USGS Topographical maps? There are historical ones from the turn of the last century. They are available online and in print. UCONN is a US Depository Library. I am sure your gov docs librarian would be thrilled to help you!
Connie Reik
Government Info Librarian and History R&I Librarian
Tufts University
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 4, 2017, at 8:24 PM, Woodward, Walter <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
I will be teaching a course next semester on the Connecticut River, and would like to find a really good map(s) of the river source to sea for students to refer to. The ideal map would have cities and towns as well as key physical features (mountains, major tributaries). It or they would also be relatively small (no bigger than a road map - remember those? - and affordable.
Can anyone point me to some possible solutions? I would be most grateful.
Walt
Walt Woodward
State Historian
Associate Professor of History
University of Connecticut
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