Monday, June 8, 2026

Maps by a Master

(Thanks to geographer and BridgeNet Senior Editor Brian Benson of the BSU Division of Enrollment, Marketing and Communications for writing this 2019 piece and for sharing it from the archives.)

They are beautiful maps and the fact they’ve survived since 1954 is pretty amazing.
They’re just a really good example of a combination of human activities
and the physical geography and geology all in one map. ~~ Dr. Bob Amey

If you’re looking for a painting by Pablo Picasso, you should visit an art museum. To see the work of “he Picasso of mapmaking,” as some geographers have called Dr. Erwin Raisz, just walk across campus to the Dana Mohler-Faria Science and Mathematics Center.

Bridgewater State University recently (2019) put on display three handmade maps by Raisz, a famous cartographer whose physiographic maps are as informative as they are beautiful.

“His style and the symbology he used were unique and the maps were phenomenally detailed,” said Dr. Robert Amey, an associate professor of geography. Raisz visited Bridgewater State in 1954 to run a summer workshop for teachers. He made maps during his time on campus by drawing freehand mountain ranges, cities, water bodies, underlying geology and other features. He brought areas to life with vivid colors: his mountains appear to jump off the paper.

The BSU collection focuses on Egypt, Alaska, New York and Massachusetts. To Amey’s knowledge, only 19 of these classroom demonstration maps still exist, as many people likely threw them away after workshops. Harvard University has the other 16.

“They are beautiful maps and the fact they’ve survived since 1954 is pretty amazing,” Amey said. “They’re just a really good example of a combination of human activities and the physical geography and geology all in one map.”

The maps moved around in the Department of Geography before faculty gave them a permanent home on the ground floor of the science and math center by the elevators. Modern mapmaking reflects technological advances, a development Amey suspects Raisz would have embraced.

“We don’t teach that technique any longer. There’s very little pen-and-ink cartography done these days,” he said. “It’s pretty much all done by computer.” Fortunately for BSU students and visitors, they can still step back in time to an age when maps were truly works of art.

Lagniappe 

This collection is mentioned in Jason Vanhorn's 2022 in Earth Sciences History article comparing the work of Erwin Raisz and Armin Lobeck, both of whom had studied with Dr. Douglas Johnson at Columbia University more than a century ago. 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Coffee Con 2026

Please mark your calendar and join us on Monday, April 27, 2026
2:00 - 3:00 PM DMF 279/283
for the Twentieth Annual Coffee Tasting.

Students in our department's Second Year Seminar The Secret Life of Coffee have been welcoming the campus community to share specialty coffees and coffee knowledge since the very first SYS course was offered in 2007. 

Image: Thea Jackson

We welcome everyone to join us from 2-3 pm in DMF 279 and 283 (adjoining classrooms). The coffee lineup this year includes:

BRAZIL

Cerrado 17/18 from Coffee Corral
Dermott Amorim / Morgan Smith

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC


Ramirez Red Honey from Coffee Corral
Thea Jackson / Ellie Ward / Bryce Bishop

HAITI

Blue Pine from Coffee Corral
Larah Letelier / Fog Pokrovskiy 

PANAMA
 
Janson Farms Geisha from Coffee Corral
Fiona Duke / Daniel Gostin

PERU

Pacha Glow from Sunrise Trading
Sarah Ahern / Emma Larose / Wendy Goetz-

VENEZUELA

La Curva donated by Red Rooster Coffee
Thal Nogueira / Molly Cleary / Mint Jindawit

Bring your own mug if you can!



Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Teamwork

 


In geography, the real world is a big part of what we do!

The Old State Farm Trail project is an excellent example of collaboration among academic, non-profit, government, and for-profit partners. It is also an example of the value of both vision and patience. 

The project is not complete, but it has recently reached an important milestone. Small parking lots are now in place at the north and south ends of a trail that will provide public access to permanently-protected open space adjacent to the National Wild & Scenic Taunton River. 

We will edit this entry to include more detail soon, but for now suffice it to say that this project has involved the Massachusetts Legislature, the Town of Bridgewater, the Natural Resources Trust of Bridgewater, the Massachusetts Department of Corrections, and many faculty members and students in the Bridgewater State University Department of Geography. 


And speaking of teamwork, the best way to locate and envision this trail and to learn about its background and latest information is to visit the Old State Farm Story Map on ArcGIS. This is the joint effort of Dr. Boah Kim and five (so far) BSU geography interns.