ONE OF THE EARLIEST WORKS ILLUSTRATING THE GRAND CANYON: DUTTON’S HISTORY, WITH LARGE FOLIO ATLAS, WITH SPECTACULAR PANORAMIC VIEWS BY WILLIAM HENRY HOLMES AND THOMAS MORAN
DUTTON, Clarence E. Tertiary History of the Grand Cañon District. WITH: Atlas to Accompany the Tertiary History. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1882. Two volumes. Text volume: tall quarto, original three-quarter brown morocco gilt rebacked with the original spine laid down, raised bands, marbled endpapers and edges; Atlas: large folio (18 by 20 inches), original dark brown cloth gilt.
First edition of the “most impressive published result of the great scientific expeditions to the American West after the Civil War,” including the magnificent large folio atlas volume with 12 folio double-page maps and ten folio double-page panoramas, as well as 42 plates in the text volume.
Dutton’s report, based on his explorations of the Grand Canyon in the early 1880’s, was the most extensive and important study of that region to date. It is particularly notable for the great atlas volume, which contains some of the earliest and the most striking illustrations of the Grand Canyon: 12 double-sheet maps (most of which are printed in color) and ten double-sheet panoramas (most tinted). One of the panoramas, entitled “The Transept,” is by Thomas Moran, the renowned Western landscape painter and etcher. The rest of the panoramas were done by the great archaeologist-artist William Henry Holmes, whose illustrations for this volume are considered “masterpieces of realism and draftsmanship as well as feats of imaginative observation” (Goetzmann, Exploration and Empire, 512-13). The scarce text volume includes an additional 42 plates, including nine by Moran and 20 by Holmes (three in color, four photographs). Farquhar 73. Eberstadt 120:75. Small stamp of ownership in the Atlas.
Light wear to extremities of text volume, plates and text fine. Atlas volume fine and fresh with minor expert cloth restoration to spine ends and bottom corners. Double-folio plates exceptionally clean and bright with none of the rubbing often found. Plate XV professionally cleaned, some stubs replaced with archival cloth. An about-fine copy.