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MARRIN’S BOOKSHOP RARE BOOKS MAPS & PRINTS KENT STOCK LIST 2013-14 1

Marrin's catalogue 2013 14

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MARRIN’S BOOKSHOP

RARE BOOKSMAPS & PRINTS

KENT STOCK LIST2013-14

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Harris’s History of Kent 1719

TERMS

All entries have been thoroughly researched using the relevant bibliographies and British Library catalogue, DNB, COPAC etc, but references have been omitted from this catalogue for reasons of space, but are available in full descriptions on request. The only exception to the above is Printing in the Mind of Man.

All books are octavo, printed in London and First Editions in good condition, unless otherwise stated. Any item found to vary from the described state may be returned within 2 weeks of receipt.

Postage is extra and overseas customers please state your preference as to air or surface mail.

We accept payment by cheque, Visa or Mastercard or any debit card.We prefer payment by Credit or Debit card, or by Sterling transfer to our UK bank account.Bank Account Name: MARRIN’S BOOK SHOP MR PJ MARRIN SO TRADING.Bank Account Number: 63313982, Sort Code: 09-01-53.BIC number: ABBYGB2LXXX IBan number: GB66 ABBY09015363313982

We always extend a warm welcome to customers visiting the shop as our stock is constantly changing.

Orders may be emailed or telephoned to us at any time. If you wish to speak to us, our shop hours are:

10:00 am – 5:30 pm. Tuesday to Saturday.

We very occasionally close at lunchtime, but there is a telephone answering machine to take messages. If placing an order on this machine, please clearly state the item number and your name and contact details. A follow up call is advised to confirm availability.

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1. THE LAST BERTH OF THE SAILORMAN. RESEARCH REPORT.The Society for Sailing Barge Research. 1996Folio. Unpaginated (approximately 100 pp.) illustrated with Plans of Barge Moorings. Original pictorial blue card wrappers in an acetate cover. A very good copy.The book comprises a list of the known whereabouts and fate of every Britishsailing barge and includes a brief history of each and an Ordnance Survey map reference. [ref: 20819 ] £25

2. ABELL, HENRY FRANCIS. HISTORY OF KENT. With Original Sketches and Maps.

Ashford Kentish Express(Igglesden and Co.) Limited. 1898First edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. vii + [i] +328 pp. Illustrated with 27 plates, including frontispiece and two full page maps, all sketches by author. Bound in original blue decorated cloth, gilt. Extremities worn but otherwise very good copy. Bookplate of R. E. Marshall. Mr Abell's aim was to connect the wider history of Britain with the events in Kent, from Roman times to the 19th century. It remains a useful work, whichhas become quite scarce. We have another similar copy, with 1898 gift inscription on verso of first free endpaper and bookseller’s label, Blinko and Son, Booksellers and stationers, 27, Queen St., Ramsgate on rear pastedown. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19777 ] £50

3. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for carrying into execution an Agreement between Peter Burrell ... and the Trustees of Morden College, in the County of Kent ...to grant leases of Maidenstone Hill.....

Charles Eyre and William Strahan 1771Folio. General title + 12 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14049 ] £15

4. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for confirming certain Provisional Orders made .....under The General Pier and Harbour Act, 1861, relating to ..... Deal and Walmer .....Chatham ......

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1863Folio. 87 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.Contains schedules of Duties payable on various goods at respective ports. [ref: 14084 ] £20

5. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for Enlarging and Maintaining the Harbour of Ramsgate, and for Cleaning Amending, and Preserving the Haven of Sandwich.

Thomas Baskett, 1749Folio. General title + 32 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.This is the Act which set up the modern Ramsgate Harbour. [ref: 13821 ] £50

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6. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for making Compensation to the Proprietors of certain Messuages, Lands, etc....purchased..... for the better securing His Majesty’s Docks, Ships, and Stores at Portsmouth and Chatham.

[Charles Eyre and William Strahan] [1783]Folio. 13 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14053 ] £15

7. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for regulating ...the Oyster Fishery inthe River Medway....

Assigns of Henry Hills, London. 1729Folio. General title and 12 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14071 ] £25

8. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for revesting certain Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, in the County of Kent.....

George Eyre and Andrew Strahan 1797Folio. General title + 5 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.This Act deals with the return of land from trustees to owners and among others, makes specific mention of James Drake Brockman and land in Shorn(e)cliffe. [ref: 14045 ] £15

9. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for the Appointment of a StipendiaryMagistrate for Chatham and Sheerness....Kent.

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1867Folio. 4 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14067 ] £8

10.ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for the more easy and speedy Recovery of Small Debts in the City of Rochester, Strood, Chatham, Gillingham, Sheerness Etc..

Charles Eyre and William Strahan 1782Folio. General title, + 25 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.An Act providing for the setting up of Commissioners (named in the Act) for the operation of a Small Debtors Court. [ref: 13913 ] £20

11. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for the more effectual Regulation of Pilots and of the Pilotage of Ships and Vessels navigating the British Seas.

George Grierson , Dublin. 1808Folio. 32 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.Includes schedules of rates for pilotage from London River to the mouth of the Thames and for Cinque Ports pilotage. [ref: 14081 ] £20

12. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for vesting in .... War Department, lands.....at Walmer....

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1863

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Folio. 4 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.Regarding the conveyance of land abutting on and surrounding Walmer Castle and mentioning the Jenkinson family and Sir Brooke William Robert Boothby. [ref: 14066 ] £8

13. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to continue.... An Act to prevent the committing of Frauds By Bankrupts.... and for extending the Laws relating to Hackney Coaches, to the Counties of Kent and Essex.

Mark Baskett. 1764Folio. General title and 2 pp. This Act gave Justices of the Peace in Kent and Essex the same jurisdiction asthose of London, et al. [ref: 14061 ] £8

14. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to continue in force ...for the better Regulation of the Oyster Fishery in the River Medway....

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1868Folio. 2 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14073 ] £10

15. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. AN ACT TO CONTINUE SEVERAL LAWS FOR THE BETTER REGULATING OF PILOTS, FOR THE CONDUCTING OF SHIPS AND VESSELS FROM DOVER, DEAL, AND ISLE OF THANET, UP THE RIVER THAMES AND MEDWAY...

London Printed by Thomas Baskett. 1750Folio. 8 x 12¼ inches. (12 pp.) Bound in dark blue cloth with gilt title to spine. A fine copy.An important act in respect of the Deal pilots. [ref: 21324 ] £45

16. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to empower the Commissioners of His Majesty’s Treasury to restore Seizures, remit or mitigate Fines, Penalties, or Forfeitures....relating to Customs or Excise....

George Grierson and John Rowe Power, Dublin. 1814Folio. 2 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.The Act deals with the restoration of confiscated goods or fines. [ref: 14037 ] £12

17. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. AN ACT TO MAKE MORE EFFECTUAL PROVISION FOR THE PREVENTION OF SMUGGLING.

