Chats on Old Clocks

CHAPTER X

Chapter 284,157 wordsPublic domain

A FEW NOTES ON WATCHES

The age of Elizabeth--Early Stuart watches--Cromwellian period--Watches of the Restoration--The William and Mary watch--Eighteenth-century watches--Pinchbeck and the toy period--Battersea enamel and shagreen.

Early makers of English watches do not crowd the stage. On the Continent pocket clocks had had a long life before they made their appearance in this country. Queen Elizabeth had only one pair of silk stockings--she had been used to "cloth hose"--before her lady-in-waiting presented her with a pair straight from the Continent. Italian and French ideas were fast acclimatizing themselves here. Shakespeare laid many of his plays in Italy; the modern Elizabethan Englishman became quite Italian; the Queen read Tasso and Ariosto in the originals. In Germany the watch had taken various forms. The watchmakers of Nuremberg were renowned throughout Europe. "Nuremberg eggs," as they were styled, set the fashion for watches of all shapes suited to the conceits of the owner. Some were in the form of a skull, with appropriate mottoes concerning Time and Death; others were in the form of a cross, of a book, or shaped like a tulip or other flowers, or simulating butterflies and insects. The earliest styles had closed cases, these cases being subjected to various forms of ornament. The dial was not visible till the outer case was opened.

Collectors of watches are collecting something that is dead. The wheels are silent for ever. The interest lies in the remoteness of the conception of a pocket clock. Possibly there is no one alive who could now set the wheels into motion, as there are no designers who could originate the exquisite tracery and filigree work, the perfect enamelling and the delicacy of metal work these old watches exhibit.

They belong to a world apart. Clocks of old masters still carry on their functions: the hand still revolves in unison with the slow swing of the "royal pendulum." As timekeepers they equal most of the modern, and excel the cheap clock, hardly worth designating as a timekeeper. But the Swiss and the American factory-made watch, claiming no equality of artistic embellishment, have dethroned the antique watch in regard to accuracy. Curious and rare examples of the latter crowd the shelves of museums as being representative of that mysterious past when Time was of less moment than it is now. They belong to the age of the missal and the illuminated manuscript, and of the advent of printing with Caxton's well-balanced page. They are at variance with modernity. They were machines before the age of machinery--their very mechanism protests against being regarded as scientifically accurate. One lingers over their ornament with loving regard and forgets their purport. As timekeepers they fell short of the abbey clock, or of the sundial--a perennial stickler for truth when the sun shone. When the long pendulum, under the auspices of Christopher Huygens, commenced swinging, a timekeeper ready to hand eclipsed their gold and enamelled triumphs. But as fashionable baubles they had their continuous evolution, from Thomas Chamberlaine de Chelmisforde to Pinchbeck, and from Tompion to Eardley Norton. A considerable amount of ingenuity was given to producing examples of diminutive size which should perform adequately the correct functions of a timekeeper. But accuracy and scientific exactitude came late in the story of evolution. At length man's ingenuity triumphed. There are watches no larger than filberts which keep exact time, but there are thousands which do not.

The last popular watch, which our grandfathers termed a "turnip," was the stage prior to modern development, and at that stage collecting ends.

A scientific classification of watches would resolve itself under the following heads:--

I. _Early watches_, prior to the invention and general adoption of the fusee, that is, from about 1500 to 1540. This period would be further subdivided into (_a_) those with movements entirely of steel; (_b_) the next stage, with plates and pinions of brass and the wheels and pinions of steel; and the latest stage, (_c_), in which the plates and wheels were brass and the pinions of steel, as at the present day.

II. _Watches from about 1540 to 1640_, all having fusees, and being made of every conceivable shape and size: octagonal, oval, cruciform, in the shape of a book, and so on. The cases were sometimes of crystal or bloodstone, and enamelled designs and chased gold work were predominant features.

III. _Watches of the seventeenth century_, from 1610 to 1675, at which date the pendulum spring was invented. These are mainly round in shape, according to the fashion about 1620, which superseded the ancient quaint forms. The cases, both of silver and gold, were richly enamelled, and moving calendars and astronomical details were frequently made.

IV. _Late seventeenth and early eighteenth century watches._ These would embrace the period from 1675 to 1720, after the invention of the pendulum spring.

