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National Boards => General Highway Talk => Topic started by: BigMattFromTexas on April 04, 2009, 07:40:27 PM

Title: Maps/Atlases
Post by: BigMattFromTexas on April 04, 2009, 07:40:27 PM
I have about 7 Texas maps,2 Atlas's,1 Kansas map, and 1 Iowa map not to mention about 20 city/metro area maps from hotels and TxDOT places whatever there called.
Just wondering how many maps and the rest yall have

       BigMatt
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: corco on April 04, 2009, 07:50:33 PM
I've got official state highway maps for all fifty states from the 2004-2006 run, plus several more recent ones. i have in the mail on the way a 2009 Quebec map. I also have official Washington State highway maps from 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1974, 1978, 1991, 1992, 1993, 2006-7, 2008-9, full Rand McNallys from 1994, 1996, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, and a few late 40's Washington-Oregon-Idaho gas station maps (Signal, Richfield, Mobil). I've also got a 1993 Gousha and a 2001ish Canadian road atlas
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: un1 on April 04, 2009, 09:36:47 PM
RandMcNally Maps:
- Minneapolis - St Paul
- Duluth, MN
- Maidson, WI

MapArt Maps:
- Thunder Bay, ON
- Sudbury, ON
- Toronto
- Ottawa
- Regina, SK
- Vancouver, BC
- 3 Ontario Roads atlas'.
- Manitoba (including Winnipeg)

CAA Maps:
- Interstate 35
- Interstate 75
- Interstate 24
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: ComputerGuy on April 04, 2009, 10:02:20 PM
All WSDOT maps, 1993-present

All Randy McNally atlases, 2005-present
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: mightyace on April 04, 2009, 11:50:54 PM
I've never inventoried mine but I have nearly all Rand McNally's from since the early 70s.  Plus I have a large collection of official state maps and gas station maps.  I got both granddad's collections so I have stuff that goes back to the 1930s.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on April 05, 2009, 08:10:06 AM
I have several Rand McNally atlases (large scale); 1987, 2007, 2008 and 2009 plus dozens of State Highway maps. I also have a Georgia wall map hanging in my kitchen  :cool:
(https://www.aaroads.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi39.tinypic.com%2F2zf5oxl.jpg&hash=872f0a189851cb3101360e96b09d8da4b13a1c7c)
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: BigMattFromTexas on April 05, 2009, 09:59:45 AM
i got a Mississippi, Kansas, Oregon, Washington State, and a couple other state maps last night of the DOT websites
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: deathtopumpkins on April 05, 2009, 10:55:41 AM
Heheh Chris you're not the only one. I used to have a jumbo map of the southeast US on my wall that I plotted out everywhere I've been on, as well as used to track hurricanes. It got a bit torn up trying to take down when I moved though...
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: corco on April 05, 2009, 12:23:40 PM
Yep- I have giant maps of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, Utah, and Nebraska up on my walls where I cross out a route every time I drive it
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Bryant5493 on April 05, 2009, 01:15:34 PM
Re: Chris' post
I've got that same Georgia map in my room. Two actually. I also have a map of Indiana, Nevada, Virginia, North and South Carolina, Arkansas and Missouri. I also have a map of Fulton County, GA, as well.


Be well,

Bryant
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: yanksfan6129 on April 05, 2009, 05:57:08 PM
I own only one atlas: 2007 Rand McNally

eventually .  .  .
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Sykotyk on April 05, 2009, 09:15:44 PM
I've never saved any. I had a 1994 RM atlas, that I wish I had kept. Mine get abused from wear and tear (especially when out driving) that I go through many every year.

Wish I had kept that one, though. Would've been nice to see all the updates from then until now. One in particular is US78 in Mississippi and Alabama becoming a limited access highway.

Sykotyk
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Tom on June 20, 2009, 11:08:04 AM
I once had road maps (official highway, AAA, + gas station maps) from the 30's through the 60's that I collected, and 1 of Jackson, Michigan in a green folder type from 1927.  After I moved away from home, I had planned 2 get them out of there someday, but my mother had other ideas, and I can only hope that they're in someone's possession and not in a landfill.  I probably can never replace every single 1, but some I'm currently looking 2 replace are a 1962 Ohio Official Highway Map, 1966 Hammond Road Atlas, 1966 + 1967 Rand McNally Road Atlases, 1967 Rand McNally Interstate Road Atlas, 1969 Rand McNally Pocket Mini Road Atlas, and 1971 Rand McNally Road Atlas. :coffee:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mapsandatlases/?yguid=148538425 (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mapsandatlases/?yguid=148538425)
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Alps on June 20, 2009, 12:09:50 PM
I showed a road enthusiast who finally met one of us for the first time my old map collection.  I have about 50-60 current maps of states, provinces, regions, cities, countries.  Then I have about 15-20 old NJ maps and another 20-30 retired maps that have been supplanted by newer versions or are just otherwise old.  So I'd say over 100 total.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on June 20, 2009, 05:12:19 PM
Wow, that was a "quick check"?  :-D

