
audiobook
by J. E. Howard
A young man of just eighteen, William Watts McNair entered the Indian Survey Department and quickly proved himself a gifted plane‑tabler and meticulous topographer. Over more than two decades he traversed the rugged frontiers of Rajputana, Mysore and Baluchistan, mapping valleys and charting unknown terrain with a blend of technical skill and quiet determination. His work placed him at the heart of the empire’s most challenging surveying projects, earning the respect of senior officers and the admiration of his peers.
When a leave allowed him to venture beyond his official duties, McNair became the first European to set foot in the isolated region of Kafiristan. Guided by native escorts, he explored passes and valleys that had never before been recorded, producing detailed observations that would later inform both military strategy and scientific understanding. His achievements earned him a prestigious grant from the Royal Geographical Society, cementing his reputation as a pioneering explorer whose maps opened a window onto a previously hidden world.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (114K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Known for writing a memoir of explorer William Watts McNair, this little-documented author appears to have had ties to British India. The surviving record is sparse, which gives the work an added sense of period curiosity.
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