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Fastest Trips Around the World

1872. A fictitious journey by Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne's novel, 80 days, Oct. 2 to Dec. 20.

1889. Nellie Bly, 72 days, 6 hours, 11 minutes. 1890. George Francis Train of New York. 67 days, 12 hours, 3 minutes.

1901. Charles Fitzmorris, Chief of Police of Chicago, 60 days. 13 hours, 29 minutes.

1903. J. W. Willis Sayre, Seattle, Wash. 54 days, 9 hours, 42 minutes. Henry Frederick. 54 days, 7 hours, 2 minutes.

1907. Col. Burnlay-Campbell, 40 days, 19 hours, 30 minutes. 1911. Andre Jaeger-Schmidt, 39'days, 19 hours,

42 minutes, 38 seconds.

1913. John Henry Mears, 35 days, 21 hours, 36

minutes. 1924.

U. S. Army airplanes, 175 days (14 days, 15 hours actual flying time.) 1926. Edward S. Evans and Linton Wells for The World of New York, 28 days, 14 hours, 36 minutes, 5 seconds. Their mileage, by train and motor car, was 4,100; by plane, 6,300; by steamship, 8,000.

1928. John Henry Mears and Capt. C. B. D. Collyer, 23 days, 15 hours, 21 minutes, 3 seconds. They left New York (June 29,) by seaplane and overtook the Olympic off Long Island. From Cherbourg, July 5, they flew across Europe and Asia, reaching Tokio on (July 11.) They travelled by steamer to Vancouver, British Columbia, (July 20,) and flew thence to New York City, arriving July 22.

1929. German dirigible balloon, Graf Zeppelin, left Friedrichshafen, Germany, (July 31,) reached Lakehurst, N. J., Aug. 4,) left Lakehurst, Aug. 8, reached Friedrichshafen, (Aug. 10,) left there Aug. 14 and reached Tokio, Japan, (Aug. 19,) left there (Aug. 23,) and reached Los Angeles, Cal., (Aug. 26,) left there (Aug. 27.) and reached Lakehurst (Aug. 29,) left there (Sept. 1,) and reached Friedrichshafen (Sept. 4.) Approximate distance covered 21,700 miles; time from Friedrichshafen to Friedrichshafen (Aug. 10-Sept. 4) 20 days, 4 hours. 1931. Monoplane Winnie Mae (Wiley Post, pilot; Harold Gatty, navigator) around the northern air circumference of the world (15,474 miles) in 8 days, 15 hours, 51 minutes-June 23 at 4:56 a.m.. to July 1, at 8:45 p.m.

1933. Monoplane, Winnie Mae (Wiley Post, alone), around the northern air circumference of

the world (15,596 miles) in 7 days, 18 hours. 4912 minutes-July 15, at 5:10 a.m., to July 22, at 11.592 p.m.

nett Field (5:20 a.m., June 3,) and flew non-stop James Mattern, a Texas airman, left Floyd Bento Jomfruland, near Oslo (Norway); and thence. via Post's 1931 route, to Moscow, and across Siberia to Khabarovsk, where, on June 13, he left in bad weather for Nome, but had to turn back. On June 14 he started again and got as far as the Anadyr River, in Northeast Siberia (750 miles west of Nome) where he was forced down and his plane cracked up. He was rescued, injured, by fur traders. A Russian plane took him (July 20) to Nome, and thence an American plane landed him at Floyd Bennett Field on July 30.

1936. Three N. Y. City newspaper reporters left that city (Sept. 30,) each for a trip around the world to test the commercial flying routes. All went to Lakehurst, N. J., to board the Zeppelin Hindenburg, which took off at 11:17:27 p.m.

The first to finish the trip was H. R. Ekins of the New York World-Telegram and the other ScrippsHoward newspapers. He returned at 11:14:20 a.m. Monday, Oct. 19, having made the trip approximately 25,654 miles from Lakehurst to Lakehurst in 18 days, 11 hours, 14 min. and 33 sec. The gross elapsed time from The World-Telegram building which he left at 8:17:30 p.m., back to it was 18 days, 14 hours, 56 min., 30 sec. The total flying time was 8 days, 10 hours, 26 min., and the average flying speed 127 m.p.h. Ekins' course was: By the Hindenburg to Frankfort, Germany; by Royal Dutch Airline to Batavia; by Netherlands Indian Airways to Manilla; by Pan American Airways to Alameda, Cal.; by United Airlines to Burbank, Cal., by T. W. A. to Newark, N. J.

