Never Was Magazine (Posts tagged Maps)

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

Countries That Almost Existed: Intermarium

Countries that almost existed: Intermarium

Intermarium map
Map of the proposed Intermarium, a federation of Central and Eastern Europe We’re starting a new series today: countries that almost existed. First up: the Intermarium. Literally “between seas”, this was a Polish proposal for the federalization of Central and European Europe. (more…)

View On WordPress

Countries that almost existed History Maps
Kennard Thomson New York map

Map of T. Kennard Thomson’s proposal to expand the size of New York, from Popular Science, January 1916

Remember the plan to fill in the Hudson River? In 1934, Modern Mechanix reported that Norman Sper, a publicist and engineering scholar, had proposed damming the river on the north and south sides of Manhattan in order to create ten square miles of new land and connect the island with New Jersey.

There were also proposals to reclaim land on the other side of Manhattan.

The first such plan came from T. Kennard Thomson, an engineer, in 1911. He suggested filling in the East River and extending Manhattan to the south. The Harlem River would be widened and a New East River dug east of Brooklyn to empty in the Jamaica Bay. The Brooklyn Navy Yard, which would lose its access to the sea, was to be relocated to the mouth of the New York Bay.

Like Sper, Thomson recognized that an effort like this would be enormously expensive. But he also foresaw huge rewards, writing in the January 1916 edition of Popular Science that the returns would “quickly pay off the debt incurred, and then would commence to swell the city’s money bags until New York would be the richest city in the world.”

New York East River reclamation plan by John Harris

Visualization of John A. Harris’ plan to drain New York’s East River, from Popular Science, December 1924

Thomson revisited his plan in 1930, when it became a little less ambitious. Called “A New Manhattan,” it zeroed in on the idea of extending the island to the south.

In the meantime, somebody else had taken Thomson’s idea to drain the East River and run with it: John A. Harris, deputy police commissioner at the time, proposed in 1924 to transform the waterway into a transportation artery, including roads, subway lines and parking spaces, in order to relief congestion in Manhattan.

Harris envisaged the construction of two dams: one near the Williamsburg Bridge and one near Hell Gate. The riverbed would be “bridged with levels supported by steel uprights,” thereby connecting the boroughs of Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens, Popular Science reported that year. Midway along the thoroughfare would be erected an imposing city hall and community center.

“A New Manhattan”: Proposals to Drain the East River Remember the plan to fill in the Hudson River? In 1934, Modern Mechanix reported that Norman Sper, a publicist and engineering scholar, had proposed damming the river on the north and south sides of Manhattan in order to create ten square miles of new land and connect the island with New Jersey.
History Maps Popular Science Unbuilt New York

Filling in the Hudson to Rebuild New York

Manhattan New York map
An airship hovers over Manhattan, New York. From Modern Mechanix, March 1934 In March 1934, Modern Mechanix reported on a plan to fill in the Hudson River and connect the island of Manhattan with New Jersey. The plan, proposed by publicist and engineering scholar Norman Sper, involved damming the Hudson River on the north and south sides of Manhattan and widening the Harlem River in order to…

View On WordPress

History Maps Modern Mechanix Unbuilt New York

The Soviet Plan to Thaw the Arctic

Soviet Arctic dam map
Depiction of a Soviet plan to dam the Arctic, from Popular Mechanics, June 1956 Nowadays we worry the Arctic is getting too hot. Half a century ago, the Soviets wished it was warmer — and they thought of a way to thaw the frigid North. Popular Mechanics reported in June 1956 that Soviet authorities were considering building a 55-mile dam between Alaska and Siberia. The barrier would keep icebergs…

View On WordPress

Future Past Maps Popular Mechanics Soviet

The World of The Man in the High Castle

The World of The Man in the High Castle: Alternate history #maps

The Man in the High Castle map
Map of the German and Japanese Empires seen in Amazon’s The Man in the High Castle (2016) Last year, we featured a map of North America from the title credits of Amazon’s The Man in the High Castle, which shows the United States divided into German and Japanese zones. The second season of the series, which is also based on Philip K. Dick’s 1963 alternate-history novel and started streaming in…

View On WordPress

Maps Second World War The Man in the High Castle