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Simeon De Witt

Simeon De Witt (December 25, 1756 – December 3, 1834) was Geographer and Surveyor General of the Continental Army during the American Revolution and Surveyor General of the State of New York for the fifty years from 1784 until his death.

Simeon De Witt
(1804)
by Ezra Ames
Born(1756-12-25)December 25, 1756
DiedDecember 3, 1834(1834-12-03) (aged 77)
Alma materQueen's College

Life and career edit

De Witt was born in Ulster County, New York,[1] one of fourteen children of physician Andries De Witt and Jannetje Vernooy De Witt, both of Dutch ancestry.[2] He was the only graduate in the class of 1776 at Queens College – now Rutgers College of Rutgers University – in New Brunswick, New Jersey. After the capture of New Brunswick by the British during the war, De Witt fled to New York City where he joined the Revolutionary Army.

 
A modern redrawing of the 1807 version of the Commissioners' grid plan for Manhattan, a few years before it was adopted in 1811

In June 1778, having been trained as a surveyor by James Clinton, the husband of De Witt's Aunt Mary, De Witt was appointed as assistant to the Geographer and Surveyor of the Army, Colonel Robert Erskine, and contributed to a number of historically significant maps. After Erskine's death in 1780, De Witt was appointed to his post.[2]

After the American Revolutionary War, De Witt attempted, but failed, to get the Continental Congress interested in a national mapping project.[1]

De Witt was appointed New York State Surveyor General in 1784, New York being one of the few states which had such an office.[3] De Witt died 50 years later still holding that position, having been re-appointed and re-elected several times. Although he was a first cousin of DeWitt Clinton – the most powerful politician in the state, and both the Mayor of New York City and a State Senator – and was a Democratic-Republican, De Witt was never removed from office. Both Federalists and Bucktails recognized his outstanding qualification for the office.

De Witt was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1787.[4]

In 1796, George Washington favored De Witt to become the Surveyor General of the United States, but De Witt turned down the nomination. Washington wrote to Thomas Jefferson about De Witt "I can assure you, he is extremely modest, sensible, sober, discreet, and deserving of favors. He is esteemed a very good mathematician," but despite this praise, none of De Witt's various proposals gained traction during Jefferson's presidency, and De Witt had nothing to do with the Land Ordinance of 1785, despite what some sources claim.[5][6]

De Witt was appointed in 1807 by the state legislature, at the request of the New York City Common Council, to a three-man commission which was to determine how the city's future streets would be laid out. Frustrated by opposition from landowners, who wanted to determine for themselves where streets would go as they developed their properties, and interference from various political factions, the Council had called on the state for assistance. The Commission was given "exclusive power to lay out streets, roads, and public squares, of such width, extent, and direction, as to them shall seem most conducive to public good, and to shut up, or direct to be shut up, any streets or parts thereof which have been heretofore laid out... [but] not accepted by the Common Council."[7][8][9] The commissioners were authorized to be paid $4 a day for their work (equivalent to $83 in 2023)[10] – although De Witt was the only one who was actually compensated; the other two commissioners, Gouvernor Morris and John Rutherfurd, were rich men and waived their fees. De Witt, however, also wanted additional compensation for the days he spent traveling from his home in Albany to New York City, and for Sundays he was required, because of Commission business, to stay in the city; he was reluctantly given travel payment, but was refused additional payment for his Sundays in New York City.[11]

The result of the work of the commission was the Commissioners' Plan of 1811, which laid out Manhattan's streets above 14th Street – and to a certain extent between 14th and Houston Streets – in a regular rectilinear gridiron pattern, which has garnered both praise and intense criticism ever since it was presented to the public.[12]

Ironically, considering the massive effect on Manhattan of the Commissioners' Plan, De Witt himself did not much like New York City. He never took up residence there, and seems to have held his time there to a minimum.[11]

In addition to his work on New York City, De Witt laid out rectilinear street grids in Albany, New York;[13] Ithaca, New York, of which he is considered one of the founders; and on a number of other developments of state-owned land.[3]

From 1810 to 1816, De Witt was also a member of the first Erie Canal Commission, a project dear to the heart of his cousin, De Witt Clinton. He ordered the making of surveys which would prove essential for the eventual building of the canal.[11]

 
1802 Map of the State of New York

As well as being Surveyor General of New York, from 1829 until his death in 1834, De Witt was the Chancellor of the University of the State of New York and thus the head of the Board of Regents; he had been a Regent since 1798. The Board of Regents is the governing body for the University of the State of New York – not to be confused with the State University of New York – which regulates many public and private institutions in New York State, licensing, accrediting and setting standards for schools operating in New York State, from pre-kindergarten through professional and graduate school, as well as for the practice of a wide variety of professions.