V. _The eighteenth century watch._ This should include all the improvements, changes in decorative style, and other details bringing the watch up to the threshold of the nineteenth century and modernity.

We can only indicate the type of watch as falling under the various periods, and specimens of the leading types are illustrated (pp. 283, 287).

The watches are numbered in the illustrations from one to ten, and can thus be easily identified by the reader.

_No. 1_ shows the character of an Elizabethan watch. The fine case shows the quality of the chased and repoussé open-work design.

_No. 2_ is a James I oval watch, and the maker is Yate, of London. This watch is dated 1620, in the reign of James I, the year when the _Mayflower_ sailed to America and New England was founded by those wise Puritans who foresaw the oncoming civil war of the next reign. The Earl of Ashburnham exhibited at the Stuart Exhibition in 1889 a gold watch which formerly belonged to Charles I, inscribed "Henricus Jones, Londini." Another maker of watches of this period is Edward East. The silver alarum clock given by Charles I on his way to execution to Thomas Herbert was made by Edward East. "Through the garden the King passed into the park, where making a stand, he asked Mr. Herbert the hour of the day: and taking the clock into his hand, gave it him, and bade him keep it in memory of him." This silver alarum watch is still treasured in the Mitford family.

_No. 3_ is a Cromwellian silver watch, plum-shaped. As coats of arms were not so sinful as painted cherubs and stained-glass windows, this bauble with elaborately engraved crest survived the wreckers' despoiling hand. Cromwell himself boasted of a crest, and in some respects it resembled that used by royalty.

_No. 4_ is a Restoration watch made by Snow, of Lavington, near Bath. It exhibits fine ornamentation and is a beautiful specimen of Late Stuart style when sumptuousness, under the guiding influence of the French Louis Quatorze grandeur, made itself felt in this country.

_No. 5_ is worthy of respect and admiration as being the work of that great maker, Thomas Tompion. It is of the William and Mary period. The craftsman had arrived at the period of a scientific endeavour to create a perfect timekeeper. The case indicates utility; ornament is in due subjection. The Arabic figures showing the seconds on the dial should be observed.

_No. 6_, of which the back is shown, is a watch by Peter Garon. It is in black piqué case, finely decorated in a subdued and reticent manner. Peter Garon flourished between 1694 and 1706. But in that year, when Marlborough's campaigns were at their full height, poor Garon felt the stress of commercial depression and became bankrupt.

_No. 7_, showing the front and open case, is a fine watch by Duhamel, about 1740, bringing us to the days of George I and Walpole.

_No. 8_, with its fine broad repoussé case, is by Haydon, and the case is signed "V. Haut."

_No. 9_ shows an illustration of the back, where the movement is visible. The maker of this is Daniels, of Leighton, 1760.

_No. 10_ is by Kemp, London, and is decorated in Battersea enamel and shagreen. This brings us to the age of Pinchbeck, "the toyman in the Strand," and suggests the gewgaws and trifles, the enamelled heads for malacca canes, the snuff-boxes, and all the fashionable paraphernalia of a man about town. The watch in some respects had begun to lose its old character and was again a toy.

Among interesting work is that of Thomas Chamberlaine de Chelmisforde. He worked in the brightest days of Charles I, when the arts were receiving stimulation from the Court. A new era seemed as though it might be about to dawn. The picture gallery of Charles I at Hampton Court showed his catholic taste, and his Queen, Henrietta Maria, was a patron of the arts. Vandyck and other great artists flocked to this country, and highly trained craftsmen commenced to build a reputation which later iconoclasts swept aside as of Baal.

In the watch illustrated by Thomas Chamberlaine there is something delightfully simple and chaste. He was a maker whose work promised much. There is a specimen of his work signed "Chamberlain Chelmisford" at the British Museum, but in the specimen illustrated the name is chased "Thomas Chamberlaine de Chelmisforde."

The study of watches of the various periods is a fascinating one. When the collector leaves the path of clocks, with their more Gargantuan proportions, to become a student of the intricacies of the art of the watchmaker as exemplified in some of his greatest triumphs, he has been enticed on a quest which is unending. No field in collecting and connoisseurship has claimed more devotees.

