Protractor

Name/Title

Protractor

Entry/Object ID

1885.1.3

Description

Silver protractor. The arch of the tool is engraved with hash lines showing measurements (imperial), and the straight part of the tool is engraved with the words, "Gardner Glasgow".

Context

Used by James Whitelaw of Ryegate, Vermont's second Surveyor General.

Acquisition

Accession

1885.1

Source or Donor

Whitelaw, George P.

Acquisition Method

Gift

Made/Created

Place

City

Glasgow

Country

Scotland

Continent

Europe

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Protractor

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Instrument, Drafting

Nomenclature Class

Drafting T&E

Nomenclature Category

Category 06: Tools & Equipment for Communication

Material

Metal

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Whitelaw, James

Related Places

Place

Town

Ryegate

County

Caledonia County

State/Province

Vermont

Country

United States of America

Continent

North America

Interpretative Labels

Label

Protractor Used by James Whitelaw (1748 - 1829), Vermont’s second Surveyor General Ryegate, VT Gift of George P. Whitelaw, 1885.1.3 James Whitelaw was born in Scotland, and came to America in 1773 as a land scout for the Scotch American Company of Farmers. He worked and traveled in several different colonies, but settled in Ryegate, Vermont. In 1787 he became Vermont’s second Surveyor General. In this capacity he was responsible for completing accurate local surveys of towns and counties. Whitelaw’s work is central to the new settlers’ process of dividing the Vermont landscape for private ownership and development. Mapmaking is a process of definition: Whitelaw and others like him were projecting their own vision of Vermont’s landscape. That vision emphasized European-style agriculture, certain kinds of “productive” wild animals, and left no room for the catamount.