George Eyre and Andrew Strahan 1807Folio. 20 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.The Act deals with the licensing, on pain of forfeiture, of vessels above a certain tonnage and regulations regarding their clearing and sailing out of Channel Island ports. [ref: 14039 ] £20

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18. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to regulate the Clearance of Vessels....for authorizing Officers of the Customs to seize Spirits....

George Eyre and Andrew Strahan 1815Folio. 4 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14041 ] £12

19. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to regulate the issuing of Licences to allow Open Boats to proceed to Foreign Parts, and for revoking the same when necessary.

George Grierson , Dublin. 1815Folio. 2 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.Further anti-smuggling regulation. [ref: 14088 ] £8

20. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to repeal a certain Toll levied upon Fishing Vessels passing the Nore.

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1859Folio. 4 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14040 ] £12

21. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act to repeal an Act ... as relates to the Purchase of Lands.... at Sheerness .....at Gillingham....

George Grierson and Martin Keene, Dublin. 1821Folio. 11 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.Pertaining to Finborough Marsh, otherwise St. Mary’s Marsh or Warden’s Marsh and mentioning the names of Rt. Hon. Charles Manners Sutton, Honourable William Huskisson, Sir Edward Knatchbull, and John Wilson Croker. [ref: 14065 ] £12

MAIDSTONE POOR LAW ACTS22.ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT, FOR THE

GOVERNMENT AND REGULATION OF THE POOR IN THE TOWN AND PARISH OF MAIDSTONE. 15TH GEO.II AND 20TH GEO.III.CHAP.22. George III. Cap.XXII. An Act for the better Government and Regulation of the Poor, in the Town and Parish of Maidstone, in the County of Kent. Bound with: An Act To alter, amend, and enlarge the powers of an Act, passed in the Twentieth Year of His present Majesty, for the better Government and Regulation of the Poor in the Town and Parish of Maidstone, inthe County of Kent.

Maidstone: Printed by J.Smith, Week Street. 1828Folio. 8 inches x 12 inches. 12 pp. + 3 + [1]. B-E2. Illustrated with royal arms at head of first act. Sewn in

buff paper wrappers. A few small holes to both wrappers and chipping to rear wrapper. Clean interior.The 1780 Act replaces the former parochial authority of the churchwardens and overseers by Trustees of the Poor. The Trustees were vested with the

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parish poor- and almshouses and were granted the power to appoint officers, levy rates, take up the wandering poor, to punish inmates ‘guilty of profane Cursing, Swearing, Drunkenness, or of any lewd, immoral or indecent behaviour, or refuse or neglect to perform the work or service which he or she shall be required to do...’ and to relieve the industrious poor. The second act appears to be the 1805 Act of George III, authorising the Trustees to sell a number of decayed alms and poor houses in the borough and to replace them. After the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act, the duties of the Trustees were limited to the levying of the poor rate to fund the activitiesof the new Board of Guardians, who established the Maidstone Union workhouse at Coxheath in 1837-38 (Russell, History of Maidstone). Russell [ref: 19479 ] £85

23.ADAMS AND SON. ADAMS’ GUIDE TO RYE AND DISTRICT. Adams and Son, Rye. No date but (c.1960)[8] + vi + 9-170 pp. + xvi with folding map and numerous photographic illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers.With an Account of the appalling Lifeboat Disaster and a Chapter on Smuggling: Ancient and Modern. [ref: 11288 ] £20

24.AGRICULTURE - BOYS, JOHN. GENERAL VIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE OF THE COUNTY OF KENT; WITH OBSERVATIONS

ON THE MEANS OF ITS IMPROVEMENT. DRAWN UP FOR THE CONSIDERATION OF THE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, AND INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT, FROM THE ORIGINALREPORT TRANSMITTED TO THE BOARD; WITH ADDITIONAL REMARKSOF SEVERAL RESPECTABLE COUNTRY GENTLEMEN AND FARMERS. TO WHICH IS ADDED A TREATISE ON PARING AND BURNING. BY JOHN

BOYS OF BETSHANGER, FARMER.1805Second Edition with amendments and additions. xxiii + 293 pp. with folding engraved map in original hand-colour, and 2 copper-engraved plates, folding tables etc.. Bound in fine contemporary half-calf, with marbled boards. A very attractive copy which is exceptionally clean. The second and much enlarged edition of the primary book on 18th and 19th century Kentish agriculture. Boys’ report was first issued in 1794 (but not generally circulated) in draft form as part of the extensive series of reports drawn up for the Board of Agriculture under Arthur Young. These describedthe conditions of farming throughout the county, and were designed to be returned to the Board with each farmer’s comments, afterwards being editedand incorporated into a final report, the first of which was published in 1796.This is the second published edition, describing in great detail the agricultural practice in Kent at the beginning of the agricultural revolution.

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Boys, a farmer from Betteshanger, edited and considerably enlarged the original report with the addition of much new material. [ref: 18963 ] £450

25.AGRICULTURE - MELLING, ELIZABETH (Editor). KENTISH SOURCES III. ASPECTS OF AGRICULTURE AND INDUSTRY. A collection of examples from original sources in the Kent Archives Office, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century.

Kent County Council. 19618vo. viii + 150pp. Illustrated. Small neat bookplate inside front wrapper. Original paper wrappers.[ref: 18996 ] £15

26.AGRICULTURE - [YOUNG, ARTHUR] A SIX WEEKS TOUR, THROUGH THE SOUTHERN COUNTIES OF ENGLAND AND WALES.

DESCRIBING, PARTICULARLY, I. THE PRESENT STATE OF AGRICULTURE AND MANUFACTURES. II. THE DIFFERENT METHODS OF CULTIVATING THE SOIL. III. THE SUCCESS ATTENDING SOME LATE EXPERIMENTS ON VARIOUSGRASSES, ETC. IV. THE VARIOUS PRICES OF LABOUR AND PROVISIONS. V. THE STATE OF THE WORKING POOR IN THOSE COUNTIES, WHEREIN THE RIOTS WERE MOST REMARKABLE.WITH DESCRIPTIONS AND MODELS OF SUCH NEW INVENTED IMPLEMENTS OF HUSBANDRY AS DESERVE TO BE GENERALLY KNOWN:INTERSPERSED WITH ACCOUNTS OF THE SEATS OF THE NOBILITY AND GENTRY, AND OTHER OBJECTS WORTHY OF NOTICE. IN SEVERAL LETTERS TO A FRIEND. BY THE AUTHOR OF THE FARMER’S LETTERS. W. Nicoll, at the Paper-Mill, No. 51, in St. Paul’s Church-Yard. London, 1768First Edition. 8vo, [2] + 284 pp; without the half-title and final blank leaf which are sometimes present, but the text is complete, with seven woodcut illustrations. Bound in quarter calf, spine with raised bands, and title label, over marbled boards.This work was the beginning of a most exhaustive inquiry into the state of British agriculture. It began almost by accident, with a simple recording of the crop rotations, the implements used, the cost of labour and provisions, the size of farms, and the horses or oxen employed on holdings of different sizes. Passing reference is also made to local industries, such as the manufacture of Witney blankets, and useful facts and figures about them arementioned. The work encompasses a vast amount of information that was to transform agriculture in these islands and beyond. Goldsmiths 10407; Higgs 4283; PMM 214; Fussell, More Old English farming books, pp. 71-72, Gazley, The Life of Arthur Young, p. 35. [ref: 18442 ] £550

27.ALLENDALE, JOHN. SAILORMAN BETWEEN THE WARS. BEING THE JOURNAL OF A THAMES, MEDWAY AND COASTAL BARGEMAN.