I just ordered the 2010 Rand McNally Large Scale atlas. They sell it for 28 dollars here, seems more expensive than in the US, but many road atlases in Europe are too expensive IMO, 30 - 40 dollars for nationwide atlases are no exception.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Hot Rod Hootenanny on June 24, 2009, 03:23:59 AM
Quote from: Bryant5493 on April 05, 2009, 01:15:34 PM
Re: Chris' post
I've got that same Georgia map in my room. Two actually. I also have a map of Indiana, Nevada, Virginia, North and South Carolina, Arkansas and Missouri. I also have a map of Fulton County, GA, as well.


Be well,

Bryant

I used to keep a 1925 map of Columbus along with a 1932 map of Suburban Philadelphia (aka The Main Line) in my bedroom along with a map of the Louisiana State Univ. campus in my kitchen.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on June 24, 2009, 01:05:21 PM
What happened to the Rand McNally 2010 large scale road atlas? My order was cancelled at my Dutch retailer, but I can't find it on the Rand McNally site either...  :confused:
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: florida on June 29, 2009, 02:42:28 PM
This might be off-topic, but I didn't want to make a new thread...

In the '95 to '97-ish Rand McNally's, did they have insets for Rochester, NH and Dover, NH? I swear I remember seeing those, but can't find them, and most of you guys have these atlases :biggrin:
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on June 29, 2009, 02:51:42 PM
After another 2 failed orders, and no sign of them on the Rand McNally site, I finally got an email that my 2010 Large Scale atlas has been shipped. Hope to find it in the mail tomorrow.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: deathtopumpkins on June 29, 2009, 02:59:21 PM
Chris: I actually just picked up that exact Atlas from Barnes & Noble this morning...  :-D
I had to ask for it though, they didn't have any atlases stocked at the time, much less my preferred brand...  :rolleyes:

And you're right about it not being on the website... odd.  :-/
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on June 30, 2009, 12:52:14 PM
It came in the mail today  :clap:

I see the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis is still shown as U/C in the 2010 atlas, weird, because it opened a couple of months ago.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: SSOWorld on June 30, 2009, 02:46:00 PM
Quote from: Chris on June 30, 2009, 12:52:14 PM
It came in the mail today  :clap:

I see the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis is still shown as U/C in the 2010 atlas, weird, because it opened a couple of months ago.
Must be a different release - I glanced at an atlas in a Wal-mart and it showed completed
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: BigMattFromTexas on June 30, 2009, 08:55:03 PM
I got some more maps: Del Rio, San Angelo, El Paso, Greater El Paso, Big Bend National Park (topographical), and Des Moines. Im gonna get a Rand McNally DFW map and a Houston city map. A greater Houston map was $6.00 and the Dallas map was $9.28, It would be cheaper to get a RMN map from Wal-Mart
BigMatt
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: BigMattFromTexas on July 01, 2009, 06:36:38 PM
Quote from: froggie on July 01, 2009, 06:43:09 AM
Not a big fan of Rand McNally anymore.  I've long gravitated towards the American Map style of cartography.  Even using something similar to that in a few of my GIS projects...
I noticed a couple mess-up on the Rand McNally San Angelo map: First-off they messed up my street name :( , then they said a San Angelo school was WAY away from where it is, i could say more but im not just gonna go on and on about that. :)
BigMatt
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on July 02, 2009, 03:21:07 AM
IMO, the Rand McNally Large Scale atlases could use some more detailed state maps, for Texas, Michigan and "empty" states like Idaho, North Dakota and Maine.

Also, metro maps should be bigger, most of them are still the size of 20 years ago, while cities have grown exponentially since then. For instance, the Rand McNally atlas only shows the I-285 area of Atlanta detailed, while the city has grown much bigger since.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: SSOWorld on July 02, 2009, 11:10:44 AM
I've always wondered why cities like Prescott, Bullhead City, Sierra Vista, AZ, Branson, MO have their own maps in the Rand McNally atlas (Likely because of being tourist attractions I bet)

Prescott - no idea
Bullhead City - Laughlin NV's accross the border
Sierra Vista - Tombstone/OK Corral nearby
Branson - well, it's the Las Vegas/NYC of the Midwest

I also wonder why National Park insets often don't show a larger view than the main map itself, esp with California's parks (Yosemite, Kings Canyon and Sequoia), Crater Lake, Mount Rainier, and Glacier

And what's with the Black Hills region in SD?