INDEX

"Act of Parliament" clocks, so-called, 124

Adam style, its employment in the clock-case, 147 Robert, clock-case by, illustrated, 139

Aicken, George (Cork), clock by, 277

Alarum clocks, 54 and striking clocks, early, 32

Ale-house clocks, Oliver Goldsmith quoted, 127

American clocks-- "Banjo clocks," 124 Bracket clock, by Savin and Dyer (Boston), 198 Lantern clock, with pendulum, 59

Anchor pendulum, the, 59

Arnold, John (Bodmin), 37, 212

Astronomical clock-dial, the, 28

Babylonian measurement of time, 28, 29, 30

Bacon, quoted, 53

Balance and weights prior to pendulum, 33

Barraud, clock by (1805), 203

Battersea enamel employed for watch-cases, 290

Beginners, hints for, 41

Belfast clocks and clockmakers, 272

Bewick, Thomas, engraver of clock-dials (1763-74), 215, 217

Biddell, clock by, 204

"Birdcage" clocks, 54

Böttger, his porcelain at Meissen, 109

Boulle, André Charles, and his marquetry, 72, 73, 111

Bracket clock, the, 179-204 or wall clock, the, early use of, 46, 49

Brass lantern clock, the, 45-63

Bristol clock illustrated, 149

Britten, F. J., _Old Clocks and Clockmakers_, full lists of makers in, 37

Brownhill, Henry (Leeds), copper token of, 218

Cabrier, name falsely put on Dutch clocks, 36

Calendar watch illustrated, 291

Case, the, evolution of, 155

Catherine of Braganza, dowry of, 107

Centres of clock and watch making in 1797, 214

Chamber clocks an established feature in furniture, 192

Chamberlaine, Thomas, de Chelmisforde, watch by, 291

Charles I, watch belonging to, 289

Charles II, death-bed scene of, 50, 53 Watch by Robert Hooke presented to, 36

Cherub head, the, a favourite ornament, 166 Its use on clock-dial, 169 Its use on Stuart furniture, 170

Cheshire clock-case, peculiarities of, 230

Chester, Bishop of (John Wilkins), quoted, 30

Chinese style of Chippendale, 91, 108 Designs at Worcester, Bow, and Bristol porcelain factories, 108 Taste, the _furore_ in France and Holland, 108

Chintzes, the early character of, 111

Chippendale, his Chinese style, 91, 108 His indebtedness to Marot, 155 Style in clock cases, 136

Clockmakers' Company, 1704, transactions of, quoted, 36 On fabrications of English work, 36

Clockmakers, the great English, 35 English, full list of, 37

Clockmaking, decadence of, 38 Personality in, 38, 39

Collecting period, the, 38

Collectors, hints for, foibles of, 39, 41

Colour _versus_ form, 110

Cookworthy, William, his true porcelain at Plymouth, 109

Copper tokens of clockmakers illustrated, 218, 236

Cork, clocks and clockmakers at, 289

Cornwall clockmakers, list of, 241

Country marquetry, 60

Cromwellian "plum" watch illustrated, 283

Cumming, Alexander, clock by (1770), 203

Day and night, 27, 29

Day, the, its division into hours, 28 Lunar, 29 Mean solar, 28

Delft, Dutch, ornamentation of, used in marquetry, 98

Devon and Cornwall clockmakers, list of, 241

Dial, the-- Brass, with silvered hour circle and engraved figures, 158 Character of, 157 Correct proportions of the, 165 Early form of, 30 Evolution of, 162, 165 Iron painted ornament and figures, 158 Position of maker's name on, 158, 161

Dickens, _Dombey and Son_ quoted, 31

Domestic clock, the, 33

Draper, John (1703), dial of clock by, 158

Dublin clocks and clockmakers, 272 National Museum, examples at, illustrated, 269, 273

Dutch clock panels imported, 97 Delft ware, its imitation of porcelain, 111 Fabrications of noted English makers, 36 Influence on cabinet-maker, 67 Influence on clockmaker, 217, 271 Origin of long-case clock, 154 Ornament found on clocks-- Cupids and crown, 170 Marquetry panels, 92 Phases of moon, 217 Spandrel with Seasons, 271

