The Army Map Service was formed during
World War II from the consolidation of the Engineer Reproduction Plant, the Library and the Cartographic Section of the
War Department General Staff. Initially, many of the maps produced were revisions of existing maps. By the middle of the war, the
cartographic work was changed to medium and small scale maps utilizing larger scale native maps as source materials. By the end of the war, considerable effort was being applied to large scale mapping by
stereo-photogrammetric methods. Between 1941 and 1945, the Army Map Service prepared 40,000 maps of all types, covering 400,000 square miles of the Earth's surface. Over 500 million copies were produced during the war. Many were produced by civilian women trained after Pearl Harbor, the "
Military Mapping Maidens." The
North African Campaign alone required 1,000 different maps with a total of 10 million copies. The Normandy invasion required 3,000 different maps with a total of 70 million copies. Similar commitments were filled for the Pacific and Far East operations. Maps of all types were needed, from the strategic level maps to tactical level maps. "Indeed, General
George S. Patton claims to have planned
Third Army movements by using a
Michelin tourist road map of Europe, his knowledge of terrain, and gut-level feeling that tanks could negotiate the ground
William the Conqueror had crossed nine centuries before." The
Corps of Engineers mapping output differs from general mapping agencies, such as the USGS, in that it is usually at a much larger scale (design/construction) and is project-specific; however, the mapping procedures used since World War II are not much different. Between 1949 and 1951, standardization of military mapping was agreed to between
Canada, Great Britain and the US, and was expanded to
NATO,
SEATO and
CENTO countries as well. This involved the application of the
UTM to over 10,000 different maps covering 400,000 square miles and the printing of over 90,000,000 copies. ==Korean War==