At one point they did an inset of the Outer Banks of NC - but that was dropped after a couple years.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on July 02, 2009, 01:19:06 PM
I have an '87 edition which has only a third of the pages they have now. And that's also a Large Scale one.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Tom on October 05, 2010, 05:09:00 PM
I've read the 2011 Rand McNally Road Atlas shows the old routing for U.S. Route 66 (shows a gray box with US-66 shield inside of it). :coffee:
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Chris on March 31, 2011, 11:09:31 AM
http://store.randmcnally.com/road-atlas/rand-mcnally-road-atlases.html (http://store.randmcnally.com/road-atlas/rand-mcnally-road-atlases.html)

2012 Rand McNally will be available from April 5th.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: kurumi on March 31, 2011, 01:28:10 PM
About 40 CT official maps dating to 1930 (http://www.kurumi.com/roads/maps/ctofficial.html), about 40 New England oil company maps from c. 1926 to the 1960s, and possibly 100 other maps, miscellaneous, US states, NZ, Singapore, etc.

Notable maps include a Japanese Atlas ("Super Mapple") purchased in Shinjuku, a CT Tercentenary map with about 20 errors (e.g. CT 160 marked as CT 60), and a 49-state atlas issued in 1959 (with CT's portion about the size of a thumbprint).
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: ftballfan on April 12, 2011, 11:07:16 AM
I have a lot of old oil company and official state maps ranging from the early 1960s into the 1980s. And also some old Rand McNally atlases, like 1978 and 1990.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: mightyace on April 12, 2011, 06:02:40 PM
I just picked up a number of things at a Borders store that is closing in Cool Springs.

Rand McNally:
Johnson City, Bristol and Kingsport Street Guide (1st Edition, 2008) - useful on Bristol race trips
Knoxville Street Guide (4th Edition, 2008) - also useful on Bristol trips

American Map:
Chattanooga (2008)
Chicagoland Seven County (2008)
Memphis (2008)

Handy Map of Nashville, TN (2005 Edition)

All were brand new and just $4.99 each except for the Chicagoland one which was $3.00!

and last but not least

GIS for Dummies
Title: Re: Maps/Atlas's
Post by: Landshark on April 15, 2011, 07:12:42 PM
I have a whole drawer full of just maps.  My dad collected maps, so I had a nice head start.

DeLorme Atlases - Alaska, Washington (x3), Oregon, Northern California, Southern California, Montana, Colorado, Illinois, Michigan, New York, New Hampshire, Maine, Florida

Benchmark (http://www.benchmarkmaps.com/) (I love these!) - Washington, Oregon, California, Arizona

Rand McNally -  dozens of road atlases from the 70's through 2011 and a box of city maps (most west coast mid and large cities, dozens of larger eastern cities)

AAA (I get my $'s worth from just the free maps!) - dozen of states, most west coast cities (inc. maps from 70's and 80's), dozens of cities in rest of the US

Official Natl. Park Maps - Olympic, Mt. Rainier, Yellowstone, Glacier

State DOT maps - WA, OR (incl. a '38), MT, NY, PA

Other maps - King of the Road (west coast cities), Trakker (Orlando), GM Johnson (NW cities), Gousha (NE cities),  MapArt (British Columba cities), UniversalMap (Denver, Scottsdale), Visual Encyclopia (Pburgh), ADC (Philly), Patton's (Philly), Chevron (WA & OR, pre-Interstate)
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: Michael in Philly on June 03, 2011, 10:32:51 AM
Here's sad news:  what may be (or have been) the best map store in the Northeast is closing:

http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/cambridge/2011/06/the_globe_corner_store_closing.html?comments=all

And I just happen to have planned a trip up there next week....
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: 1995hoo on June 03, 2011, 11:21:32 AM
I don't keep many maps around because we just don't  have space for them and we don't need them in the car due to the sat-navs. I keep a 2005 Rand McNally atlas that I use to highlight the roads I've travelled in North America (at least, the roads significant enough to appear in the atlas). I had a French roommate one year of law school who had a map of the USA that he used in that manner and that's where I got the idea. I enjoy looking at old maps to see what has changed in what period of time, though.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 11:31:31 AM
I always use maps for my strategic navigation - a GPS will tell me that the fastest way to get from here to Portland is to take I-5.  It will not tell me that I can take US-97 and then cross back across the Cascades on OR-58 as a scenic option.  But if I look at a map, I can see the big picture and plan out a routing which takes me to places I have not yet been.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: 1995hoo on June 03, 2011, 11:45:07 AM
Quote from: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 11:31:31 AM
I always use maps for my strategic navigation - a GPS will tell me that the fastest way to get from here to Portland is to take I-5.  It will not tell me that I can take US-97 and then cross back across the Cascades on OR-58 as a scenic option.  But if I look at a map, I can see the big picture and plan out a routing which takes me to places I have not yet been.

