The Department of History, United States Military Academy
Licensing
In the public domain as an original work of the United States federal government and/or military
In 1938 the predecessors of what is today The Department of History at the United States Military Academy began developing a series of campaign atlases to aid in teaching cadets a course entitled, "History of the Military Art." Since then, the Department has produced over six atlases and more than one thousand maps, encompassing not only America’s wars but global conflicts as well.
In keeping abreast with today's technology, the Department of History is providing these maps on the internet as part of the department's outreach program. The maps were created by the United States Military Academy’s Department of History and are the digital versions from the atlases printed by the United States Defense Printing Agency. We gratefully acknowledge the accomplishments of the department's former cartographer, Mr. Edward J. Krasnoborski, along with the works of our present cartographer, Mr. Frank Martini.
Please be aware that these maps are large in file size and may require substantial download times.
Licentie
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
Dit werk bevindt zich in het publieke domein in de Verenigde Staten omdat het is vervaardigd door een ambtenaar van de Amerikaanse federale overheid tijdens de uitoefening van zijn functie, en het daarmee volgens Titel 17, Hoofdstuk 1, Sectie 105 van de United States Code [Engelstalige link] een werk van de Amerikaanse federale overheid [Engelstalige link] is.Nota bene: Het bovenstaande is alleen van toepassing op werken van de federale overheid of een van haar onderdelen, en niet op werken van een afzonderlijk(e) Staat, Territorium, Commonwealth, County, Gemeente, of enig andere bestuurlijke eenheid. Dit sjabloon is ook niet van toepassing op ontwerpen voor postzegels, door de United States Postal Service openbaar gemaakt sinds 1978 [Engelstalige link]. Zie Art. 206.02(b) van "Compendium II: Copyright Office Practices" (Engelstalig).
In 1938 the predecessors of what is today The Department of History at the United States Military Academy began developing a series of campaign atlases to aid in teaching cadets a course entitled, "History of the Military Art." Since then, the Department