Dutton, Matthew, 37 Thomas, 37 William, 37

Earnshaw, Thomas (1750), 37, 212

East Anglian clockmakers, list of, 247

East, Edward, 37

East India Company, the Dutch, 107 The English, 109

Ebsworth, John, 37

Edict of Nantes and its effect, 68, 90, 120

Edinburgh clocks and clockmakers, 261-265

Eighteenth century, best period of clockmaking in, 40

Elizabethan watch illustrated, 289

Ellicott, John (Bodmin), 212

English masters of clockmaking, the great, 35 School of lacquered work, 114

Equation of time, 29

Evelyn, _Diary_ of, quoted (1681), 107

Evolution of the English mantel clock, 186

Evolution of long-case clock, 153 Base, its changing form, 155 Dial, its character, 157 Hands, their differing types, 174 Spandrel, its ornamentation, 166 Waist, its varying proportion, 155

Exeter clockmakers, list of, 241

Fleur-de-lis ornament on dial, 174

Foreign craftsmen working in England-- Dutch marquetry workers, 83, 92 French Huguenot cabinet-makers, 69, 90 Italian glassworkers, 69

Form, changing, of hood, waist, and base, 155 Innovations of, in clock-cases, 141 _versus_ colour, 111

French clocks and their influence, 147, 197, 278 Influence on mantel clocks, 197

Fromanteel, Ahasuerus, pendulum introduced into England by, 37 The family of, great clockmakers, 37

Furniture, influence of, on clock case, 141

Georgian clocks (1720-1830), 131

German school of marquetry, 72

Gibbons, Grinling, 121

Glasgow, example at Corporation Art Gallery illustrated, 259

Glass windows, when first used in coaches, 161 Workers in London, seventeenth-century, 69

Goldsmith, Oliver, _Deserted Village_ quoted, 127

Gordon, Patrick (Edinburgh), clock by, 261 Thomas (Edinburgh), 1668-1743, 261

Graham, George (1673-1751), 212 His evidence as to Robert Hooke's invention, 36

Grandfather clock, the, its Dutch origin, 74 Its long survival, 135 Its popularity, 135

Grant, John, 37 Inn clock by, illustrated, 125

Graydon, George (Dublin), clock by (1796), 277

Greek measurement of time, 28, 29

Halifax and district, list of clockmakers, 217

"Halifax" grandfather clocks, 217

Hampton Court, Dutch character of, 91 Protestant style of decoration at, 170 The work of Daniel Marot at, 91 The work of Sir Christopher Wren at, 91

Hands, the, evolution of, 174 Hour hand, at first employed, 30, 157 Minute hand first added, 30, 158

Harris, Richard, clock by, at St. Paul's, Covent Garden, 35

Harrison, John, 37 His chronometer, 212

Hill, Thomas, clock by (1760), 197

Hogarth, William, the possibility of engraved clock-dials by, 161

Home Counties, the, list of clockmakers, 236

Hood, changing forms of the, 155

Hooke, Dr. Robert, his claim for invention of balance-spring for watches, 36 His inventions, 212 Watch by, presented to Charles II, 36

Hour, the, its division into minutes, 30, 158

Hours, division of day into, 30

Huguenot refugees settle in England, 68, 120

Huygens, Christopher, Dutch astronomer, his work, 33 His quarrel with Dr. Hooke, 36

Huygens, Dutch cabinet-maker, his imitations of Japanese lacquered panels, 111

Inlaid furniture, 70, 71

Inn clock, the, 124

Innovations of form in clock-cases, 141

Irish clockmakers, list of, 271, 272

Italian school of marquetry, 71

James I appoints Ramsay as "Clockmaker Extraordinary," 256

Japanese lacquer, specimens of, 106

Johnson, Thomas, clock by (1730), 191

Jones, Henry, Charles I watch made by, 289 Charles II clock by, 212

Kent and Sussex, clockmakers of, 247

Kew Gardens Botanical Museum, Japanese lacquer at, 106

Knibb, Joseph, father and son, 37 Joseph (1670), 211 Clocks by (1690), 191, 236, 241 Copper token of (1677), 236

Knokmakers, the, of Scotland, 258

Labarte, _Arts of the Middle Ages_ quoted, 33

Lac and its properties, 105 Its introduction into England, 107

Lacquer-- Chinese and Japanese origin of, 105, 106 Dutch imitations, 110, 111 English school of lacquer work, 118, 121 French masters, 112 Its use in the clock-case, 105 Work-- English school of, 114 Foreign craftsmen in London, 120 School of English amateurs, 121

