Various charts and pilot books for
North American waters were published in
England beginning in 1671, but the first book of sailing directions, charts, and other information for mariners in North American waters published in North America was the
American Coast Pilot, first produced by
Edmund M. Blunt in
Newburyport,
Massachusetts, in 1796. In 1833, Blunts son Edmund E. Blunt accepted employment with the
United States Coast Survey, and this began a relationship between the Blunt family and the Coast Survey in which the Coast Survey provided
hydrographic survey information to the Blunts for incorporation into the
American Coast Pilot and the Blunts sold the Surveys charts, while the Blunts served as influential allies of the Survey in defending the Survey against its critics and lobbying for funding of the Surveys efforts. Other than providing information to the Blunts for publication in the
American Coast Pilot and charts for them to sell, the Coast Survey relied exclusively on articles published in local newspapers to provide its information to mariners. This began to change in 1858, when the Coast Surveys
George Davidson adapted an article published in a
San Francisco,
California, newspaper into an addendum to that years
Annual Report of the Superintendent of the Coast Survey. It was the first time that the Coast Survey had published a mariners guide of any kind outside of a newspaper or the Blunts
American Coast Pilot, and it is retrospectively considered the first example of what would later become the
United States Coast Pilot. Twenty-one editions of the
American Coast Pilot had been published by the time George W. Blunt sold the
copyright for the publication to the U.S. Government in 1867. Although by that time the
American Coast Pilot already consisted almost entirely of public information produced by the Coast Survey anyway, the transaction placed responsibility for regular production of the publication with the Coast Survey for the first time. The publication existed under various names until 1888, when the name
United States Coast Pilot was adopted for volumes covering navigation along the
United States East Coast and
United States Gulf Coast. Thirty years later, the name also began to be applied to volumes covering the
United States West Coast and the
Territory of Alaska. The Coast Survey, known from 1878 as the
United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, continued to publish the
Coast Pilot until it merged with other U.S. Government agencies to form the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) on 3 October 1970. The Office of Coast Survey in NOAAs
National Ocean Service has published them since then. ==See also==