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John Hallewell, Rochester. 1978205 pp. with photo illustration Original blue cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.[ref: 20793 ] £25

28.ANDERSON, OLOF. S. THE ENGLISH HUNDRED-NAMES. Lunds Universitets Arsskrift. 1934xlvii + 174 pp. Original printed paper wrappers. Wrapper edges a little frayed but text clean and sound. A very good copy.Although not taken specifically from Kentish examples this general survey is similar to Wallenberg’s ‘Place-Names’. Very scarce. [ref: 12070 ] £100

SIGNED BY AUTHOR29.ANDREWS, GEORGE. MEMORIALS OF MURSTON.

Privately Printed 1930.First and only edition, 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. 204 pp. Illustrated by 50 pages of black and white photographic plates, including signed portrait frontispiece. Rebound in blue cloth, gilt. Lower third of title page and lower right hand part of pp.203-4 at end missing, both with some loss of text. Contemporary ink inscription on front pastedown crossed through.Well-illustrated and scarce memoir of life in a village in the north Kent marshes.

[ref: 21674 ] £45

30. ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. FARNBOROUGH/ORPINGTON - A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT IN TWENTY FIVE SHEETS. SHEET NUMBER 6 - WICKHAM AND HAYES TOP LEFT. SWANLEY TOP RIGHT. SEVENOAKS BOTTOM RIGHT. WESTERHAM BOTTOM LEFT. N.B. A SMALL AMOUNT OF THE LEFT HAND SIDE OF THE MAP IS BLANK, AS MOST OF THIS IS IN SURREY AND THE MAP DETAIL SHOWS ONLY KENT.

London. 1769Copper-engraving in original outline colouring. Sheet approximately 19 x 28 inches. A fine example with good margins.The map shows Wickham, Wickham Court, Farnborough, Orpington, the Crays, Swanley, Chelsfield, Lullingstone, Shoreham, Chevening, Brasted andSundridge among other more or less important places. [ref: 18291 ] £250

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MAGNIFICENT DELUXE HAND-COLOURED EXAMPLEANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. KENT - A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT, IN TWENTY FIVE SHEETS. ON A SCALE OF TWO INCHES TO A MILE, FROM AN ACTUAL SURVEY; IN WHICH ARE EXPRESSED ALL THE ROADS, LANES, CHURCHES, TOWNS, VILLAGES, NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMENS SEATS,

ROMAN ROADS, HILLS, RIVERS, WOODS, COTTAGES AND EVERY THING REMARKABLE IN THE COUNTY; TOGETHER WITH THE DIVISION OF THE LATHES AND THEIR SUBDIVISION INTO HUNDREDS. By Jno. C. Andrews, Andw. Dury, and W. Herbert.London Printed for A. Dury in Dukes Court, St. Martins Lane and W. Herbert, at No 27 in

Gulstons Square. White Chappel.. Published according to Act of Parliament January ye 1st. 1769. 1769First edition. Folio. 16 x 21.5 inches. Each map approx. 28 x 21 inches. A Map of the County of Kent (index map) and 25 copper-engraved hand-coloured maps. The engraved title and dedication form sheets 25 and 21, and a Plan of the Town of Sandwich is located in the lower left hand corner of map 22. These maps are at a scale of two inches to the mile. Nothing larger was issued until the 25 inch Ordnance Survey maps of the mid-nineteenth century. Map 5is signed T. Kitchin, Sculp.; Maps 2, 3, 8-10, 13, 14, 17-19 and 20 signed John Andrews, Sculp. Bound in later half morocco over marbled boards with contrasting black morocco title label, gilt. Extremities slightly worn. Maps 18-24 have damage to lower corners, which has some time ago been repaired, but only marginally affecting the maps themselves with no significant loss of content. Otherwise a fine clean copy of one of the most sought after of Kent Maps.A rare atlas of the county of Kent; Andrews and Dury published their

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famous atlas some thirty years before the Ordnance Survey, immediately becoming the best large scale maps of the county. It is thought that Edward Hasted based his maps of the Hundreds of Kent on Andrews and Dury’s work. The finely engraved hatching at once distinguishes these sheets from other maps of the period and the use of the large scale enables one to see individual houses and, particularly, the ground plans of the country seats, many of which are identified with their owners’ names; even the houses of the lesser gentry are included. A circular of 1765 sought subscriptions for this project Andrews appears to have been the principal engraver and possibly surveyor as well, Dury and Herbert were booksellers in London who backed the project. The Map was reprinted in 1775, 1779 and 1794 all the issues are rare and highly prized. The map was issued in this first editionas uncoloured sheets, and coloured in outline, and these are the most frequently seen. Deluxe copies were issued fully hand-coloured with each Hundred in a different watercolour wash and other detail picked out with great skill, as in this example. Very rare thus. Burgess, Printed Maps of Kent, 60, 61. Smith p.16. Roger 225. [ref: 21279 ] £6000

FACSIMILE REPRINT31. ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. KENT - A

TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT IN TWENTY FIVESHEETS. ON A SCALE OF TWO INCHES TO A MILE, FROM AN ACTUAL SURVEY; IN WHICH ARE EXPRESSED ALL THE ROADS, LANES, CHURCHES, TOWNS, VILLAGES, NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMENS SEATS, ROMAN ROADS, HILLS, RIVERS, WOODS, COTTAGES AND EVERY THING REMARKABLE IN THE COUNTY; TOGETHER WITH THE DIVISION OF THE LATHES AND THEIR SUBDIVISION INTO HUNDREDS.

London Printed for A. Dury in Dukes Court St. Martins Lane and W. Herbertat No 27 in Gulstons Sq. White Chappel, Published according to Act of Parliament January ye 1st. 1769. but reprinted by Harry Margary, Lympne Castle Kent. 1968Folio. Engraved title and dedication, (forming sheets 25 and 21), index map of the county and 23 copper engraved maps. Each sheet approx. 19 x 28 ins. The de-luxe edition bound in original cloth. In very good condition.A facsimile of the rare atlas of the county of Kent providing an affordable example of this great map (the original is well into four figures). Andrews and Dury published their famous atlas some thirty years before the Ordnance Survey and they immediately became the best large scale maps of the county - it is thought Edward Hasted based his maps of the Hundreds of Kent on Andrews and Dury’s work. The fine engraved hatching at once distinguishes these sheets from other maps of the period and the use of the large scale enables one to see individual houses and particularly the country seats, many of which are identified with their owners’ names. Also availablein card wrappers at £75. [ref: 18867 ] £175

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32.ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. KENT - A TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT - THE INDEXMAP OF THE WHOLE COUNTY.

