Old Maps of Rouse, Anderson for Metal Detecting
Plan your next treasure hunt with 7 historic maps of Rouse. Find old homesites, ghost towns, trails, and gathering spots that may be lost to time — perfect for identifying promising metal detecting locations.
- Locate forgotten sites: Uncover places like long-lost settlements, abandoned rail lines, or gathering spots.
- Plan better hunts: Use map overlays combined with LiDAR or satellite views to narrow in on historically rich areas.
- Made for detectorists: Thousands of hobbyists use these maps to discover relics, coins, and hidden history.
Use these historic maps to boost your research and find new opportunities beneath the surface of Rouse.
Rouse, Anderson maps
(7)- 1940 Map of Upson, 1961 Print1940 Upson1961 Print · USGSIron County’s timber and rail history is captured here at the start of the 1940s, when the northwoods were dotted with logging camps and active sidings. Genealogists and historians can trace family ties at Hillside Cem or locate the distinct footprints of Iron Belt and the remote LeClair Camp.2 unique versions available
- 1943 Map of Upson1943 Upson1943 Print · USGSIron County during the early 1940s reveals a landscape shaped by mining, timber, and the railroads that served them. Genealogists and local historians can trace family-named outposts like McIver Camp and LeClair Camp or locate burials at Hillside Cem.2 unique versions available
- 1953 Map of Ashland, 1964 Print1953 Ashland1964 Print · USGSNorthern Wisconsin's lakefront and timberlands are seen here in the mid-1950s, showing the intersection of industrial rail lines and vast wilderness. Genealogists and historians can trace the Soo Line through rail towns like Mellen or locate family roots in the Apostle Islands and Bad River Indian Reservation.3 unique versions available
- 1956 Map of Upson, 1957 Print1956 Upson1957 Print · USGSIron County's Northwoods are captured here in the mid-1950s, showing a landscape defined by timber history and rail. Researchers can trace the Soo Line through Upson and Rouse, or locate remote sites like McIver Camp.2 unique versions available
- 1958 Map of Ashland1958 Ashland1958 Print · USGSCoastal Wisconsin and the Michigan borderlands meet here in the late fifties, dominated by the timbered expanses and iron-rich ranges. Genealogists can trace family footprints in settlements like Odanah and Montreal, or locate landmarks such as the Coast Guard Station and Agricultural Experiment Station.
- 1980 Map of Ironwood1980 Ironwood1980 Print · USGSThe Michigan-Wisconsin borderlands appear in the late twentieth century as a landscape defined by iron mining and deep forests. Researchers can trace the rail-and-river economy through the Soo Line and Chicago and North Western tracks connecting Mellen, Glidden, and Hurley.
- 2022 Map of Upson, 2022 Print2022 Upson2022 Print · USGSIron County’s timber and mineral country is documented here during the early twenty-first century, centered on the Gogebic Range. Researchers can trace the legacy of northern settlements at Upson and Rouse or explore the drainage of the Potato River.
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