1938. Howard Hughes, accompanied by four technical assistants, left New York City, (7:26 p.m., July 10,) and flew around the world via Paris, Moscow, U. S. S. R..; Omsk, U. S. S. R.; Yakutsk. U. S. S. R.: Fairbanks, Alaska; Minneapolis, Minn., and landed in New York City at 2:34.10 p.m., completing the trip of 14,824 miles in 3 days, 19 hours, 8 minutes and 10 seconds.

1939. Mrs. Clara Adams of New York City departed from Port Washington, L. I. N. Y. (June 28) on the flying boat Dixie Clipper of the Pan American line and landed at Newark Airport (July 15), completing the around the world trip by air in 16 days, 19 hours, 4 minutes.

Fast Atlantic Ocean Passages by Air

DIRIGIBLE BALLOONS

1928. The Graf Zeppelin left Friedrichshafen, Germany (Oct. 11, at 2 a.m.), and arrived at Lakehurst, N. J. (Oct. 15, at 5:38 p.m.), having flown 6,630 miles in 4 days, 15 hours, 46 minutes. Graf Zeppelin made the trip by the way of Spain.

the Madeiras and Bermuda.

The

1936. The Hindenburg left Frankfort on the Main, Germany (June 30, at 12:29 a.m.) and reached Lakehurst (July 2 at 3:46 a.m.) making The dirigible the trip in 51 hours, 17 minutes. made the run over the Atlantic Ocean from Lands End, Northern Ireland, to Land Fall, over Labrador, in 22 hours, 50 minutes, after passing over the southern tip of Greenland. The Hindenburg left Lakehurst (Aug. 9, at 10:35 p.m.) and reached Frankfort (Aug. 11 at 5:28 p.m.) in 42 hours, 53

minutes.

AIRPLANES

1919 U.S. Navy Seaplane NC4, Commander Albert C. Read and crew, flew from Newfoundland to Lisbon, Portugal, via the Azores (May 16-27). John Alcock and A. W. Brown flew non-stop from Newfoundland to Ireland, (June 14-15) a distance of 1960 miles in 16 hours, 12 minutes.

1925 Commander John Rodgers, U.S.N. and crew, flew from San Francisco Bay to within 100 miles of the Hawaiian Islands in September, drifted nine days and were rescued.

land, Cal. to Australia, 8,000 miles, in three hops. (June-July.)

1931 Wiley Post and Harold Gatty crossed from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, to England, 2,200 miles in 16 hours, 17 minutes (June 23-24.)

1932 Mrs. Amelia Earhart Putnam flew from

Harbor Grace to Ireland 2,0261⁄2 miles in 14 hours,

56 minutes (May 20-21.)

1937 Henry T. Merrill and John S. Lambe flew from Bennett Field, Brooklyn, N. Y. to Croydon Airdrome, London, in 20 hours, 59 minutes (May 9-10.) They left Southport, England, with coronation photographs and reached Brooklyn in 24 hours, 22 minutes, 25 seconds, after a brief landing at (May 13-14.) Mikhail GromSquantum, Mass. off, Andrey Yumasheff and Sergei Danilin, Russian non-stop from Moscow to San aviators, flew

Jacinto, Cal., approximately 6,262 miles, in 62 hours, 2 minutes, via the North Pole route (July 12-14.)

1938 Douglas G. Corrigan flew his nine-year-old $900 plane from Floyd Bennett Field, Brooklyn, N. Y. to Baldonnel Airfield, Dublin, in 28 hours, 13 minutes (July 17-18.) British Imperial Airways seaplane, Mercury, completed non-stop East-toWest flight from Foynes, Ireland to Montreal in 20 hours, 19 minutes. (July 20-21.) Also see 1938 above.

1940 The Yankee Clipper of Pan American Airways flew from LaGuardia Field, New York Munipal Airport, to Lisbon, Portgual (April 1-2, 1940) in 18 hours 35 minutes flying time. The elapsed time was 21 hours 56 minutes. The return tripeast-west, was made in 25 hours 1 minute with an elapsed time of 27 hours 43 minutes. The round trip flying time was 43 hours 36 minutes. The American Clipper flew from Lisbon to New York 12.).(April 15-16, 1940) in 23 hours 23 minutes The Atlantic Clipper of the Pan American Airways flew (Oct. 22) from Bermuda to Lisbon, 3,118 miles, in 18 hours 24 minutes.

