Walter Ristow - Publications and Papers

Publications and Papers

  • Ristow, Walter W. 1997. "The French-Smith map and gazetteer of New York State ". Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 36: 68-90.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1997. "Aborted American atlases". Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 36: 320-345.
  • Ristow, Walter William. 1986. World directory of map collections. Munchen: Verlag Dokumentation. Compiled by the Geography and Map Libraries Sub-Section; edited by Walter W. Ristow.
  • American maps and map makers: Commercial Cartography in the Nineteenth Century, 1985.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1983. Cartography and Robinson then and now. Madison, Wis: University. Presented at the dedication of the Arthur H. Robinson Map Library at the University of Wisconsin--Madison on November 4, 1982. Reprinted from the Special Libraries Association, Geography and Map Division Bulletin, no. 132 (June 1983), p. 8-16.
  • The emergence of maps in libraries, 1980.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1979. Cartography of the Battle of Bunker Hill. Lisboa: Junta de Invesitgações Científicas do Ultramar. "Separata da Revista da Universidade de Coimbra, vol. XXVII - Ano 1979 - pág. 263-279." Pages also numbered 265-279 of the Revista ...
  • Ristow, Walter William. 1979. The Ebeling-Sotzmann Atlas von Nordamerika: . "The Ebeling-Sotzmann Atlas von Nordamerika : ".
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1978. "The Hauslab-Liechtenstein Map Collection". The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 35 (2): 108-138.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1978. "Worlds of Christmas Greetings". The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 35 (4): 234-241. From an original painting by Norman Rockwell. Reproduced with permission from the Saturday Evening Post, 1926 The Curtis Publishing Company.
  • Ristow, Walter William. 1978. The greening of map librarianship. S.l: s.n.]. "Reprinted from SLA Geography and Map Division Bulletin, no. 111, March 1978."
  • Buttery, L. M., and Walter W. Ristow. 1978. The 1823 John Melish map of the United States. Oklahoma City: for Western Heritage Center Library, National Cowboy Hall of Fame." Appendix contains reprint of an article from A la carte, John Melish and his map of the United States, by Walter W. Ristow, that originally appeared in the September 1972 issue of the Library of Congress Quarterly journal of Current acquisitions.
  • Ristow, Walter W., and R. A. Skelton. 1977. Nautical charts on vellum in the Library of Congress.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1977. "ROBERT MILLS'S ATLAS OF SOUTH CAROLINA". The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 34 (1): 52-66. John Wilson's 1822 map of South Carolina, as engraved by Henry S. Tanner.* Ristow, Walter W. 1976. World directory of map collections. Munchen: Verlag Dokumentation. Compiled by the Geography and Map Libraries Sub-Section; edited by Walter W. Ristow.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1976. Map library education in the United States and Canada. : .
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1975. "Lithography and maps, 1796-1850". Hoofdstuk in: Five centuries of map printing / ed. by David Woodward. - Chicago, Ill., : University of Chicago Press, 1975. P. 77-112.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1975. The Geography and map division : A guide to its collections and services. Washington: Library of Congress.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1974. "Cartographic Information Services of the Library of Congress". Cartography and Geographic Information Science. 1 (2): 125-130.
  • Ristow, Walter W. 1974. "Dutch Polder Maps". The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 31 (3): 136-149.
  • Walter W. Ristow papers, La Crosse, Wisconsin Public Library, library archives: articles by Walter Ristow on maps and their use in libraries.

Read more about this topic:  Walter Ristow

Famous quotes containing the words publications and/or papers:

    Dr. Calder [a Unitarian minister] said of Dr. [Samuel] Johnson on the publications of Boswell and Mrs. Piozzi, that he was like Actaeon, torn to pieces by his own pack.
    Horace Walpole (1717–1797)

    You had such a vision of the street
    As the street hardly understands;
    Sitting along the bed’s edge, where
    You curled the papers from your hair,
    Or clasped the yellow soles of feet
    In the palms of both soiled hands.
    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)