Description
A “American War of Independence” wall map (70×100 cm) is a large-format educational chart that visualizes the territorial scope, key battles, and major campaigns of the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783), supporting classroom instruction and historical reference.
Key Content Elements
Geographic Focus: Shows the original 13 American colonies along the Atlantic coast, key cities (Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Charleston), and major campaign routes crossing into Canada and the southern frontier.
Battle Sites and Campaigns: Annotated with pivotal military actions: Lexington & Concord, Bunker Hill, Saratoga, Trenton, Yorktown, and southern campaigns; arrows and legends mark troop movements (British vs Continental armies), naval operations, and shifting control of regions.
Colonial and British Territories: Distinguishes Patriot- and Loyalist-controlled areas, British-occupied cities, French intervention zones, and important frontier boundaries after the Treaty of Paris (1783).
Timeline and Visual Symbols: Often features a sidebar with dates and summaries of major events, portraiture or small graphics of leaders (George Washington, King George III, Lafayette, Cornwallis), and iconic elements (Liberty Bell, flags, Declaration of Independence).
Color Coding: Uses vivid color blocks for regions, battle highlights, and key changes over time, for fast classroom reference.
Educational and Catalog Use
Utilized by history educators, competitive exam centers, and product catalog compilers needing visual aids on North American independence movements.
Typically offered laminated and pipe-mounted for classroom durability and visibility.
Sourcing and Compliant Digital Images
Major educational publishers (Vidya Chitr Prakashan, Justdial, Walmart, Etsy, AllPosters) stock these in classroom sizes, while printable digital versions (royalty-free JPEG, 800×800 px) can be downloaded from teaching portals and museum map archives for catalog conversion.
For authentic layouts, consult US history map archives and educational suppliers specializing in US colonial-era maps and American Revolution visuals.
If specific battle focus or additional timeline content is required, use high-resolution classroom infographic resources or consult detailed interactive maps from national history institutes.