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That document records that Washington acquired 9,744 acres on the Ohio River and owned another 23,341 acres on the Great Kanhawa, with an additional 234 acres in Pennsylvania near Great Meadows, 3,051 acres in the northwestern territory, and 5,000 acres in Kentucky.
Title annotated. Facsimile from Massachusetts' Historical Society Collections, vol. 61. Reproduced in The George Washington Atlas, 1932, plate 11. Available also through the Library of Congress web site as a raster image. 4 copies. Copy 2 includes pencil annotations. Copy 3 is a photographic reproduction. Copy 4 is a negative photostat.
Map of the Ohio River Valley and surrounding area. Relief shown by hachures; Facsimile of manuscript map; Covers western Pennsylvania, western Virginia and Ohio; Shows major rivers and tributaries, forts, principal settlements and Indian tribal territories. Ohio River Valley--Maps, Maunscript--Early works to 1800--Facsimiles.
Location: Library of Congress Geography and Map Division. Collection (local): Library of Congress Collection. Subjects: Ohio River Valley--Maps, Manuscript--Early works to 1800. Northwest, Old--Maps, Manuscript--Early works to 1800. Places: Ohio River. Extent: 1 manuscript map : hand color 52 x 74 cm. Terms of Use: No known copyright restrictions.
31 lip 2021 · Seven Years War, 1756-1763 (Europe) In May 1754, encouraged by Ohio Valley Indians and the governor of Virginia, Major George Washington marched soldiers to occupy the forks of the Ohio River (present day Pittsburgh).
An Accurate Map of the English Colonies in North America bordering on the River Ohio, 1754 Scope and Contents From the Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure, December 1754, vol. 15, pg. 24
An accurate map of the English colonies in North America, bordering on the river Ohio. This map is also available in American Revolutionary Geographies Online (ARGO), a collections portal especially built for material relating to the American Revolutionary War Era.