A Portraiture of the City of Philadelphia in the Province of Pennsylvania in America, 1683 [Chew copy]


Permanent ID:
2794
Date:
1683
Image Description:
Copy of Thomas Holme's A Portraiture of the City of Philadelphia belonging to Benjamin Chew.  In 1682, William Penn appointed Holme surveyor-general of Pennsylvania and charged him with the task of laying out the "greene country towne" that Penn envisioned along the Delaware River.  The site that Penn acquired for the city of Philadelphia stretched two miles east to west across a tract of land situated between the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers; all told, the rectangular grid of land comprised twelve thousand acres.  Holme imposed an orderly grid plan on the site, with streets organized around a large square in the center of the town and four smaller squares, one in each quadrant.  The grid also included two main streets, Broad and High (present-day Market), which were kept wide in hopes of preventing the kind of fire that destroyed London in 1666.  Completed in 1683 A Portraiture of the City of Philadelphia was used for both reference and promotional purposes to show the unique layout of William's Penn emerging city.
Address:
Philadelphia
Format:
Map
Collection:
Chew Family papers
Related Person or Organization:
Thomas Holme, d. 1695 (cartographer)