Jefferson, Thomas (1743-1826). Notes on the State of Virginia. London: John Stockdale, 1787.
8vo (210 x 121 mm). Full-page woodcut of "Madison's cave" at C8v, several printed tables in the text, large folding table of Indian Tribes, large folding engraved map [see below]. (Some offsetting or toning to text, light marginal spotting.) Modern half calf antique, contemporary(?) marbled boards, preserving original endpapers and morocco lettering-piece(?).
FIRST LONDON EDITION, following the privately printed, virtually unobtainable first edition (Paris, 1782 [i.e., 1785]) and a poor French translation (Paris, 1786). This edition contains new accounts of events during and since the Revolution (when Jefferson served as Governor) and features the map engraved at Jefferson's request to incorporate the most up-to-date topographical data on the soon-to-be-opened Ohio Valley.
Two appendices are of considerable significance; these were issued as supplements with a few copies of the original edition, but are integral to this edition. Appendix II contains the full text of THE PROPOSED VIRGINIA CONSTITUTION, prepared by Jefferson and a committee of "revisers" in the summer of 1783. It was, Jefferson proudly declared, a legal code drafted in "the plain language of common sense" (quoted in R.B. Bernstein, Are We To Be A Nation: The Making of the Constitution, p.65). Appendix III contains THE VIRGINIA ACT FOR ESTABLISHING RELIGIOUS FREEDOM passed in 1786. This act was entirely drafted by Jefferson, who "rated it as second in importance only to the Declaration of Independence in such lists of his own achievements as he afterwards drew up" (Dumas Malone, Jefferson the Virginian, pp. 279-280). Pages 293-332 contain a bibliography of pamphlets published in Virginia relating to the controversy over taxation, plus a chronological catalogue of American state papers, largely treaties, compiled by Jefferson, certainly one of the earliest such bibliographical efforts. Church 1189 (first edition); Howes J-78; Sabin 35896; Sowerby 4, pp.101-30.
[Bound with as issued:]
A Map of the Country Between Albemarle Sound and Lake Erie, Comprehending the Whole of Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and Pensylvania Engraved for the Notes on Virginia. London: Engraved by S. J. Neele, No.352 Strand, London, Published as the Act directs July 13th, 1787 by John Stockdale. 600 x 584 mm., hand-colored in outline (discrete touch-up along upper horizontal fold verso, a few light spots of offsetting, bottom margin trimmed to neatline, cutting of engraver credits).
An important post-Revolutionary map of Virginia, first issued with the 1786 French edition of the Notes, derived from Fry and Jefferson's key map of Virginia (1751, additions in 1755), Nicholas Scull's of Pennsylvania, and Thomas Hitchins' of Virginia (1778). Jefferson was quite aware of the cartographic importance of the composite map: "When Jefferson, then minister to France, decided to publish his Notes on the State of Virginia, first in a French and then in an English edition of 1787, he had the [Fry & Jefferson] map re-engraved, for the occasion, speaking of it with justifiable pride as more valuable than the book in which it was to appear" (The Eye of Thomas Jefferson, ed. W. H. Adams, p.4). Phillips, p.984.
This lot is located in Chicago.