1922 Map of Charleston School
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1922 Map of Charleston School

USGS Topo · Published 1922

About this map

Charleston School stands as a central landmark in this 1919 survey of the Merced County landscape, situated near a burgeoning network of agricultural infrastructure. The territory is defined by the massive San Joaquin and Kings River Canal, which snakes through the eastern half of the sheet, supported by a dense grid of smaller irrigation ditches that signal the region's intensive reclamation for farming. West of the canal, the terrain shifts dramatically from the flat valley floor to the rising foothills, where the seasonal drainage of Ortigalita Creek and Laguna Seca Creek flows down from the higher elevations. This map, published under the direction of George Otis Smith and State Engineer W.F. McClure, illustrates the precise moment when water management began to reshape the Central Valley. Beyond the schoolhouse and the canal, the area is crossed by local routes like Swamp Road, indicating the challenging nature of the low-lying lands before modern drainage.


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Map Details

Date Portrayed1922
Date Published1922
PublisherU.S. Geological Survey
Map TypeTopographic
Scale1:31,680
Physical Dimensions16.4 x 19.8 inches

Editions of this 1922 Charleston School Map


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Source Details

CopyrightPublic Domain