1926 Lieutenant Commander Richard Evelyn Byrd, U.S.N., flew from Spitzbergen to the North Pole and return (May 9). Amundsen-EllsworthNobile expedition flew from Spitzbergen over the North Pole to Barrow, Alaska, in a dirigible landing at Teller, Alaska, after having been lost over the Arctic area for seventy-eight hours. (May

1927 Charles A. Lindbergh flew from Mineola, N. Y. to Paris, 3,600 miles, in 33 hours, 30 minutes (May 20-21.) Clarence Chamberlin and Charles Levine flew from Mineola, N. Y. to Eisleben, Germany, 3,911, in 42 hours, 31 minutes (June 4-6.)

1928 Charles Kingsford-Smith flew from Oak

1941-The Atlantic Clipper of the Pan American Airways flew non-stop from Bermuda to Lisbon, in 16 hours 30 minutes (Jan. 21-22).

650

Great Ocean Steamships and Motorships

Source: Lloyd's Register of Shipping and the U. S. Maritime Commission (Note The length is from the stem to the fore part of the rudder post.)

[graphic]

Queen Elizabeth, Br.

Motor ships. † Lloyd's lists the tonnage as 27,000.

In the above list 23 ships are missing from the World Almanac list of 1941; 19 of them were "lost as the result of the War" to quote from the description of the United States Maritime Commission.

They were (registered tonnage in parentheses): Empress of Britain, Brit. (42,348); Stattendam, Holl. (28,291); Champlain, Fr. (28.124); Hansa, Ger. (21,131); Terje Viken, Brit. (20,638): Oxford. Brit. (20,043); Lombardia. Ital. (20,006): Orama, Brit. (19,840); Monticello, U. S. (19,361); Laurentic. Brit. (18,724).

16,418 549 5 16,381 574 4 16,314 549 5 16,297 552 4 16,287 551 4 15.784 541 6 15,551 570 0 15,543 600 0 15,507 550 3 15,495 550 3 15,434 550 2 15,363 577 1 15,355 561 3 15,346 526 3 15,300 561 3 15,286 549 3 15,276 543 9 15,241 523 5

67 8 40 9 70 2 40 2 70 4 38 8 68 8 36 2 73 3 41 9 67 3/33 3 65 3 23 1 67 3 43 0 67 3 43 0 67 3 32 6 64 1 37 0 72 2 44 1 70 3 42 3 72 2 44 1 69 2 34 8 66 2 41 7 70 2 42 3 15,225 523 5 70.2 42 3 15,209 546 1 67 2 41 S 15,135 570 3 67 3 33 3 15,130 550 7 67 4 44 1 15,105 543 5 65 0 41 4 15,007 540 0 71 9 37 8

Oslofjord, Nor. (18,673); Conte Rosso. Ital. (17.879); Caledonia, Brit. (17,040): Rangitare, Brit. (16,712); Rajputana, Brit. (16,644): Montrose. Brit. (16,402); Lancastria, Brit. (16,243): Anandora Star, Brit. (15.501); Veendam, Holl. (15,450): Liguvia. Ital. (15.354).

The Bremen, Ger. (51,731) was destroyed by fire. The Monticello, U. S. (19.361) and the Mount Vernon, U. S. (18,372) were scrapped.

The Rotterdam, Holl. (24.149), was scrapped. The above list is incomplete, but there were no sources of information available governmental during the war.

On

The Merchant Fleets of the World

Source: Lloyd's Register of Shipping: figures cover vessels of 100 tons or over

No. of Gross On July 1 Ships Tonnage July 1

1892. 1893. 1894. 1895

31,983 23,672,698|| 1904. 31,926|24,236,865 1905. 30,640 24,547,597 1906 30.288 25,086,199 1907 1896 29.801 25,593,186 1908. 1897 28.280 25,889,044 1909 1898. 27,982 26,543,360 1910.. 27,816 27,613,851 1911. 27,840 28,957,358 1912. 28,209 30,479,971 1913 28,630 32,302,412 1914

1899. 1900. 1901. 1902. 1903..

