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Lot 22
TABLETOP GLOBE; SCHEDLER, Joseph. J. Schedler's Terrestrial Globe. [Jersey City]: J. Schedler, November 24, 1868.
22 October 2014, 13:00 EDT
New YorkSold for US$937.50 inc. premium
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TABLETOP GLOBE; SCHEDLER, Joseph.
J. Schedler's Terrestrial Globe. [Jersey City]: J. Schedler, November 24, 1868.
A 6" (15.4 cm) diameter, 12¾ tall terrestrial globe in full iron meridian circle on cast iron stand, with central baluster turned post on round base with three foliate feet. 12 chromolithographed paper gores with polar calottes, the equatorial graduated in degrees, the ecliptic graduated in days clockwise and anticlockwise, the antarctic with partial coastline, Central Africa marked as "unexplored," the oceans showing the currents, shipping routes and telegraph cables. Spotting and browning to gores, heavier over Asia and the Pacific.
"The German immigrant Joseph Schedler (fl.1850-80) started producing maps and globes in the 1850s. He carried off three medals with his globes: at the Paris International Exhibition of 1867, the American Institute fair of 1869 and the Vienna International Exhibition on 1873 ... In 1875, he published An Illustrated Manual for the use of the Terrestrial and Celestial Globes ... Schedler was one of the first to draw in shipping lines telegraph lines, ocean currents, depth figures and lines of the same magnetic variation" (Dekker Globes from the Western World pp 142-143).
A 6" (15.4 cm) diameter, 12¾ tall terrestrial globe in full iron meridian circle on cast iron stand, with central baluster turned post on round base with three foliate feet. 12 chromolithographed paper gores with polar calottes, the equatorial graduated in degrees, the ecliptic graduated in days clockwise and anticlockwise, the antarctic with partial coastline, Central Africa marked as "unexplored," the oceans showing the currents, shipping routes and telegraph cables. Spotting and browning to gores, heavier over Asia and the Pacific.
"The German immigrant Joseph Schedler (fl.1850-80) started producing maps and globes in the 1850s. He carried off three medals with his globes: at the Paris International Exhibition of 1867, the American Institute fair of 1869 and the Vienna International Exhibition on 1873 ... In 1875, he published An Illustrated Manual for the use of the Terrestrial and Celestial Globes ... Schedler was one of the first to draw in shipping lines telegraph lines, ocean currents, depth figures and lines of the same magnetic variation" (Dekker Globes from the Western World pp 142-143).

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