Lacquered clock-case, its peculiarities, 112 Panels imported from the East, 109

Lamb, Charles, quoted on sundials, 162 Name falsely put on Dutch clocks, 36

Lancashire clock-case, peculiarities of, 230 Clockmakers, list of, 230

Lantern clock-- Early form, 45 Its similarity to ship's lantern, 46

Lilly, _Life and Times_ quoted, 256

Liverpool and district, list of clockmakers, 224

Long-case clock-- Dutch origin of, 154 Evolution of the, 153 Georgian period, the, 131 Lacquer period, the, 105 Stability of the, 132 Veneer and marquetry period, the, 67

Loomes, Thomas, clock by, 191

Lovelace, Jacob (Exeter), 212, 242

Lowestoft china, so-called, with Dutch inscription, 173

Lunar day, the, 29

Lunette, the use of the, in dial and case, 158

Lustre ware clock vase, Staffordshire, 198

Macaulay, his account of death of Charles II, 50, 53

Mahogany long cases, the period of, 136

Makers, old, their personality given to clocks, 38

Mantel clocks, the English character of, 185

Marot, Daniel, his work at Hampton Court, 90, 91 Designs of long-case clocks, 155

Marquetry-- Country cabinet-makers' use of, 84 Decadence of, 100 Definition of, 71 Dutch school of, 79 Early English attempt at, 84 Finest period, 40, 79, 83 Foreign influence on English art, 79 German school of, 72 Imported sheets, frequent use of, 84, 97 Italian school of, 71 Provincial, 60 Revival of, Sheraton period, 123, 147 Veneer, the use of, with, 74

Martin, Sieur Simon Etienne, his varnish, 112

Mary, Queen, and Hampton Court, 98, 170

Massy, Henry (1680), dial of clock by, 158

Mean time, 29

Mechanism of clocks, early, 32

Midlands, list of clockmakers in the, 230

Mills, Humphry, Edinburgh (1661), 261 Richard, Edinburgh (1678-1710), 261

Minute, the, its division into seconds, 30

Mudge, Thomas, Exeter (1715), 37, 212

Musical clock attributed to Rimbault, 142 by George Aicken, Cork, 277

Name of maker, position on dial, 161

Names found on dials, origin of, 213

Nantes, Edict of, and its effect, 68, 120

Newcastle-upon-Tyne, list of makers, 215

New Geneva (near Waterford), Irish watchmaking centre at, 278 Silver assayed at, 278

New York Metropolitan Art Museum, clocks illustrated, 57, 193

Nineteenth century, best period of clockmaking in, 40 Long-case clock of the, 147

North of England, list of clockmakers, 215

Nottingham clockmakers, list of, 235

Numerals on dial, note on, 158, 165

Painted furniture simulating lacquer work, 123

Panels, lacquered, imported from the East, 109 Marquetry, their use in clock-case, 97

"Parliament" clocks, so-called, 124

Pendulum, the-- Advent of, 50 Early studies relating to, 154 First introduction of, 33 Introduced into England by Fromanteel, 37 Length of, determined by longitude, 179 Types of-- the anchor, 59; the "royal" or long, 33; the short, its position at front of dial, 33

Pepys' _Diary_ quoted (1667), 161

Personal clock, the, 34

Personality in clockmaking, 38

Pinchbeck, Christopher, 37 Period of watches, 290

Pitt, his tax on clocks (1797), 124

Pope, _Essay on Criticism_ quoted, 31

Porcelain, true, its introduction into Europe, 109

Poy, Godfrey, clock by (1745), 192

Pre-pendulum clocks, 33

Provincial clocks and makers, 211 Makers, some great, 211

Quare, name falsely put on Dutch clocks, 36

Queen Mary, her influence in rebuilding Hampton Court, 98

Ramsay, David, 255; watch signed by, 257

_Réfugié, le style_, its introduction into England, 90

Regulator clock, the, 148

Repairs, ignorant restoration to be avoided, 42

Riesener, the marquetry of, 111

Rimbault, Stephen, 37 Noteworthy for musical clocks, 142, 147

Roentgen, David, the marquetry of, 111

Science, the dawn of, 35

Scott, Sir Walter, _Fortunes of Nigel_ quoted, 255

Scottish clocks, 255 Character of, 266 Makers, eighteenth century, list of, 261, 262

Second, the, the second division of the hour, 30 Hand, the, 30

Seventeenth century, dawn of science in the, 35 Types of lantern clock, 53 Watches, 286, 287