I sometimes look at maps online for that, or the atlas I mentioned. Thankfully, though, the sat-nav in my car is not solely touchscreen-operated–it's built in and has a joystick as well, so when I'm in stopped traffic or stopped a red light I've sometimes zoomed it out and moved it around to figure out alternates. Being able to do that has proven a lot more valuable than the touchscreen ones when we've been stuck in traffic in unfamiliar areas. But yeah, in terms of figuring out an overall new route and how the roads relate to each other a sat-nav isn't really an adequate replacement for conventional maps. I tend to use Google Maps quite a bit in advance for just that sort of reason.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 12:09:53 PM
which GPS do you have?  I've got a TomTom One and, while it is more than adequate for last-mile navigation (that winding set of residential streets for which even my state atlas doesn't have the details), it is cumbersome to try to bring up, and use, the pan and scan feature, so I never do, grabbing the map instead.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: 1995hoo on June 03, 2011, 12:27:09 PM
Quote from: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 12:09:53 PM
which GPS do you have?  I've got a TomTom One and, while it is more than adequate for last-mile navigation (that winding set of residential streets for which even my state atlas doesn't have the details), it is cumbersome to try to bring up, and use, the pan and scan feature, so I never do, grabbing the map instead.

My Acura has the built-in device that was an option on the third-generation (2004—08) TL. My wife has a Garmin and that device is not at all useful for trying to pan around because it's solely a touchscreen. The joystick on mine makes it a bit easier. True, it's still not necessarily the easiest way to plan in advance, but it's served me pretty well on trips–last summer, for example, we got stuck in a backup on I-70 in Pennsylvania en route to Bedford. Using the joystick made it easy to determine that there was a back road at the next exit that would eventually connect through to the Breezewood area, so we went that way. The people who had exclusively touch-screens evidently couldn't scroll around as easily and I didn't see any of them going the same way.

Picture of my dashboard taken a few years ago. The joystick is the round silver thing below the sat-nav screen. I use either the joystick or the voice-controls because I don't like smudging up the screen with fingerprints. (Obviously the map can zoom in a lot closer than it's set in this picture.)

(https://www.aaroads.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi31.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fc378%2F1995hoo%2FSpring2005cardetailing039.jpg&hash=19eb409be3eb1097a3de7bee88b66676c1334e87)
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: froggie on June 03, 2011, 12:51:13 PM
Forget GPS.  DeLorme is my friend.  SatNav is useful for creating a track of where you've been going (I have a handheld GPS that I use for such a purpose, whether bike/hike trips or roadtrips), but it's less than useful if your destination is random and/or doesn't involve a major highway.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 01:02:16 PM
Quote from: froggie on June 03, 2011, 12:51:13 PM
Forget GPS.  DeLorme is my friend.  SatNav is useful for creating a track of where you've been going (I have a handheld GPS that I use for such a purpose, whether bike/hike trips or roadtrips), but it's less than useful if your destination is random and/or doesn't involve a major highway.


it is incredibly useful for that last mile.  I don't use it as much for roadgeeking purposes, but when I have to get to someone's house and they live in one of those 1970s neighborhoods that is a twisty little maze of passages, all alike ...
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: 1995hoo on June 03, 2011, 01:31:55 PM
Quote from: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 01:02:16 PM
Quote from: froggie on June 03, 2011, 12:51:13 PM
Forget GPS.  DeLorme is my friend.  SatNav is useful for creating a track of where you've been going (I have a handheld GPS that I use for such a purpose, whether bike/hike trips or roadtrips), but it's less than useful if your destination is random and/or doesn't involve a major highway.


it is incredibly useful for that last mile.  I don't use it as much for roadgeeking purposes, but when I have to get to someone's house and they live in one of those 1970s neighborhoods that is a twisty little maze of passages, all alike ...

It's useful for a couple of other things as well, I think, such as finding nearby ATMs or gas stations (I'd rather just hit the button and say "Find nearest ATM" than screw around with a cell phone) and for backup while driving–you know, if you hit a traffic jam in an unfamiliar place you can hit the button and say "Detour" and it will give an alternate route without having to mess around with a map while in traffic. Of course the alternate route isn't always ideal–there are some back roads the thing just inexplicably refuses to use. But often those back roads don't show up on any map that I'd be likely to have around anyway.

