail-Roads_1888_UTA.jpg
Summary
Title |
English:
Map – showing – the Geographical location of Fort-Worth, Tex., and Rail-Roads
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Description Paddock Fort-Worth, Tex., and Rail-Roads 1888 UTA.jpg |
English:
Due to the international financial panic of 1873, the Texas & Pacific Railway, building from the east, temporarily stopped construction after reaching Dallas that year. However, in the town of Fort Worth, just thirty-four miles to the west, newspaper publisher and editor B. B. Paddock (1844-1922) of the Fort Worth
Democrat
and his fellow citizens refused to give up. Paddock tirelessly promoted Texas, Tarrant County, and his adopted town in the national press, worked to see that construction continued on the Texas & Pacific as well as to secure other railways for the growing city, including the Fort Worth and Rio Grande Railway (chartered in 1885) for which he served as president. One of Paddock's most famous creations was his so-called "Tarantula Map" of which this chromolithograph is one of the best contemporary printed representations.
Paddock sketched the map as early as 1873, when a crudely executed and simple hand-drawn version appeared in the Democrat . He apparently drew a number of these for anyone who would listen to him share his vision for the city. The chromolithographed version here from 1888 shows Fort Worth as the hub of the Texas & Pacific, the Houston & Texas Central, the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe, the Fort Worth & Rio Grande, the Fort Worth & Denver, the Missouri, Kansas & Texas and other railroads. It boasts Fort Worth's recent selection as "the headquarters of a railway postal division" and appeared in a promotional and libretto of a "madcap" parody written by Ed. J. Smith specifically about Fort Worth based upon Englishmen W.S. Gilbert & Arthur Sullivan's then wildly popular satirical operetta The Mikado . Among other projects, Paddock also promoted the Texas Spring Palace (a short-lived exposition and exhibit building in Fort Worth constructed entirely from Texas products), published the Fort Worth Gazette , wrote a four-volume History of Texas: Fort Worth and the Texas Northwest Edition (1922), and eventually served four terms as the city's mayor. His beloved city eventually became the headquarters for today's Burlington Northern Santa Fe, operating "one of the largest freight railroad networks in North America, with 32,500 miles of rail across the western two-thirds of the United States." |
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Source | UTA Libraries Cartographic Connections : map / text | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Creator |
creator QS:P170,Q66480951
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Credit line |
English:
The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections, Gift of Jenkins Garrett
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Geotemporal data | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Map location | North America | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Georeferencing | Georeference the map in Wikimaps Warper If inappropriate please set warp_status = skip to hide. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bibliographic data | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publication |
The Capitalist; or, The City of Fort Worth. A Parody on the Mikado
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Author |
Ed. J. Smith
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Place of publication | Fort Worth | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publisher |
Fort Worth Board of Trade
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Printed by |
Ketterlinus,
Philadelphia
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Archival data | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Collection |
institution QS:P195,Q1230739
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Dimensions |
height: 24 cm (9.4 in); width: 32 cm (12.5 in)
dimensions QS:P2048,24U174728
dimensions QS:P2049,32U174728
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Medium |
chromolithograph
on
paper
medium QS:P186,Q1121337;P186,Q11472,P518,Q861259
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artwork-references |
Huseman, Ben W. (2018) Paths to Highways: Routes of Exploration, Commerce, and Settlement , Arlington : The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections, no. 86 , p. 50 Jackson, Jill Carlson (1996) Along came a spider: Visions and realities of railroad development in Fort Worth, Texas, 1873-1923. A Cartographic Approach (M.A. Thesis), The University of Texas at Arlington Patricia L. Duncan ( June 15, 2010 ). Paddock, Boardman Buckley . Handbook of Texas Online . Texas State Historical Association . Retrieved on August 16, 2019 . |
Licensing
This file was provided to Wikimedia Commons by the
University of Texas at Arlington Libraries
as part of a
cooperation project
. The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries is part of the
University of Texas at Arlington
, a public research university located in Arlington, Texas.
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Public domain Public domain false false |
The author died in 1922, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer . This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office ) before January 1, 1929. |
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This file has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. |
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/ PDM Creative Commons Public Domain Mark 1.0 false false