Mark:
Thank you for your kind words, but I am ever the student. I really enjoy imparting historical information to others, fostering a greater understanding of the past that surrounds us all.
I enjoyed reading your thoughts about how modern transportation systems have disconnected people from the geography that surrounds them. To a certain extent, the historical record confirms your thesis. Without going into a full blown discussion about the history of cartography, an examination of John Ogilby’s road maps from his 1675 published volume,
Britannia, illustrates just how important stream crossings and hills played as landmarks in navigating from one location to another in seventeenth-century England:
The ribbon map on this page depicts only stubs of crossroads at intersections, but the streams and hills are named and prominent along the route.
Likewise, Christopher Colles, who published the first road maps of the new United States of America in 1789, also followed the same formula in aiding his patrons who sought to travel from Point A to Point B:
I think both of these examples convincingly illustrate and reinforce your narrative on the subject.
While you may be correct on the motivation of the League of Pen Women, I also suspect that auto-tourism, a huge phenomenon at that time, played a significant role in why the members of the organization proposed such informative signage. Back-to-nature interests, geography, and even a contiunation of the Reform Movement likely entered into the campaign to establish a marker system for water courses.
Thank you for sharing your thesis with us all. I find many of your postings well composed and thought-provoking.
Best regards,
Jerseyman