Shagreen cases to watches, 290

Shakespeare, _As you like it_ quoted, 162 _King John_ quoted, 32

Sheraton style in clock-cases, 147

Spandrel ornament on clock-dial-- Artistic difficulty of, 166 Cherub head style, 166, 169 Cupids and crown style, 170

Spanish proverb quoted, 185

Specialization of clockmaking, 37

Spring, the, its early use as a motive power, 32

Staffordshire earthenware clock vase, 198

Stalker and Parker, treatise on "japanning" (1688), 122

Striking and alarum clocks, early, 32

Strowbridge (Dawlish), clock by, 204 Clock repaired by, 247

Stuart and Tudor ages compared, 35

Sundial, the, and its tradition, 162 Time, 29

Sussex, clockmakers of, 247 Clock (Ashburnham) illustrated, 243

Swiss watchmakers settled in Ireland (1784-90), 278

Table clocks, great variety of, 185

Time, apparent and mean, equation of, 29 and its measurement, 27 Babylonian method of reckoning, 28, 29, 30

Tokens, copper, of clockmakers illustrated, 218, 236

Tombstones, ornament on, indicative of contemporary styles, 157

Tomlinson, William, 37

Tompion, Thomas (1671-1713), 212, 236 Name of, falsely put on Dutch clocks, 36

Tudor and Stuart ages compared, 35

Veneer and marquetry, the use of, 74 Definition of, 69 Modern delicacy of, 69

Verge escapement of old clocks, 33

Vulliamy, Benjamin, 37 Benjamin Lewis, 37 Justin, 37

Wales, clocks made in, 248

Wall clock, early use of, 46, 49 Inn clock illustrated, 125 Irish wall clock illustrated, 277

Wall-paper-- Early use of in England, 99 Period in marquetry, 99 Repeat design of, on marquetry, 100

Walnut period of long case, 135, 136

Watches, Old English-- Battersea enamel, 290 Cromwellian, 289 Early Stuart, 289 Eighteenth-century, 290 Elizabethan, 289 Pinchbeck period, 290 Typical English described, 285, 286 William and Mary, 290

Watches, Liverpool and district famous for, 224

Waterford, Swiss watchmakers at, 278

Watson, Sam (Coventry), clock by (1687), 186

Webster's _New International Dictionary_ quoted, 30

Wedgwood medallions as ornaments to clock-case, 204

Welsh clocks and makers, 248

West Country clockmakers, list of, 241

Wilkins, John, Bishop of Chester, quoted, 30

William and Mary period of decoration, 92, 97, 98

Windmills, name falsely put on Dutch clocks, 36

Woodcarvers at Hampton Court, 170

Wooden works of clocks, 266

Wren, Sir Christopher, his work at, Hampton Court, 91

Yorkshire clock-case, peculiarities of, 223, 229 Clockmakers, 217

Zoffany, clock-cases decorated by, 142

_Printed in Great Britain by_ UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON

CHATS ON ENGLISH EARTHENWARE

(Companion volume to "Chats on English China.")

BY ARTHUR HAYDEN

With coloured Frontispiece and 80 Full-page Illustrations of specimens of Earthenware, Lists of Prices, Glossary, Bibliography, and Reproductions of 200 Marks.

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+--------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Transcriber's Note: | | | | Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. Other | | errors are noted below. | | | | Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant | | form was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed. | | | | Ambiguous hyphens were retained. | | | | Mid-paragraph illustrations have been moved between paragraphs and | | some illustrations have been moved closer to the text that | | references them. The List of Illustrations paginations and those | | in image captions were not corrected. | | | | Italicized words are surrounded by underline characters, | | _like this_, bolded words by equal signs,=like this=. | | | | Corrections: | | Bartholomew Newsom -----> Bartholomew Newsam (p. 46) | | Kenneth Maclellan -----> Kenneth Maclennan (p. 114) | | panels of ergolesi -----> panels of pergolesi (p. 121) | | Ralph Beilly -----> Ralph Beilby (p. 216) | | Peter Garron -----> Peter Garon (p. 287). | | | | Note: | | Page 173: Quinton, Yarmouth. The letter u in these two words | | appears with a dot on top. These words are shown as follows: | | Q[.u]inton, Yarmo[.u]th. | +--------------------------------------------------------------------+