London. 1769Copper-engraved map, 19 x 27 inches, fully hand-coloured producing a very decorative effect. Good margins all around, a particularly attractive example.Highly detailed sheet covering the entire county. For easy reference and engraved with a twenty-five square grid shows how the larger-scale sheets are divided. Thomas Kitchin, the well known engraver, produced this map for the publishers, and it remains important in Kentish cartography as the first 'modern' survey, here shown on one map. This outline of the county became something of a classic, it was widely copied and was still being used in the late nineteenth century. Further copies of the index map are available, priced according to finish. [ref: 17934 ] £300

33.ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. KENT - A TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT - THE INDEXMAP OF THE WHOLE COUNTY.

London. 1769Copper-engraved map, 19 x 27 inches, fully hand-coloured producing a very decorative effect. This example is dissected and lain on to linen and preserved within the original slip case. Good margins all around, a particularly attractive example.The slip case has a small paper label with the title ‘KENT’ in ink and below is an inscription ‘The gift of Mrs. C.B. Ainge to Charlotte A. Weller. 15 Sept. 1826’. On the reverse in another hand is ‘Charlotte A. Weller’ in ink, below which is the date 1833. Highly detailed sheet covering the entire county. For easy reference and engraved with a twenty-five square grid showing how the larger-scale sheets are divided. Thomas Kitchin, the well-

known engraver, produced this map for the publishers, and it remains important in Kentish cartography as the first ‘modern’ survey, here shown on one map. This outline of the county became something of a classic, it was widely copied and was still being used in the late nineteenth century. [ref: 19570 ] £225

34.ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. ROMNEY MARSH -A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT IN TWENTY FIVE SHEETS. SHEET NUMBER 23 - ROMNEY MARSH - RYE - BROOKLAND - WALLAND MARSH.

London. 1769Copper engraving in original outline colouring. Sheet approximately 19 x 28 inches. [ref: 9214 ] £175

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35.ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. ROMNEY MARSH -A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT IN TWENTY FIVE SHEETS. SHEET NUMBER 24 - ROMNEY MARSH - LYDD - NEW ROMNEY - DYMCHURCH.

London. 1769Copper engraving in original outline colouring. Sheet approximately 19 x 28 inches. [ref: 9215 ] £175

36.ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. TENTERDEN - A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT IN TWENTY FIVESHEETS. SHEET NUMBER 18 - FRITTENDEN TOP LEFT TO HOTHFIELD AND ASHFORD TOP RIGHT. HAM STREET BOTTOM RIGHT. ROLVENDEN AND IDEN GREEN BOTTOM LEFT WITH TENTERDEN, HIGH HALDEN, BETHERSDEN AND WOODCHURCH ROUGHLY CENTRAL.

London. 1769Copper engraving in original outline colouring. Sheet approximately 19 x 28 inches. This example is dissected and laid onto linen to form a folding map buthere mounted flat. A fine example.A few sets of Andrews and Dury’s great map of Kent were dissected to form a series of folding maps, this being one such. They are quite scarce in this format. [ref: 18290 ] £250

37.ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. THAMES ESTUARY - A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT IN TWENTY FIVE SHEETS. SHEET NUMBER 3 - HUNDRED OF HOO - SHERENESS - THAMES ESTUARY.

London. 1769Copper engraving in original outline colouring. Sheet approximately 19 x 28 inches. A large area of this map is the Thames estuary, but this is dotted with sand banks and ships. The town of Sheerness is on the right at the bottom of this sheet with the mouth of the Medway separating the Isle of Sheppy and the The Isle of Grean [sic] and most of the Hundred of Hoo. [ref: 9198 ] £100

38.ANON. THE KENTISH ANGLER; OR THE YOUNG FISHERMAN’S INSTRUCTOR; SHEWING THE NATURE AND PROPERTIES OF FISH WHICH ARE GENERALLY ANGLED FOR IN KENT; THEIR HAUNTS, SPAWNING TIMES ETC., RULES AND CAUTIONS TO BE OBSERVED BY YOUNG ANGLERS; THE PROPER METHOD OF ANGLING FOR TROUT, CARP, PIKE, TENCH, ROACH, EELS ETC., WORM, MINNOW,CADIS, AND MAGGOT FISHING; FLY FISHING, AND THE PREPARATION OF ARTIFICIAL FLIES; AND AN ABSTRACT OF THE LAWS OF ANGLING. BY AN EXPERIENCED ANGLER.

Canterbury; Printed by J. Saffery; and may be had at Goulden’s Grocery and Fishing Tackle Shop, opposite Palace Street Canterbury. 1804, but reprinted, Peter Blest, Wateringbury, Kent. 1997

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12mo. Frontispiece + 40 + [1] pp. Original cloth, gilt. Upper board decorated in blind.A limited edition of 350 numbered copies. Numbers 1-25 are bound in half calf, some of which are still available at a higher price.The original of this little treatise is of legendary rarity, only two or three copies are known. This is a nicely produced facsimile. [ref: 21378 ] £25

OLDEST COUNTY MAP AND FIRST MAP OF KENT

39.ANON. [but LAMBARDE, WILLIAM ?]. THE SHYRE OF KENT, DIUIDED INTO THE FIVE LATHES THEREOF WITH THE ROADS.

[n.d. but 1570, third state, c.1720-30]Oblong map within decorative border. 14.75 x 9 inches (13.5 x 7 within borders). Upper right, crown, garter and coat of arms of Queen Elizabeth; dividers surmounting scale bar, Scala Miliarium 1-10. Borders contain a banded leaf pattern within double inner and outer lines, with the four cardinalpoints in Latin. Kent is engraved across the map, the sea stippled with coastal shading and flow lines along the Thames. Map has former fold lines. Lower right hand margin with decorative border is missing, but not affecting text; otherwise a fine copy.This is the earliest surviving printed map of Kent, and if shown to date from 1570, the earliest of any English county. It is also the first to show the ancientfive lathes of the county. The attribution is unclear, but it may be the ‘Chart of the Shire,’ referred to by William Lambarde in the first edition of his Perambulation of Kent.’ 1576. However, a map of Kent had already been cited by Lambarde in his manuscript of the Perambulation, 1570 and it is suggested that this may be identical to the 1576 map. Taylor’s Tudor Geography considers the map may be the work of the engraver, Nicholas Reynolds. The first map of Kent, which can be dated with certainty is that of Christopher Saxton, but issued as part of a larger map, including Surrey, Sussex and Middlesex. in 1575. This version appears to be the third state, as quoted by Burgess, which includes the main roads and is dated by him to c. 1720-30. Burgess, Printed Maps of Kent web site, 2/ iii. Livett, Arch. Cant., 1938 and numerous other references. [ref: 21473 ] £3,500

40. ARCHAEOLOGIA CANTIANA: BEING THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE KENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY.