But the point about planning out an overall trip using a more conventional map, or something like Google Maps if you don't have a paper one handy, is certainly very valid. One thing I like with Google Maps as opposed to the sat-nav is that you can drag the route around to select different roads to get a sense for how much longer or shorter it estimates your trip will be. My wife isn't particularly tolerant of long side trips taken solely for the purpose of going a different way, so I like to have an idea of time and distance because I have a sense for the limits of what she'll put up with at any given time. (Obviously there are exceptions for detours in case of roadwork or traffic or the like, but if I go 150 miles out of the way just for the sake of clinching a road or something like that it's about as welcome as a fart in church.)
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: agentsteel53 on June 03, 2011, 01:58:30 PM
I do like the ability of Google Maps to drag the route around to estimate distances - but it shares, with the GPS, the absence of "seeing the forest instead of the trees".  I can either zoom in and get details, or I can get a very undetailed big picture, but not both, which I seem to be able to do when I look at a printed page of a map which shows an entire state.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: PAHighways on June 03, 2011, 03:36:19 PM
Quote from: 1995hoo on June 03, 2011, 12:27:09 PMMy Acura has the built-in device that was an option on the third-generation (2004—08) TL. My wife has a Garmin and that device is not at all useful for trying to pan around because it's solely a touchscreen. The joystick on mine makes it a bit easier. True, it's still not necessarily the easiest way to plan in advance, but it's served me pretty well on trips–last summer, for example, we got stuck in a backup on I-70 in Pennsylvania en route to Bedford. Using the joystick made it easy to determine that there was a back road at the next exit that would eventually connect through to the Breezewood area, so we went that way.

You got to experience some of old PA 126, if the route you took went right into Breezewood.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: 1995hoo on June 03, 2011, 03:41:23 PM
Yup, it was indeed old PA-126. Nice diversion. We got off I-70 at the Amaranth exit and eventually got back on at Crystal Springs instead of going all the way to Breezewood. 

What it really boils down to for me is just not having a good place to store a lot of paper maps. So I've learned to adjust to other ways.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: brownpelican on June 03, 2011, 11:44:29 PM
I don't have near the number of maps today than I had back from 1999-2004 (I was going between Jackson, Miss., The Bay Area and Upstate South Carolina). At the peak, I had the 1999 and 2003 Rand McNally atlases, 1999 versions of every Thomas Map available of the Bay Area (GOOD.ASS.MAPS), 1999 maps of Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas, a late 80s Exxon map of New Orleans/Roads to New Orleans (Ark.-La.-Miss-W. Ala.-E. Texas), a Jackson, Miss. city map from a local phone book (Not BellSouth), maps of South Carolina and the cities of Greenwood, Greenville, Anderson and Columbia.

Now, I have the 2010 Rand McNally atlas, state maps of Oklahoma, Missouri, Arizona, Arkansas, Michigan, Alabama, North Carolina, Texas, Tennessee and Wisconsin; city maps of Houston, Baton Rouge (including one from 1987), New Orleans, Hammond, La.; and St. Tammany Parish, La. My dad has large posterized maps of Baton Rouge from the mid- to late 80s...and I want to find them.

I remember throwing away a gem back in high school: A late 70s or early 80s Allstate Motor Club road map with route to North Carolina highlighted.
Title: Re: Maps/Atlases
Post by: mjb2002 on June 06, 2011, 04:02:01 PM
I have state maps of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. I also have an atlas that have every state and providence in North America.

I am not a big fan of state-wide maps and atlases, though, because they do not have enough detail.

I also have one atlas of the highways and streets of North Carolina's counties and three atlases containing information for all 46 of South Carolina's counties. Those maps have better detail than state-wide atlases and maps, but does not have local sidestreets in most cases.

So, I primarily collect county maps.

Every county map I have, except for three of them, are from South Carolina.

I have two maps of Augusta-Richmond County, Ga. and one of Savannah-Chatham County, Ga. -- which also includes Hilton Head Island.

I have maps of Aiken County (5), Barnwell County (3), Lexington County, Richland County, Orangeburg County (5), Dorchester County, Berkeley County, Florence County, Horry County (2), Beaufort County (3), Hampton County, Colleton County (2), Spartanburg County, and Anderson County.

I also have city maps of Augusta, Ga.; North Augusta; Barnwell; Blackville; Williston (2); Denmark; Bamberg; Greenville; Columbia; Charleston; and Myrtle Beach.