Ives, Joseph C.; Report Upon the Colorado River of the West; under the direction of the office of explorations and surveys, A. A Humphreys, Captain Topographical engineers, in charge by order of the Secretary of War. Senate Ex. Doc. 36th Congress, 1st Session. Published by Gov't printing office, Washington, 1861. Large quarto, five parts in one volume, pp. 131, frontispiece, 2 large folded topographic maps, 2 large folded colored geological maps, profile, 8 panoramic views, 11 plates, 7 colored plates of Indian portraits, 41 text wood cuts. pp. 14. pp. 154, 3 plates views, 3 plates of fossils, 27 text woodcuts. ( the 2 folded color washed geological maps were issued in a limited number of copies.
The work is complete and in the original stamped cloth with gilt spine titles and gilt cover vignette. The binding is tight and clean, light wear to binding, titles and vignette with light wear. The text and plates are clean and bright with only minor toning to the outer edges of some pages. The four maps are very clean with a short gutter tear outside of the map image repaired. Inscribed by Newberry to Dr. Franklin B. Hough (1822-1885), the first chief of the United States Division of Forestry which was the predecessor of the United States Forest Service. Hough was among the first to call attention to the depletion of forests in the U.S. and is referred to as the "father of American forestry”. Over all in very good condition with all four maps present.
Joseph Christmas Ives (1828-1868), is best remembered for two accomplishments. He was the engineer and architect of the Washington Monument (1859-1860) and led the successful expedition up the Colorado River. Ives's expedition included the prominent paleontologist and naturalist John Strong Newberry, Heinrich Balduin Möllhausen as artist and diarist, and F. W. Egloffstein as topographer. Ives purchased a steamboat in Philadelphia. The vessel was taken apart and shipped via the Isthmus of Panama to California and thence to the mouth of the Colorado River, where Ives and the members of his expedition rendezvoused late in 1857. Ives and his men reassembled the steamboat and christened it the Explorer.The results were published in this work which includes separately numbered parts: Geological Report. By Dr. John Strong Newberry. Botany by Professors Asa Gray, John Torrey [et al.]; Zoology. By Professor Spencer Fullerton Baird; and Appendices. John Strong Newberry, who was the naturalist on Ives' expedition up the Colorado River, wrote Part III of this Report, which deals with the Geology and Paleontology of the regions they explored. Ives' party were among the first white men to visit the floor of the Grand Canyon, and upon their return, it was Newberry who realized the canyon's geological significance and encouraged further exploration.