Printed for the Society between 1858-2002 We always have in stock a large selection of odd volumes of this well-known series, at various prices, depending on age and condition. (£10-30, apart from the difficult index volumes which are more expensive). Please enquire or send a list of your requirements. [ref: 15211 ] £400

COMPLETE SET41. ARCHAEOLOGIA CANTIANA: BEING THE TRANSACTIONS OF

THE KENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY.

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Printed for the Society. 1858-2003125 volumes. Royal 8vo and 8vo. In original cloth, gilt. A complete run with all the extra volumes and scarce indices. A good set of this invaluable periodical, which remains one of the cheapest Kent books, the disadvantage being that you need 13 feet of shelving. Some volumes are a little rubbed at thehead and tail of spines, some of the cloth spines are faded (the cloths used for this periodical have varied over the years, but vols. 33-49 seem particularly susceptible to the effects of sunlight). This is not an ex-library set and is in much better than average condition.The monographs that are contained here are authoritative and well-illustrated covering every aspect of Kentish history and providing a major source for the Kentish historian. A complete run of this invaluable journal. Although now available on CD, which is very handy, the folding plates and maps are never as good as the print version and you can’t take it to bed with you. I have reduced the price by £300 so this is a snip. Free delivery anywhere in the county.***We also have numerous individual volumes available - please enquire*** [ref: 17388 ] £550

42.ARCHER, JOHN. KENT. Engraved for Dugdale’s England and Wales Delineated.

c.1857Engraved map 7 x 9 inches. Mounted and fully hand-coloured. An excellent example particularly well coloured.[ref: 17935 ] £50

43.ARMSTRONG, ALAN. Edited by THE ECONOMY OF KENT 1640-1914.

The Boydell Press, Woodbridge/Kent County Council. 19958vo. 318 pp. + 29 b/w plates with tables and figures to the text. Original blackcloth. As new, in like dust wrapper.This volume, the third in the Kent History Project, complements those already published on the economy of Kent and religion and society in Kent between 1640 and 1914. This volume considers the population of Kent, its growth, mobility, and distribution; agriculture; industry; transport; labour;and the importance of the sea to the county. [ref: 18895 ] £65

44.ARMYTAGE, SIR GEORGE J., Edited by A VISITATION OF THE COUNTY OF KENT BEGUN ANNO DNI 1663 FINISHED ANNO DNI 1668. BY SIR EDWARD BYSSHE, Kt CLARENCEUX KING OF ARMES.

The Harleian Society, London. 1906Folio. 7 x 10.5 inches. xi + 203 pp. + 20 + [4] catalogue. Bound in original burgundy cloth, gilt with gilt device of The Harleian Society to upper board. Alittle rubbed at extremities and spine faded. Half-title a little browned but a very good copy.Pedigrees and Arms of Kent families in the 17th century. Scarce. [ref: 20097 ] £150

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45.ARNOLD, JULIAN and ANDREW AUBERTIN. OLD SANDWICH. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 1983Folio. 48 pp. with b/w photo illustration throughout. Original glossy pictorial card wrappers. Patchy fading otherwise a very good copy.The illustrations are selected mostly from old postcards and give a varied and interesting view of Sandwich during the early part of the 20th century. [ref: 16045 ] £10

46.ARNOLD, JULIAN and ANDREW AUBERTIN. OLD SANDWICH. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 1983Folio. 8.75 x 12 inches. 48 pp. with b/w photo illustration throughout. Original glossy pictorial card wrappers. Some fading of edges, otherwise a verygood copy.The illustrations are selected mostly from old postcards and give a varied and interesting view of Sandwich during the early part of the 20th century. [ref: 20740 ] £10

SIGNED COPY47.ARNOLD, RALPH. THE HUNDRED OF HOO.

London Constable 19478vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. ix + [i] + 164 pp. Half title. Illustrated by coloured frontispiece and 10 black and white photographs. Maps of Hoo Peninsular on both endpapers. Bound in original cloth, gilt in slightly chipped and protected coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Signed by author on half title.Classic account of the wild North Kent marshes and the peninsula which separates the Thames and Medway. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21722 ] £25

48. ARNOLD, RALPH. THE WHISTON MATTER. The Reverend Robert Whiston versus the Dean and Chapter of Rochester.

London Rupert Hart Davis, Soho Square 19618vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. 213 pp. + [1]. Half title. Illustrated by portrait frontispiece and four other black and white plates. Bound in original maroon cloth, gilt in pictorial price clipped dust wrapper. Extremities a little worn butotherwise a good, ex-Kent County Library, copy. The plot of Trollope's 'The Warden' was based on this Victorian clerical scandal, 1848-53, involving the Headmaster of Rochester Cathedral Grammar School and the Dean and Chapter. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21778 ] £12

49.ARROWSMITH, R.L. A HISTORY OF KENT COUNTY CRICKET. Readers Union. 1972165 pp. with photo illus. Original cloth in dust wrapper. [ref: 17842 ] £15

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50.ASHFORD. HEADLEY'S GUIDE TO ASHFORD AND DISTRICT. Headley Brothers, The Invicta Press, Ashford, Kent. [1936]

Fourth edition. 88 pp. + coloured frontis with 2 maps, a plan of Ashford and numerous photo illustrations and adverts. Original pictorial paper wrappers.A comprehensive look at the town of Ashford and its amenities in the mid-thirties with some excellent photographs of the principal buildingsand institutions. A very good copy of this scarce Ashford guide. [ref: 19602 ] £35

ASHFORD IN 181251. ASHFORD - DEARN, F.D.W. (Drawn by) AND ROSENBERGH,

C. (Engraved by) ASHFORD CHURCH, KENT. DEDICATED TO ROBERT MASCALL Esq.

S. Reader, Britannia Printing Office, Cranbrook, !st July 1812Uncoloured Aquatint printed in black ink, 12 x 9.5 inches, with good margins.Mounted in conservation matterials, ready for framing. A very good example with signs of an old crease, otherwise fine. One of a series of five rare aquatint views published by Reader in Cranbrook, of Wealden churches, all drawn by Dearn. We have had examples of Goudhurst, Tenterden, Hawkhurst and Cranbrook through our hands in the past. They were issued printed in sepia and hand-coloured or, as here, printed in black and uncoloured. Both are very hard to find as they were not issued in book form, but separately published as single sheets, giving them a high mortality rate. [ref: 20553 ] £250

52.ASHWORTH CHRIS ACTION STATIONS: 9. Military airfields of the Central South and South-East

Patrick Stephens Limited Wellingborough. 1985 First edition, 8vo. 9.5x6.5 inches, 313 pp. Many photographs and maps throughout. Original orange cloth. No dustwrapper,With particular emphasis on the fighter airfields of the Second World War. Many from Kent; Walmer, Dover, New Romney, Wye, Throwley, Lympne, Manston, etc., Battle of Britain airfields and the forward air stations that were built to assist the invasion. [ref: 21767 ] £15

53.ASTBURY, A.K. ESTUARY LAND AND WATER IN THE LOWER THAMES BASIN.

