1942 Map of Daulton, 1954 Print
Loading...
Loading map...

1942 Map of Daulton

USGS Topo · Published 1954

About this map

The Fresno River drainage defines this central California landscape during the early 1940s, a period when the area was characterized by large ranching tracts and scattered rural waypoints. Daulton serves as the primary rail point along the Southern Pacific line in the northwest, while the interior is marked by historic stopping places like Sixmile House and the Adobe Ranch. The map reveals a transition from the lower foothills near Little Table Mountain to the river bottomlands, connected by early transit routes such as the Madera and Oneals Road. Genealogists and local historians can trace the early road network, including Hildreth Road and the crossing at Hensley Bridge, which provided essential links between isolated homesteads and the growing town of Madera to the southwest. This survey, revised just after the start of World War II, documents the rural infrastructure of Madera County before modern development altered these traditional ranching boundaries.


Find a feature on this map

13 named features on this map. Tap any name to fly to it.

Don’t see what you’re looking for? This feature index may not catch every label — zoom into the map to look around manually.


Map Details

Date Portrayed1942
Date Published1954
PublisherU.S. Geological Survey
Map TypeTopographic
Scale1:24,000
Physical Dimensions22 x 26.8 inches

Editions of this 1942 Daulton Map

This is the sole edition of this map. No revisions or reprints were ever made.


Historical Maps of Daulton Through Time

220 maps found


Featured Locations


Source Details

CopyrightPublic Domain