On No. of Gross

On No. of Gross

No. of Gross
Ships Tonnage July 1 Ships Tonnage July 1 Ships Tonnage

29,283 34,786,132 1916... 30,167 48,683,136||1928..
|29,750|35,998,180 1917
30,087 37,550,477 1918.
30,197 39,435,788 1919
30,524 40,920,551 1920
30,536 41,447,825 1921.
30,053 41,912,520 1922
30,082 43,144,909 1923.
30,316 44,600,677 1924.

32,408 66,954,659

1929
1930.

29,255 50,919,273 1931
31,595 57,314,065 1932
33,206 61,974,653 1933.
33,935 64,370,786 1934..
33,507 65,166,238 1935..
32,956 64,023,567 1936.

132,482 68,074,312 32,713 69,607,644 32,344 65,641,035

32,247 69,734,310 31,700 67,920,185 30,997 65,576,612

30,979 64,885,972 30,923 65,063,643 29,524 65,271,440 29,409 66,870,151

30,591 46,970,113 1925... 32,916 64,641,418 1937 30,836 49,089,552 1926. 32,615 64,784,370 1938. 28.90133,501,855 1915...30.720 49,261,769 1927...32,175 65,192,910 1939... 29.763 68,509,432

On July 1

1915.

1916

1917

1918. 1919.

1920. 1921

19:2 1923 1924. 1925.

19 6 1927

1928

1929

1930. 1931 1932.

1933

1934

1935

1936

1937

1938 1939

Tons

276,427 272,160

233,606 193,538

313,276 464,659

551,031

605,050

560,597

542,583

GROSS TONNAGE OF MERCHANT FLEETS OF CHIEF NATIONS
U. S. Gr. Brit. Germany France Japan Norway Holland Italy Belgium
Tons
Tons Tons Tons Tons Tons Tons Tons
8,389,429 19,541,368 4,706,027 2,285,7281,826 068 2,529,188 1,522,547 1,736,545
8,469,649 19,134,857 4,151,552 2,216,643 1,847,453 2,771,022 1,508,916 1,896.534
8,871,037 19,637,418 3,156,008 2,152,524 2,059,001 2,307,164 1,552,382 1,757,605
9,924,518 21,035,149|3,225,294 2,029,884 2,299,405 1,806,576 1,288,245 1.283,790
12,907,300 16,555,471|3,503,380 2,233,631 2,325,266 1,857,829 1,591,911 1,370,097
16,324,024 18,330,424| 672,671 3,245,194 2,995,878 2,114,190 1,848,348 2,406,958
17,026,002 19,571,554 717,450 3,652,249 3,354,806 2,584,058 2,225,787 2,650,573
16,986,196 19,295,637 1,887,408 3,845,792 3,586,918 2,600,861 2,632,713 2,866,335
16,952,018 19,281,549 2,590,073 3,737,244 3,604,147 2,551,912 2,625,741 3,033,742
15,956,967 19,105,838 2,953,671 3,498,233 3,842,707 2,505,393 2,556,417 2,832,212|
15,377,480 19,440,711 3,073,713 3,511,984 3,919,807 2,680,642 2,600,831 3,028,661
14,797,717 19,399 797 3,110,918 3,490,606 3,967,617 2.841,905 2,564,904 3,240,630
14,585,300 19,309,022 3,363,046 3,469,980 4,033,304 2,824,225 2,654,003 3,483,383
14,537.958 19,875,350 3,777,251 3,344,465 4,139,815 2,968,207 2.816,705 3,428,817
14,377,114 20,166,331 4,092,552 3,378,663 4,186,652 3,224,493 2,939,067 3,284,660||
13,946,846 20,438,444 4,229,235 3,530,879 4,316,804 3,668,289 3,086,315 3,331,226
13,642,183 23,379,999 4,254,601 3,566,227 4,276,341 4,065,506 3,118.170 3,335,673
13,546,620 22,784,383 4,164,842 3,557,006 4,255,014 4,166,839 2,963,840 3,390,572 537,442
13,357,799 21,819,687 3,901,274 3,512,219 4,258,159 4,079,540 2,765,457 3,149,807 456,207
13,045,037 20,841,218 3,690,990 3,298,053 4,072,707 3,981,354 2,618,016 2,928,396 414,655
12,852,250 20,510,921 3,703,662 3,025,136 4,085,650 3,967,972 2,558,383 2,884,406 402,221
12,556,563 20,385,138 3,718,417 3,002.455 4,215,690 4,054,485 2,511,281 3,098,159 388,413
11,788,272 20,398,157 3,927,916 2,843,688 4,475,110 4,346,782 2,630,802 3,174,089 420,454
11,515,258 20,719,090 4,231,657 2,280,783 5,006,712 4,613,175 2,852,012 3,258,992 430,624
11,470,177 21.001,925 4,482,662 2,933,933 5,629,845 4,833,813 2,969,578 3,424,804 408,418
MERCHANT VESSELS LAUNCHED, BY COUNTRIES, 1920-1938