Carnforth Press. 1980[x] + 326 pp., + 41 plates, 2 figures in the text and a large folding map. Original blue cloth, gilt. Mint in like dust wrapper.

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A comprehensive study of the lower river and its banks, dealing with its geology, post-glacial history, Roman sites and river crossings, pre-Roman and Roman roads, the Saxon and Danish eras, stones, churches and buildings, etc. [ref: 17392 ] £20

54.AUCTION PARTICULARS. ALKHAM. PARTICULARS AND CONDITIONS OF SALE OF FREEHOLD AND COPYHOLD ESTATES, SITUATE IN THE PARISH OF ALKHAM, ABOUT FOUR MILES FROM DOVOR, WHICH WILL BE SOLD BY AUCTION, BY MESSRS. COLEMAN AND ELWIN, AT THE FLYING HORSE INN, IN DOVOR, ON MONDAY, THE 12TH DAY OF JULY, 1847, AT THREE O’CLOCK IN THE AFTERNOON, IN 10 LOTS.

Kennett and Son, Dover. 1847Folio. 9.25 x 15.25 inches. Single folded sheet, later folded in four to display title. Title a little darkened and a few small tears along creases; otherwise fine condition.Front serves as sale poster. Includes particulars of lots and conditions of sale. [ref: 20776 ] £35

55.AUSTEN, B. ENGLISH PROVINCIAL POSTS 1633 - 1840. A study based on Kent examples.

Phillimore,Chichester. 19788vo. viii + 192 pp. with illustrations and map, seven appendices, refences and bibliography. Original cloth gilt with neatly price-clipped dust wrapper. Smallneat bookplate on front paste down. Fine condition.A detailed study of the methods by which the Post Office ran services outside London. [ref: 18992 ] £20

SHENNANIGANS IN NEW ROMNEY, 172756.AUSTEN, SIR ROBERT. THE CASE OF SIR ROBERT AUSTEN AND

SIR ROBERT FURNESE, PETITIONERS FOR NEW-ROMNEY IN THE COUNTY OF KENT.

[London] No printer or date but, [1727]Folio. Single sheet letterpress broadside. 9.75 x 15 inches. With a docket title to otherwise blank verso, The Case of Sir Robert Austen and Sir Robert Furnese } Barts. Decorative initial. At some time bound into a volume and subsequently removed, inner blank margin partly cut away, traces of previous folding, and some foxing. Four lines, contemporaneously deleted in ink, but still legible.A rare printed broadside concerning the disputed New Romney parliamentary election of 1727. As a Cinque Port, New Romney returned two MPs (Barons) to Parliament from 1371 to 1832. The right to vote in elections was restricted to the Mayor and the Common Council or, as the broadside states, ‘by the Mayor, Jurats, and the Commonalty of the Corporation, and there are only two Ways of obtaining such Freedom; the one by Birth, being the Sons of Freemen, and Resident within the Corporation, and the other ex Gratia, by Election of a Common Assembly of

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the Corporation.’ At the election held on 17th August 1727, the two petitioners, Sir Robert Austen and Sir Robert Furnese stood against David Papillon (who had been MP since 1722) and John Essington. All four candidates secured eleven votes each, the Mayor, John Coates, voting for Papillon and Essington. The Mayor then voted again for these two and declared them elected as MPs for New Romney. Disputing this result, the two losing candidates drew up the petition. They also pointed out that the Mayor had omitted the vote of John Mascall, an elected freeman, but had allowed the vote of Jeremiah Smith who had been refused admission as a freeman in 1724. If these irregularities were set aside, the petitioners, Austen and Furnese, would have been returned by a majority of one. It should be noted that although the petitioners claim that both Papillon and Essington were the sitting members, the list of New Romney MPs indicates that only Papillon had already been MP, whereas the other sitting MP was no less than Furnese (elected 1710, 1713 and 1722). The Petition was evidentlygranted for in 1728, the election results were set aside and Austen and Furnese were declared the winners. Austen therefore served as one of the New Romney MPs, 1728-34. In the case of Furnese, however, a further complication arose when he was also elected for one of the Kent county seats,which he chose to represent, rather than New Romney. Consequently the recently unseated Papillon was returned again, this time as the legitimate MP for New Romney. Papillon was re-elected in 1734 but had also been elected for Dover, which he chose to represent instead of New Romney. Austen, who had been unseated in 1734 was returned again in 1736 to serve until 1741. About seven years later John Coates was playing the same game again. As outgoing Mayor he irregularly swore in two additional freemen, without the consent of the commonalty as required, and then used their votes, with the addition of two non-residents (thereby not entitled to vote), including David Papillon, then still MP, to elect Mr Wightwick as the new Mayor. The opposing faction, however, chose Richard Elles, leading to unseemly scuffling at the swearing-in ceremony: ‘For upwards of a year there were, in fact, two Mayors acting in New Romney for part of the time two Town Clerks, and indeed something like two rival and independent administrations. It must of course, be remembered that the main functions ofan eighteenth century municipal corporation were to return burgesses to Parliament, to spend the corporation property, and to feast its members’. Both sides filed writs against each other, and after three separate court hearings, judgement was passed against both mayors. After the new election of 1735 Richard Elles was sworn Mayor and Sir Robert Austen and Henry Furnese (presumably the heir of Sir Robert Furnese) were invited to come to the town and partake of an entertainment: ‘New Romney had returned to normal conditions, and the Corporation was resuming one of its three essential functions - to feast its members’. Only two copies of this broadside are recorded by COPAC; in the British Library and the National Library of Scotland. ESTC T26364. Smith, 292 Jessup, Frank W., A New Romney Mayoral Dispute(Arch. Cant., 62, 1949). [ref: 21260 ] £450

57. BAGLEY, GEOFFREY SPINK. THE BOOK OF RYE AN ANCIENT TOWN OF THE CINQUE PORTS CONFEDERATION.

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Barracuda Books Ltd. Buckingham. 19824to. 132 pp. with photo illustration throughout. Bound in original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.Particularly rich in illustration. Issued in an unspecified limited edition but 477 subscribers are listed so perhaps 500 were printed? [ref: 21385 ] £15

58.BAGSHAW, CAPTAIN HARRY. RE-FIT. UNRIGGING AND RIGGING THAMES SPRITSAIL COASTING BARGE SCONE.

