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Sanborn maps

Sanborn maps are detailed maps of U.S. cities and towns in the 19th and 20th centuries. Originally published by The Sanborn Map Company (Sanborn), the maps were created to allow fire insurance companies to assess their total liability in urbanized areas of the United States. Since they contain detailed information about properties and individual buildings in approximately 12,000 U.S. cities and towns, Sanborn maps are valuable for documenting changes in the built environment of American cities over many decades.[1]

Type

1866 (1866)

The Sanborn Map Company

Available

LightBox

Sanborn held a monopoly over fire insurance maps for the majority of the 20th century, but the business declined as US insurance companies stopped using maps for underwriting in the 1960s. The last Sanborn fire maps were published on microfilm in 1977, but old Sanborn maps remain useful for historical research into urban geography. The license for the maps was acquired by land data company Environmental Data Resources (EDR), and EDR was acquired in 2019 by real estate services company LightBox.[2][3]

Description[edit]

The Sanborn maps themselves are large-scale lithographed street plans at a scale of 50 feet to one inch (1:600) on 21 by 25 inches (53 by 64 cm) sheets of paper. The maps were published in volumes, bound and then updated until the subsequent volume was produced. Larger cities would be covered by multiple volumes of maps. Between editions of published volumes, map updates were sent out as correction slips. Sanborn employees, called "pasters" or "correctors", would visit subscribers' offices to paste the slips on top of the old maps.[4][5][6]


The map volumes contain an enormous amount of information. They are organized as follows: a decorative title page; an index of streets and addresses; a ‘specials’ index with the names of churches, schools, businesses etc.; and a master index indicating the entirety of the mapped area and the sheet numbers for each large-scale map (usually depicting four to six blocks); and general information such as population, economy and prevailing wind direction.[4]


The maps include outlines of each building and outbuilding; the location of windows and doors; street names; street and sidewalk widths; property boundaries; fire walls; natural features (rivers, canals, etc.); railroad corridors; building use (sometimes even particular room uses); house and block number; as well as the composition of building materials including the framing, flooring, and roofing materials; the strength of the local fire department; indications of sprinkler systems; locations of fire hydrants; location of water and gas mains; and even the names of most public buildings, churches and businesses.[4]


Unique information includes the location of the homes of prominent individuals, brothels, and more ephemeral buildings including outhouses and stables.

Insurance underwriting[edit]

At the outset of the fire insurance industry, underwriters visited every property that was under consideration for coverage.[6] As insurance companies increased their service areas, it was no longer practical to send people to every insurable property to assess the risk. The Sanborn maps allowed them to underwrite properties from the office, pooling the cost with other insurance companies that also subscribed to the maps. It was said that at one time, insurance companies and their agents “relied upon them with almost blind faith”.[1]


The maps were utilized by insurance companies to determine the potential risk of a particular building, taking into account all of the information included on the map: building material, proximity to other buildings and fire departments, the location of gas lines, etc. The decision as to how much, if any, insurance would be offered to a customer was often determined solely through the use of a Sanborn map. The maps also allowed insurance companies to visualize their exposure in their coverage areas; when an agent sold a policy, he could color in the corresponding building on the map.

Walter Ristow

Oswald, Diane L. (1997). Fire Insurance Maps: Their History and Applications. College Station, Texas: Lacewing Press.

Ristow, Walter (1985). American Maps and Mapmakers. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.

Sanborn Map Company

. Library of Congress.

Introduction to the Sanborn Map Collection

Tom Gates (2001). . Kent State University, Libraries & Media Services. Retrieved July 1, 2011.

"Information About Digital Sanborn Maps"

Chris Nehls (2003). . Geostat Center and Department of History, University of Virginia. Retrieved July 1, 2011.

"Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps, A Brief History"

. Retrieved March 20, 2014.

"Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps"

. Archived from the original on May 15, 2021. Retrieved October 23, 2023.

"Historical Atlases Rescued from the Trash Could be a Boon to Historians"

. Digital Collections, Berkeley Library, University of California. Retrieved October 23, 2023.

"Sanborn"