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1607-1675 21 Howard Kleinberg Fonds July 8, 1992 Louis De Vorsey Jr. Department of History University of Georgia 355 Kings Road Athens, GA 30606 Dear Mr. De Vorsey, When I queried Dr. Joe Fitzgerald about the de Brahm and Romans maps of southeast Florida, he suggested I write to you. I am writing a book on the history of Miami Beach and am in need of some buttress ing when it comes to the early charts of the area. Dr. Fitzgerald, like me, is of the opinion that until de Brahm, there were no detailed maps of the Biscayne Bay region. Would you agree? Also, in the Romans map -- or at least in the facsimile edi tion -- Boca Rattones on the Miami Beach side and Boca Ratones as the Miami River -- are spelled differently. Do you have any idea of whether the facsimile map was accurate in the two spellings; did Romans misspell Ratones as Rattones, or did the people who created the facsimile map? In reading numerous versions, I also find de Brahm spelled as De Brahm, as in De Vorsey. In your introduction to The Atlantic Pilot, you spelled it De Brahm. Other than as the first word of a sentence, shouldn 't we be spelling it de Brahm? In a 1975 article written about early Biscayne Bay for Tequesta, the journal of the Historical Society of Southern Florida, the late Roland Chardon of Louisiana State University referred to de Brahm changing the name of Boca Ratones to White Inlet in 1765 yet the chart included in the facsimile Atlantic Pilot shows it as Boca Ratones. Was Chardon referring to another map drawn by de Brahm, one that wasn 't included in the facsimile edition? Sincerely, Howard Kleinberg