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A handsome full sized home library globe, with Aesthetic movement ebonized tripod stand that works as well with 20th Century modern décor as in traditional Victorian rooms. For example, New York interior designer Charles Pavarini III incorporated this globe in an elegant modern room setting for the 2005 Designer Showhouse of New Jersey.
Geographical entities are in tones of in tones of green, dark pink, light pink, blue, with some outlined in red, the oceans are uncolored. “Dacotah” is shown as one territory and the Atlantic cable is indicated by a continuous black line between Ireland and Newfoundland. Various keys, information, and the maker’s name are printed on the horizon band rather than directly on the globe.
This Joslin 16-inch globe was originally designed by Charles Copley (fl. 1843-69), a map and globe publisher and engraver working in Brooklyn, New York. He is well known for his sea charts, published by Charles Copley and Sons in the mid 19th century. In 1852, he copyrighted a pair of 16-inch terrestrial and celestial globes and received a gold medal for them at the Fair of the American Institute in New York in the same year. In the 1870s and 1880s, Copley’s globes were revised and reissued by the prominent American globe makers Gilman Joslin and the Franklin group.
Read more about Joslin on our Guide to Globe Makers.
Maker’s information on horizon band: IMPROVED GLOBE, BOSTON. MANUFACTURED BY GILMAN JOSLIN,/ CORRECTED TO DATE.