507,473 499,229

492,609

529,043

553,037 547,470

Holland

No. Tons

99,183,149 98 232,402 60 163.132 35 65,632 41 63.627 47 78,823

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47 73,671

105 289,622

68 119,790

81 376,416

74 166,754

85 249,077

77 186,517

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18 100,917

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1931

148 502,487

31 13,612

30 125,974

22 103,419

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30 26,232

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20 12,958

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16 9,112

21 61,729

10 15,950

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33 122,095
35 97,537
26 131,411
15 97,338

10 42,873

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17 39,208

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Sweden United States Oth'r Co's. World Total

Year

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The United States Maritme Commission states that there are no later data.

852 2,467,084

701 1,643,181

12 31,211

924 2,247,751

17 53,750

101

855 2,193,404

781

66

179,218

63

63

100

57
18

49,542

14 60,860 14
12

22 105,538

33 154,044

21 14 69

38 161.008) 123
24 115.678

16

Principal Rivers of the United States

Source: U. S. Geological Survey, Army Engineer, and Weather Bureau records.

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Junction of Salt and Double Mountain
Forks, Stonewall County, Tex.

Colfax County, N. Mex.
Junction of Haw and

Chatham County, N. C..
Dodge County, Minn.

Junction of South Fork and Beaver Creek,
Fall River County, S. Dak.

Junction of East and West Forks, Sawyer
County, Wis.

Colfax County, N. Mex.

Silver Bow County, Mont,

Rocky Mountain National Park, Colo.
Dawson County, Texas

Columbia Lake, British Columbia.
Columbia Lake, British Columbia.
Third Connecticut Lake, N. H..

Junction of Etowah and Oostanaula
Rivers, Floyd County, Ga.....
Junction of Poor and Clover Forks, Har-
lan County, Ky..

Junction of East and West Branches, at
Hancock, N. Y..

Lava Lake, Deschutes County, Oreg.
Junction of East and West Forks, Hum-
boldt County, Iowa..
Dolores County, Colo.

Mississippi River.

To mouth of Snake Riv.
Long Island Sound
Alabama River..

Ohio River..

Source

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Junction of Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers,
Elmore County, Ala..

Potter County, Pa.

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Junction of Oconee and Ocmulgee Rivers,
Montgomery County, Ga.

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Junction of Yellow and South Rivers,

Newton County, Ga.

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Umbagog Lake, Maine.

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Junction of Flint and

Chattahoochee

Rivers, Seminole County, Ga..

Lake County, Colo

Webster County, Miss.

Junction of Wind and Popo Agle Rivers,
Fremont County. Wyo

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Junction of Locust and Mulberry Forks,
Jefferson County, Ala.

Junction of East and West Forks, Rey-
nolds County, Mo..

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Deep Rivers,

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Junction of Mud and Camp Creeks, Fay-
ette County, Ga.

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Columbia County, Wis

Junction of North and West Forks, Tran

sylvania County, N. C.

Catron County, N. Mex.
Jackson County, Mich.
Lincoln County, Ky.

Junction of Wells and Trail Creeks, Sub-
lette County, Wyo

nison County, Colo.

....

Junction of North and South Forks, Sul-
livan County, Tenn.
Town of Washington, Mass.
Henderson Lake, Essex County, N. Y.
Mouth of Bishop Creek, Elko Co., Nev.
Junction of Kankakee and Des Plaines
Rivers, Grundy County, Ill...
Junction of East and West Branches,
Wright County, Ia..

Wells County, North Dakota

Junction of Jackson and Cowpasture
Rivers, Botetourt County, Va.
Source of Red Rock River in Beaverhead
County, Mont..

Blue Mountains, Grant County, Oreg.
Junction of New and Gauley Rivers, Fay-
ette County, W. Va..

