Containing A Description of the Several Counties, Towns, Villages, Post Offices, Rivers, Creeks, Mountains, valleys, Etc. in the State of Tennessee. Its Civil Divisions, Resources, Population, Etc. and a Condensed History From the Earliest Settlements Down to the Rise of the COnvention in the Year 1834.
Map of Missouri created by David Burr in 1834. Shows counties along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. Land to the west of the state is labelled "Missouri Terr.", Map published in "New and Universal Atlas Comprising Separate Maps of all the Empires, Kingdoms and States throughout the World and Forming a Distinct Atlas of the United States." New York: Stone, 1836.
The first of these maps was from a French school atlas which gave clear information on names of waterways, lakes, mountain ranges, native tribes, along with cities and states. The trans-Mississippi, in an interesting French administrative style, are drawn up in districts, the earliest western state, of Missouri, being in the “Ozark district”., From "Atlas Geographique dresse sous la Direction du Conseil Royal de l’instruction publique pour l’usage des colleges." Paris: Selves, 1832