De Witt was often given credit for giving Classical Greek and Roman names to the twenty-eight central New York Military Tract townships that his office mapped after the war, to be given to veterans in payment for their military service. More recently, credit has been given to his clerk Robert Harpur, apparently a reader of classical literature.[14]

De Witt did not leave much in the way of writings. He wrote a treatise published in 1813 on perspective drawing, and one in 1819 which argued for the establishment of a state agricultural college, and also had some letters published on scientific topics.[11]

New York State map edit

In 1802, De Witt produced a detailed map of the state of New York, which was then engraved by Gideon Fairman.[15] The map is said by historian Gerard Koeppel to have been "meticulously drawn" and to have "set a standard for American cartography; it is still considered 'the most important map ever made of the Empire State.'"[16] The map shows New York state to be primarily uninhabited, at least as far as white settler go: the map does not indicate Native American encampments or lodges.[3]

Personal life edit

De Witt was almost six-foot (1.8 m) tall, and was described by his son as having "a noble, serious face, resembling in some respects that of Genl Washington." He was a devout Christian.[3]

De Witt was married three times. In 1789, he married Elizabeth Lynott (1767–1793), the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Van Valkenburgh Lynott, and they had two children. In 1799, he married Jane Varick Hardenbergh (d. 1808), the widow of Abraham Hardenbergh (1756-1794), and the sister of Richard Varick, the longtime mayor of New York City. Their son, Richard Varick De Witt, became a prominent civil engineer. Later, Simeon married Susan Linn in October 1810. Linn was the daughter of the theologian William Linn. The Linns were a literary family: Susan wrote fiction and poetry, her brother John Blair Linn was a poet, and her sister, Elizabeth, married Charles Brockden Brown, who wrote novels.[11]

De Witt owned a considerable amount of land in the Finger Lakes area, and held four slaves at his residence in Albany, New York, but by 1810 he had freed them, a common practice of the area. They continued to work in his household.

De Witt died in Ithaca after having caught a very bad cold while traveling to his various properties in upstate New York.[11] He was buried on his estate in Ithaca, but his remains were subsequently moved to Albany Rural Cemetery.[2]

Exhibitions and collections edit

On May 25, 2010 the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History exhibited the oldest surviving Anglo-American star map, hand-drawn in 1780 by Simeon De Witt, in its Albert H. Small Documents Gallery. The map shows the stars visible from De Witt's post in New Jersey. Drawing such a map, as De Witt himself later said, fostered an appreciation of "the ever shifting scenery of the skies and all the gorgeous drapery of heaven." During the Revolutionary War, when cut off from trade with Europe, colonists had to make their own maps; De Witt assisted military geographer and surveyor general Robert Erskine in drawing the maps needed by George Washington. Also on view are De Witt's drawing instruments and examples of European star maps and astrolabes. The exhibition closed on December 5, 2010. An existing online exhibition offers views of the star map and images of objects in the exhibition.[17]

Portfolio samples edit

The following map sections were drawn by, or under the direction of, Simeon De Witt. The originals were not colored as these are.