Junction of North and South Forks of
New River, Ashe County, N. C.
Junction of Smoky Hill and Republican
Rivers, Geary County, Kans......
Moosehead Lake, Maine.

Junction of North and Middle Forks, Lee
County, Ky..

Lake Ewauna, Klamath Falls, Oreg.
Latitude 34°, Apache County, Ariz.
Crook County, Wyo..

Junction of Pemigewassett and Winnipe-
saukee Rivers, Franklin, N. H.
Indian Lake, Logan County, Ohio.

Junction of North and South Forks, Al

berta Province.

Big Stone Lake, Minn.
Near Lake Itasca, Minn.
Near Lake Itasca, Minn

River

Mississippi-Missouri..

Missouri..

Missouri-Red Rock
Mobile.....

Mobile-Alabama-Coosa

Mohawk...

Monogahela..

Muskingum..

Neches..
Neosho

Neuse.

GREAT RIVERS-(Continued)

Source

Source of Red Rock River, Mont.
Junction Jefferson, Madison and Gallatin
Rivers, Madison County, Mont....
Source of Red Rock River, Mont..
Junction of Alabama and Tombigbee
Rivers, Baldwin County, Ala..
Junction of Etowah and Oostanaula
Rivers, Floyd County, Ga.

Junction of East and West Branches,
Oneida County, N. Y.

Junction of West Fork and Tygart Rivers,
Marion County, W. Va...

Junction of Tuscarawas and Walhonding
Rivers, Coshocton County, Ohio..
Van Zandt County, Tex..
Morris County, Kans.

Junction of Eno and Flat Rivers, Durham
County, N. C.

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hee County, Idaho

Neshoba County, Miss.
Mora County, N. Mex.

Junction of Yadkin and Uharie Rivers,
Montgomery County, N. C..
Watauga County, N. C.

Profile Lake, Grafton County, N. H.
Junction of East and West Branches,
Medway, Maine..

Junction of North and South Platte
Rivers, North Platte, Nebr...
Junction of North and South Branches,
Hampshire County, W. Va.
Junction of South and Middle Forks,
Johnson County, Wyo..

Faquier and Rappahannock Counties, Va,
Junction of Prairie Dog Town and North
Forks, Tillman County, Okla..
Junction of Otter Tail and Bois de Sioux
Rivers, Wilkin County, Minn...
Junction of North Fork and Arikaree
River, Dundy County, Nebr.
San Juan County, Colo...

Junction of North and South Forks, Mont-
gomery County, Va.

Washington County, Wis.

Junction of South and Caddo Forks, Hunt

Upper St. Croix Lake, Wis.

Iron County, Mo..

Lake Washington, Brevard County, Fla.
Hillsdale County, Mich
Custer County, Idano

Junction of South and Middle Forks,
Madera County, Calif.

Silver Lake, Archuleta County, Colo
Junction of Wateree and Congaree Rivers,
Richland, S. C...

McDowell County, N. C.

Mississippi River.
Mississippi River.

Missouri River.
Red River..

Chesapeake Bay
Yellowstone River.
Chesapeake Bay
Mississippi River...
Lake Winnipeg.

Kansas River...
Gulf of Mexico..

Atlantic Ocean.
Lake Michigan.
Snake River.

Junction of North and South Forks, Ashe
County, N. C.

Kanawha River.

255

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981

1,306

500

605

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287

375

185

1,018

545

445

1,800

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276

210

420

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Cheyenne County, Colo.

Ocean Plateau, Teton County, Wyo.
Junction of North and South Rivers at
Port Republic. Va

Junction of South and Middle Forks, Park
County, Colo.

Otsego Lake, Otsego County, N. Y

Junction of North and Log Rivers, Charl-
ton County, Ga.

Near Embry in Paulding County, Ga..
Person County, N. C...

Junction of French Broad and Holston
Rivers, Knox County, Tenn...

Tennessee-French Broad......Junction of North and West Forks of

Tombigbee.

French Broad, Transylvania County, N.C.
Junction of East and West Forks, Monroe
County, Miss...

Ohio River..

Junction of North and South Forks at
Riverton, Va...

Potomac River.
Kansas River.
Columbia River.

55

540

1,038

Shenandoah River..

100

Platte River.
Chesapeake Bay

424

444

Gulf of Mexico..

190

Tippah County, Miss.

Yazoo River.

391

Alabama River..

268

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652

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