Privately published by the author. 2002Folio. viii + 184 pp. with numerous b/w photo illustrations and drawings. Original spiral binding with heavy laminated pictorial wrapper. Slight yellowing of edges, otherwise a very good copy indeed.A valuable personal and technical account indispensible for anyone undertaking rerigging of a spritsail barge. Only 78 copies printed. [ref: 20821 ] £40

59.BALDOCK, KAY and IRENE HALES. OLD MAIDSTONE. A selection of postcards from the early years of this century.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198048 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18635 ] £10

60. BALLANTYNE, R.M. THE FLOATING LIGHT OF THE GOODWIN SANDS. A TALE.

James Nisbet. 1884.11th Thousand. 406 pp. with illustrations by the author. Original decorated cloth, gilt a clean bright copy.Stirring Ballantyne yarn based around the Goodwin Sands Lightships. First published in 1870, the story was immediately popular and went into several printings although it is now scarce.

[ref: 21285 ] £60

61. BARFRESTONE - GILBERTSON, E. BARFRESTONE CHURCH. Sept. 7 1846Pencil drawing, 10 x 7 inches, laid on contrasting card with frame line and titleneatly executed by hand Titled and dated in pencil. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing, overall size 17 x 15 inches.A very accomplished drawing depicting the eastern end of the Norman church. Several figures appear in the fore- and middle ground, the nearest seated on the low wall round the church. This drawing was among a small number from an album of drawings of places scattered throughout England. They had all been carefully mounted on card and exquisitely hand-titled. None of the drawings was signed but the album was identified as the work of E. Gilbertson. [ref: 17766 ] £100

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FIRST ISSUES 62.[BARHAM, REV. R.H.] aTHE INGOLDSBY LEGENDS OR MIRTH

AND MARVELS BY THOMAS INGOLDSBY. Richard Bentley, London. 1842 - 47.3 volumes. Large 8vo. with engraved titles and illustrations by George Cruikshank and John Leech. Contemporary half-morocco gilt, very slightly worn at extremities, some foxing to the plates as usual, but a very good set.The Ingoldsby Legends proved very popular and three volumes, the First, Second, and Third series, comprising more than fifty tales and a Life of Barham, were respectively published in 1840, 1842, and 1847, with many subsequent editions. Thus, 1840 saw the the publication of the single volume that is the First series. 1842 saw the two volumes, namely the First edition of the Second Series and the Second and subsequent editions of the First Series. 1847 saw the First Edition of the Third Series with later editions of the First and Second Series. This makes for a number of permutations in the composition of sets. In this instance we have a Second Edition, published 1843, of the 1842 First Series; a First Edition of the 1842 Second Series; and a First Edition of the 1847 Third Series. Simplicity itself! Suffice it to say thatall you need is a First, a Second, and a Third series to make up a set! [ref: 17614 ] £200

63.[BARHAM, REV. R.H.] THE INGOLDSBY LEGENDS. Illustrated by Cruickshank, Leech, and Tenniel.

Richard Bentley and Son. 1881Folio. Approximately 8 x 11 inches. 64 pp., with 40 woodcut illustrations. Bound in grey-green cloth preserving the original illustrated paper wrappers. The ‘People’s Edition’ of the famous tales. A scarce survivor in this format. [ref: 18213 ] £45

LOVAT FRASER’S COPY64.[BARHAM, REV. R.H.] THE INGOLDSBY LEGENDS Or Mirth and

Marvels. By Thomas Ingoldsby, Esq. Edited by his daughter Mrs Edward A. Bond. Eighty-eighth edition. In three volumes.

London Richard Bentley and Son. 18948vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. Vol.I. xliv. + 283 pp. + [1]; Vol.II. viii + 280 pp; Vol.III. x + 336 pp. Half titles. Title pages in red and black. Illustrated by 28 plates including frontispiece and portrait, three engraved titles in red and black, one folding in sepia, one facsimile and by numerous engravings in text. Illustrations by Leech, Cruikshank, Tenniel, etc. Decorated with publisher’s device on title pages. Bound in original calf with gilt borders; spine in compartments with raised bands decorated gilt, with contrasting maroon and green title labels, gilt. Inner dentelles. Top edges gilt, others deckled. Slight wear to extremities but otherwise a very fine copy. Armorial bookplate of Alexander Fraser, with manuscript inscription gifting the book to his grandson, Lovat Fraser, 1900, and later bookplate of the latter.Richard Harris Barham (1788-1845), Church of England clergyman, was born in Canterbury and his father living in Tappington Everard House, the

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location of the first story. His knowledge of Kentish legends was developed during his residences as a curate in Ashford and Westwell, and subsequently in the livings of Snargate and Warehorne, until he moved to London in 1821: ‘And he would be not long in discovering that, dull and dreary as Romney Marsh may have been in times when railways were not and Folkestone was an insignificant fishing village, it was not without matter of interest and amusement’ (Memoir). A note in Vol. III lists the principal editions publishedby Richard Bentley, the author’s old school friend; the first, second and third series, first appearing in book form in in 1840, 1842 and 1846 respectively. Claud Lovat Fraser (1890-1921) was an English artist, related to the Lovat chiefs of the Fraser clan, whose crest is on the first bookplate. After his war service, he became friendly with Paul Nash, and died while on holiday with him at Dymchurch. [ref: 21714 ] £150

65.[BARHAM, REV. R.H.] THE INGOLDSBY LEGENDS OR MIRTH AND MARVELS.

Henry Frowde, 1905527 pp. with engraved illus. by Cruikshank, Leech, Tenniel &c. Finely bound in full “tree”calf, spine tooled and gilt.The Oxford edition with the full text and and the original illustrations together with a brief life of Barham.[ref: 21349 ] £50

66.[BARHAM, REV. R.H.] THE INGOLDSBY LEGENDS OR MIRTH AND MARVELS. By Thomas Ingoldsby Esquire

Henry Frowde, 1905527 pp. with engraved illustrations by Cruikshank, Leech, Tenniel etc. Finely bound in full tree calf, spine tooled and gilt.The Oxford edition with the full text and and the original illustrations together with a brief life of Barham. [ref: 21351 ] £50

67.BARHAM, REV. RICHARD HARRIS. THE LIFE AND LETTERS OFTHE REV. RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM. AUTHOR OF INGOLDSBY LEGENDS: WITH A SELECTION OF HIS MISCELLANEOUS POEMS BY HIS SON.

