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A plan of the city of New-York & its environs to Greenwich, on the North or Hudsons River…, John Montrésor, 1766/1775. Courtesy of Richard H. Brown and Mary Jo Otsea.

Bring your lunch and learn more about George Washington's world, the Washington Presidential Library’s important map collection, and the American Revolutionary Geographies Online (ARGO) web portal in our ARGO Brown Bag lunch series.

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David M. Rubenstein Leadership Hall

George Washington Presidential Library

New York During the Stamp Act and Revolutionary War: The Montrésor Map of 1766/1775

Join Dr. Alexandra Montgomery, manager of the Library’s Center for Digital History and one of the ARGO project leads, to learn more about one of Early America’s most important cities, New York, from one of its most influential early maps: John Montrésor’s A Plan of the City of New-York. Washington owned a copy of this map, which was surveyed and drafted during the heady days of the stamp act riots and published at the beginning of the American Revolution.

Alexandra L. Montgomery

Dr. Alexandra L. Montgomery is Manager of the Center for Digital History at the Washington Presidential Library at George Washington's Mount Vernon and one of the leads for the ARGO project. She holds a PhD in early American history from the University of Pennsylvania. When she is not wrangling digital projects about George Washington, her work focuses on land speculation, settler expansion, and mapping in eighteenth century North America.