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b Koeppel (2015), p.78
  2. ^ a b c Simeon de Witt, New Netherland Institute
  3. ^ a b c d Koeppel (2015), p.79
  4. ^ "Simeon De Witt". American Philosophical Society Member History. American Philosophical Society. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  5. ^ Koeppel (2015), pp.78–79
  6. ^ An example of the rectangular grid laid down according to the 1785 law can be found at Ballon, Hilary, ed. (2013). The Greatest Grid: The Master Plan of Manhattan 1811-2011. New York: Museum of the City of New York and Columbia University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-231-15990-6.
  7. ^ Remarks Of The Commissioners For Laying Out Streets And Roads In The City Of New York, Under The Act Of April 3, 1807
  8. ^ Gray, Christopher (October 23, 2005). "Streetscapes: The Commissioners' Plan of 1811: Are Manhattan's Right Angles Wrong?". The New York Times. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  9. ^ Burrows, Edwin G. and Wallace, Mike (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 419–22. ISBN 0-195-11634-8.
  10. ^ Koeppel (2015), p.83
  11. ^ a b c d e f Koeppel (2015), p.80
  12. ^ Koeppel (2015), pp.xix-xxi and passim
  13. ^ De Witt's map of Albany can be found at Ballon, Hilary, ed. (2013). The Greatest Grid: The Master Plan of Manhattan 1811-2011. New York: Museum of the City of New York and Columbia University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-231-15990-6.
  14. ^ Lemak, Joseph (2008). . New York History. 89 (3): 245. Archived from the original on 2012-04-28.
  15. ^ De Witt, Simeon (1802). "Map of the State of New York". Library of Congress.
  16. ^ Koeppel (2015), p.79, quoting Allen, David Y. (2008), How Simeon De Witt Mapped New York State, New York Map Society
  17. ^ "Cosmos in Miniature: The Remarkable Star Map of Simeon De Witt". National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 24 April 2012.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Guthorn, Peter J. (1966). American Maps and Map Makers of the Revolution. Monmouth Beach, New Jersey: Philip Freneau Press. OCLC 1019460.
  • Ristow, Walter W. (December 1968). "Simeon De Witt / Pioneer American Cartographer". The Canadian Cartographer. 5 (2): 90–107. doi:10.3138/D235-1057-104G-J643. ISSN 0317-7173.
  • Schubert, Frank N., ed. (June 1988). . EP 870-1-37. Fort Belvoir, Va.: Office of History, United States Army Corps of Engineers. OCLC 17385113. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011.

External links edit

  • Biography of Simeon De Witt on the New York State Museum website.
  • Department of the Geographer to the Army Reenacting Unit, Brigade of the American Revolution
  • at Christ Church Cemetery, Manlius
  • De Witt genealogy at Mr. Jumbo
Political offices
Preceded by New York State Surveyor General
1784–1834
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Chancellor of the University of the State of New York
1829–1834
Succeeded by

