John Johnson Collection
Collection Overview
The John Johnson Collection consists of 168 maps, surveys, and architectural drawings. The items included here represent every town in Chittenden County, as well as much of the rest of northwestern Vermont. The original items are in the Oversize...
Show moreThe John Johnson Collection consists of 168 maps, surveys, and architectural drawings. The items included here represent every town in Chittenden County, as well as much of the rest of northwestern Vermont. The original items are in the Oversize Maps and Surveys series in the John Johson Papers, which also contain seven cartons of records divided into the following broad categories: correspondence; business papers; architectural plans and drawings; maps and surveys; bound manuscripts; and miscellaneous papers. More information about the John Johnson Papers is available here - http://scfindingaids.uvm.edu/repositories/2/resources/1249.
John Johnson -- surveyor, millwright, master builder, civil engineer -- was born in Canterbury, New Hampshire on December 2, 1771. He moved to north-western Vermont in 1790 and eventually settled in Essex, where he helped build a dam and several mills at Hubbells Falls on the Winooski River. Johnson's practical versatility soon made him the most prominent surveyor and engineer in northern Vermont and Lower Canada, and the growing demand for his services led him to move to Burlington in 1809. He was named Surveyor General of Vermont in 1813, and four years later received the appointment of superintendent of the survey of the United States-Canada border from the Bay of Fundy to the head of the Connecticut River. Although the survey was suspended after two years, Johnson's work along the Maine-New Brunswick line in 1818-19 served as a partial basis for the final settlement of the border under the Webster-Ashburton Treaty in 1842.
Johnson maintained his several careers in the 1820's and 1830's. He designed or constructed many of the finest residences and public buildings in Chittenden County, served as a consultant on engineering projects as far away as North Carolina and Illinois, and continued to run surveys throughout northern Vermont. He also served again as Surveyor General of the state in the 1830's, and worked throughout that decade as an inspector for the Vermont Mutual Fire Insurance Company. Johnson died of sudden attack of erysipelas fever on April 30, 1842 at the age of seventy.
Show less
Related Archival Collection
Pages
- Title
- Burlington: Roads near Muddy Brook, South, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Burlington: South East block in part, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Burlington: Strong's lot, East of court house square, May 31, 1839
- Date Created
- 1839-05-31
- Title
- Burlington: Surveys down the River H. B. Stacy, North, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Burlington: Unidentified property on Goch Street, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Burlington: W. A. Griswold et al., undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Caldwell Manor, northern end of Lake Champlain, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Charlotte and Shelburne, plat map, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Charlotte, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Charlotte: Widow McNeil's third of the Estate of Charles McNeil, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Coit's Gore, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Colchester and Essex Joshua Stanton's original purchase of Ira Allen, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Colchester Falls, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Colchester mill lots, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- A Correct Map of Coventry Drawn By William Allen, Surveyor, 1810
- Date Created
- 1810
- Title
- Coventry, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Coventry, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Coventry, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Essex, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Georgia plot map, undated
- Date Created
- undated