Camille N. Drie

Camille N. Drie (active 1871–1904) also known as Camille N. Dry, was a draughtsman active in the Southern United States. Drie created pictorial maps of various cities, including a 110-sheet view of St. Louis, Missouri (1875). The Library of Congress has a collection of his work.[1]

Urban planning historian John W. Reps cites Drie's 1875 110-sheet view of St. Louis as a "tour de force" in a 1984 catalog, describing its scale and accuracy as "an accomplishment beyond any reasonable expectation." Drie worked with Richard J. Compton to produce the St. Louis project, and likely also had a team of assistants, although none are named in his records. Drie is recorded as having lived in St. Louis from 1875 to 1878.[2]

Drie also produced pictorial maps of Galveston, Texas; Anniston, Alabama,[3] and Vicksburg, Mississippi.[2] His final work was a plot of Birmingham, Alabama, published in 1904.[2]


See also

References

  1. ^ dry, camille n. "Search results from Panoramic Maps, Dry, Camille N., Pictorial St. Louis, the great metropolis of the Mississippi valley; a topographical survey drawn in perspective A.D. 1875, (g4164sm.gpm00001/)". Library of Congress.
  2. ^ a b c Reps, John William (1984). Views and Viewmakers of Urban America. University of Missouri Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-8262-0416-5. OCLC 9465818. Wikidata Q107434952.
  3. ^ "Bird's eye view looking northwest, city of Anniston, Calhoun County, Alabama".

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