simeon, witt, december, 1756, december, 1834, geographer, surveyor, general, continental, army, during, american, revolution, surveyor, general, state, york, fifty, years, from, 1784, until, death, 1804, ezra, amesborn, 1756, december, 1756wawarsing, ulster, c. Simeon De Witt December 25 1756 December 3 1834 was Geographer and Surveyor General of the Continental Army during the American Revolution and Surveyor General of the State of New York for the fifty years from 1784 until his death Simeon De Witt 1804 by Ezra AmesBorn 1756 12 25 December 25 1756Wawarsing Ulster County New YorkDiedDecember 3 1834 1834 12 03 aged 77 Ithaca Tompkins County New YorkAlma materQueen s College Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 New York State map 2 Personal life 3 Exhibitions and collections 4 Portfolio samples 5 References 6 External linksLife and career editDe Witt was born in Ulster County New York 1 one of fourteen children of physician Andries De Witt and Jannetje Vernooy De Witt both of Dutch ancestry 2 He was the only graduate in the class of 1776 at Queens College now Rutgers College of Rutgers University in New Brunswick New Jersey After the capture of New Brunswick by the British during the war De Witt fled to New York City where he joined the Revolutionary Army nbsp A modern redrawing of the 1807 version of the Commissioners grid plan for Manhattan a few years before it was adopted in 1811 In June 1778 having been trained as a surveyor by James Clinton the husband of De Witt s Aunt Mary De Witt was appointed as assistant to the Geographer and Surveyor of the Army Colonel Robert Erskine and contributed to a number of historically significant maps After Erskine s death in 1780 De Witt was appointed to his post 2 After the American Revolutionary War De Witt attempted but failed to get the Continental Congress interested in a national mapping project 1 De Witt was appointed New York State Surveyor General in 1784 New York being one of the few states which had such an office 3 De Witt died 50 years later still holding that position having been re appointed and re elected several times Although he was a first cousin of DeWitt Clinton the most powerful politician in the state and both the Mayor of New York City and a State Senator and was a Democratic Republican De Witt was never removed from office Both Federalists and Bucktails recognized his outstanding qualification for the office De Witt was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1787 4 In 1796 George Washington favored De Witt to become the Surveyor General of the United States but De Witt turned down the nomination Washington wrote to Thomas Jefferson about De Witt I can assure you he is extremely modest sensible sober discreet and deserving of favors He is esteemed a very good mathematician but despite this praise none of De Witt s various proposals gained traction during Jefferson s presidency and De Witt had nothing to do with the Land Ordinance of 1785 despite what some sources claim 5 6 De Witt was appointed in 1807 by the state legislature at the request of the New York City Common Council to a three man commission which was to determine how the city s future streets would be laid out Frustrated by opposition from landowners who wanted to determine for themselves where streets would go as they developed their properties and interference from various political factions the Council had called on the state for assistance The Commission was given exclusive power to lay out streets roads and public squares of such width extent and direction as to them shall seem most conducive to public good and to shut up or direct to be shut up any streets or parts thereof which have been heretofore laid out but not accepted by the Common Council 7 8 9 The commissioners were authorized to be paid 4 a day for their work equivalent to 83 in 2023 10 although De Witt was the only one who was actually compensated the other two commissioners Gouvernor Morris and John Rutherfurd were rich men and waived their fees De Witt however also wanted additional compensation for the days he spent traveling from his home in Albany to New York City and for Sundays he was required because of Commission business to stay in the city he was reluctantly given travel payment but was refused additional payment for his Sundays in New York City 11 The result of the work of the commission was the Commissioners Plan of 1811 which laid out Manhattan s streets above 14th Street and to a certain extent between 14th and Houston Streets in a regular rectilinear gridiron pattern which has garnered both praise and intense criticism ever since it was presented to the public 12 Ironically considering the massive effect on Manhattan of the Commissioners Plan De Witt himself did not much like New York City He never took up residence there and seems to have held his time there to a minimum 11 In addition to his work on New York City De Witt laid out rectilinear street grids in Albany New York 13 Ithaca New York of which he is considered one of the founders and on a number of other developments of state owned land 3 From 1810 to 1816 De Witt was also a member of the first Erie Canal Commission a project dear to the heart of his cousin De Witt Clinton He ordered the making of surveys which would prove essential for the eventual building of the canal 11 nbsp 1802 Map of the State of New York As well as being Surveyor General of New York from 1829 until his death in 1834 De Witt was the Chancellor of the University of the State of New York and thus the head of the Board of Regents he had been a Regent since 1798 The Board of Regents is the governing body for the University of the State of New York not to be confused with the State University of New York which regulates many public and private institutions in New York State licensing accrediting and setting standards for schools operating in New York State from pre kindergarten through professional and graduate school as well as for the practice of a wide variety of professions De Witt was often given credit for giving Classical Greek and Roman names to the twenty eight central New York Military Tract townships that his office mapped after the war to be given to veterans in payment for their military service More recently credit has been given to his clerk Robert Harpur apparently a reader of classical literature 14 De Witt did not leave much in the way of writings He wrote a treatise published in 1813 on perspective drawing and one in 1819 which argued for the establishment of a state agricultural college and also had some letters published on scientific topics 11 New York State map edit In 1802 De Witt produced a detailed map of the state of New York which was then engraved by Gideon Fairman 15 The map is said by historian Gerard Koeppel to have been meticulously drawn and to have set a standard for American cartography it is still considered the most important map ever made of the Empire State 16 The map shows New York state to be primarily uninhabited at least as far as white settler go the map does not indicate Native American encampments or lodges 3 Personal life editDe Witt was almost six foot 1 8 m tall and was described by his son as having a noble serious face resembling in some respects that of Genl Washington He was a devout Christian 3 De Witt was married three times In 1789 he married Elizabeth Lynott 1767 1793 the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Van Valkenburgh Lynott and they had two children In 1799 he married Jane Varick Hardenbergh d 1808 the widow of Abraham Hardenbergh 1756 1794 and the sister of Richard Varick the longtime mayor of New York City Their son Richard Varick De Witt became a prominent civil engineer Later Simeon married Susan Linn in October 1810 Linn was the daughter of the theologian William Linn The Linns were a literary family Susan wrote fiction and poetry her brother John Blair Linn was a poet and her sister Elizabeth married Charles Brockden Brown who wrote novels 11 De Witt owned a considerable amount of land in the Finger Lakes area and held four slaves at his residence in Albany New York but by 1810 he had freed them a common practice of the area They continued to work in his household De Witt died in Ithaca after having caught a very bad cold while traveling to his various properties in upstate New York 11 He was buried on his estate in Ithaca but his remains were subsequently moved to Albany Rural Cemetery 2 Exhibitions and collections editOn May 25 2010 the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History exhibited the oldest surviving Anglo American star map hand drawn in 1780 by Simeon De Witt in its Albert H Small Documents Gallery The map shows the stars visible from De Witt s post in New Jersey Drawing such a map as De Witt himself later said fostered an appreciation of the ever shifting scenery of the skies and all the gorgeous drapery of heaven During the Revolutionary War when cut off from trade with Europe colonists had to make their own maps De Witt assisted military geographer and surveyor general Robert Erskine in drawing the maps needed by George Washington Also on view are De Witt s drawing instruments and examples of European star maps and astrolabes The exhibition closed on December 5 2010 An existing online exhibition offers views of the star map and images of objects in the exhibition 17 Portfolio samples editThe following map sections were drawn by or under the direction of Simeon De Witt The originals were not colored as these are nbsp Central New York Military Tract c 1792 1793 nbsp Twenty Townships c 1792 1793 nbsp Otsego County New York c 1792 1793 nbsp George Croghan s Otsego Patents c 1790 nbsp Albany New York 1790References editNotes a b Koeppel 2015 p 78 a b c Simeon de Witt New Netherland Institute a b c d Koeppel 2015 p 79 Simeon De Witt American Philosophical Society Member History American Philosophical Society Retrieved 14 December 2020 Koeppel 2015 pp 78 79 An example of the rectangular grid laid down according to the 1785 law can be found at Ballon Hilary ed 2013 The Greatest Grid The Master Plan of Manhattan 1811 2011 New York Museum of the City of New York and Columbia University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 231 15990 6 Remarks Of The Commissioners For Laying Out Streets And Roads In The City Of New York Under The Act Of April 3 1807 Gray Christopher October 23 2005 Streetscapes The Commissioners Plan of 1811 Are Manhattan s Right Angles Wrong The New York Times Retrieved July 9 2010 Burrows Edwin G and Wallace Mike 1999 Gotham A History of New York City to 1898 New York Oxford University Press pp 419 22 ISBN 0 195 11634 8 Koeppel 2015 p 83 a b c d e f Koeppel 2015 p 80 Koeppel 2015 pp xix xxi and passim De Witt s map of Albany can be found at Ballon Hilary ed 2013 The Greatest Grid The Master Plan of Manhattan 1811 2011 New York Museum of the City of New York and Columbia University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 231 15990 6 Lemak Joseph 2008 Roman Grandeur in Central New York the Classical Tradition in a Nineteenth Century Pioneer Town New York History 89 3 245 Archived from the original on 2012 04 28 De Witt Simeon 1802 Map of the State of New York Library of Congress Koeppel 2015 p 79 quoting Allen David Y 2008 How Simeon De Witt Mapped New York State New York Map Society Cosmos in Miniature The Remarkable Star Map of Simeon De Witt National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 24 April 2012 Bibliography Koeppel Gerard 2015 City on a Grid How New York Became New York Boston Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 82284 1 Further reading Guthorn Peter J 1966 American Maps and Map Makers of the Revolution Monmouth Beach New Jersey Philip Freneau Press OCLC 1019460 Ristow Walter W December 1968 Simeon De Witt Pioneer American Cartographer The Canadian Cartographer 5 2 90 107 doi 10 3138 D235 1057 104G J643 ISSN 0317 7173 Schubert Frank N ed June 1988 The Nation Builders A Sesquicentennial History of the Corps of Topographical Engineers 1838 1863 EP 870 1 37 Fort Belvoir Va Office of History United States Army Corps of Engineers OCLC 17385113 Archived from the original on July 22 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Simeon De Witt 1802 Map of Central New York Biography of Simeon De Witt on the New York State Museum website Franklin and his Friends Names of Townships in the Military Tract Department of the Geographer to the Army Reenacting Unit Brigade of the American Revolution Hardenbergh family info at Christ Church Cemetery Manlius De Witt genealogy at Mr Jumbo Political offices Preceded byPhilip Schuyler New York State Surveyor General1784 1834 Succeeded byWilliam Campbell Academic offices Preceded byJohn Tayler Chancellor of the University of the State of New York1829 1834 Succeeded byStephen Van Rensselaer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simeon De Witt amp oldid 1192707013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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