Richard Bentley. l870First edition. 2 volumes with frontis portrait. Original cloth gilt. Extremities slightly worn, otherwise a very good copy.The scarce and very entertaining biographical memoir of the author of Ingoldsby Legends by his son. Barham was for some time vicar of Snargate and knew the smugglers and country folk, listened to their tales, some of which were to emerge in the 'Legends'. Barham was also a friend of other novelists and writers of his day and many letters to them are reprinted here. His life spans the years 1788 - 1844 and it sheds much light on Kent in this

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period. The poems are included in this first edition. We have another example of this title in half-morocco binding at the same price [ref: 14347 ] £125

68. BARNWELL, P.S. and ADAMS, A.T. THE HOUSE WITHIN. INTERPRETING MEDIEVAL HOUSES IN KENT.

London Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England. HMSO.19944to. 8.5 x 11 inches, xii + 163 pp. + [1]. Half-title. Illustrated by black and white photographs, plans, sections and maps throughout. Original coloured laminated card wrappers as issued. A very good copy.One of three volumes resulting from a project to survey some 450 houses in sixty parishes. A useful reference work, now out of print, and due to the small print run it has become difficult to find. [ref: 21168 ] £65

69.BATEMAN, AUDREY. VICTORIAN CANTERBURY. A close look at day-to-day life in the Cathedral City 1837-1901

Barracuda Books 19914to. 144 pp. illustrated throughout with endpaper maps. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper, slightly faded on spine. Small neat bookplate lightly attached to front paste down.A social history, well-illustrated. [ref: 19065 ] £15

70.BATES, H.E. A BREATH OF FRENCH AIR. The Book Club, 121 Charing Cross Road nd but c 1960First Edition of the Book Club Edition, 184 pp. Original cloth in dust wrapper.A very good copy of the first edition of the Book Club Edition, of the second ofthe ‘Larkin’ series of novels. The dust wrapper design bears a remarkable resemblance to that of the original by Broom Lynne but, although competently executed, is simply a pastiche. [ref: 19900 ] £25

71. BATES, H.E. THE DISTANT HORNS OF SUMMER. Michael Joseph, 1967First Edition. 8vo. 277 pp. Original cloth in dust wrapper designed by Broom Lynne, book and wrapper in very good condition.First Edition. [ref: 19885 ] £30

72.BATES, H.E. IN THE HEART OF THE COUNTRY. ILLUSTRATED BY C. F. TUNNICLIFFE.

Country Life. 1942First edition. 4to. ix + 150 pp. with 14 fine wood-engravings by Tunnicliffe. Bound in original cloth, gilt. In very good condition in the original, unclipped dust wrapper, which has slight chipping to the head and tail of the spine, not affecting the lettering. A very good copy.The book describes something of what the Southern English countryside was like during the first two winters and summers of war. Bates's prose

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combined with Tunnicliffe's fine illustrations make this a most attractive book. [ref: 19605 ] £65

73.BATES, H.E. A MOMENT IN TIME. Michael Joseph. 1964.First Edition, 247 pp. Original cloth in the scarce dust wrapper designed by Richard Barton, title page and fore-edge a little foxed but a good copy.H.E. Bates's famous story set in Kent during the Battle of Britain. Eads A100a [ref: 20852 ] £35

74.BATES, H.E. THE PURPLE PLAIN Michael Joseph, 1947.First edition. 224 pp. Original cloth in dust wrapper, which is chipped at the base of the spine with loss of publishers name and front panel is also chipped, but a reasonable copy.[ref: 19899 ] £25

75. [BATES, H.E.] THERE’S FREEDOM IN THE AIR. The Official Story ofthe Allied Air Forces from the Occupied Countries.

H.M.S.O. 19444to., 36 pp. with photo illustration. Original photo-illustrated wrappers as issued. A very good copy.Anonymous Ministry of Information pamphlet. Scarce. [ref: 20654 ] £20

76.BATES, H.E. THE VANISHED WORLD. AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY, VOLUME ONE.

Michael Joseph, 1969189 pp. Illustrated by John Ward. Original cloth, gilt, in price-clipped dustwrapper. A very good copy.First edition of the first volume of the autobiographical trilogy. [ref: 19886 ] £30

77. BATES, H.E. WHEN THE GREEN WOODS LAUGH. Michael Joseph. 1960First Edition. 157 pp. Original cloth in a very good, unclipped dust wrapper, designed by Broom Lynne.A very good copy of the first edition. The third of the “Larkin” series of novels. [ref: 16501 ] £30

78.BAVINGTON JONES, J. DOVER A PERAMBULATION OF THE TOWN, PORT AND FORTRESS.

Printed and Published at the ‘Dover Express’ Printing works, 185 Snargate Street, Dover, 1907First Edition. 8vo. frontis. + viii + 451 pp.+ [1]. Illustrated by [29] plates, including

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plans. Original red cloth gilt. A slight nick to head of spine, otherwise a tight, bright copy in very good condition.The scarce history and description of the town, which was compiled with the typical thoroughness of the author. All his books are now very hard to find. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 20905 ] £120

79.BAXTER, G.G., K.A. OWEN and P. BALDOCK. AIRCRAFT CASUALTIES IN KENT, PART 1: 1939 TO 1940. Kent Aviation HistoricalResearch Society.

Meresborough Books. 19908vo. 126 pp. Original laminated pictorial boards. A very good copy.Standard work, now out of print. [ref: 19517 ] £20

80. BEARSTED AND THURNHAM HISTORY BOOK COMMITTEE. A HISTORY OF BEARSTED AND THURNHAM.

The Bearsted and Thurnham Book Committee. [1978]8vo. 6 x 8.5 inches. xiii + [1] + 188 pp. + [6] p. blank pages for notes. Illustrated with maps and drawings in text. In original pictorial card wrappers. Some browning of edges, otherwise in good condition. Ownership inscription of Elizabeth Melling. History of two adjoining parishes, east of Maidstone, illustrated with original drawings. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21182 ] £12

BOYS FAMILY HISTORY81. BEHRENS, LILIAN BOYS. UNDER THIRTY SEVEN KINGS.

LEGENDS OF KENT AND RECORDS OF THE FAMILY OF BOYS. The Saint Catherine Press, Stamford Street, London, S.E. 19264to. 8 x 11 inches. frontis. + [xii] + 163 pp. [8], A-K8, L-L4. 34 illustrations, including photographic plates, brasses and others in the text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. Spine and board edges sunned. Deckle edges. Occasional spotting but otherwise fine inside. A very good copy.Scarce and important history of the Boys family from the Norman conquest to the 19th century, with many

references to other Kentish families - and to major and minor events in Kentish history. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20301 ] £250

82.BELLOC, HILAIRE. THE OLD ROAD. Illustrated by William Hyde.Constable. 19118vo. xii + 296 pp. with maps, including folding map at end, and original illustrations by William Hyde. Original decorated cloth. Small neat bookplateon front paste down. Slight wear on corners of boards.

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First Edition of the most famous of the descriptive accounts of the old Pilgrim's Road. [ref: 19036 ] £70

ORIGINAL WATERCOLOUR83.BENENDEN - [HEMSTED HOUSE] A WATERCOLOUR PAINTING

OF HEMSTED HOUSE, BENENDEN. [c.1830-40]Watercolour. 19 x 13 inches. The watercolour is untitled, but depicts old Hemsted House, near the village of Benenden in Kent. The Tudor mansion is set in wooded parkland and there are two groups of sheep grazing in the foreground and middle distance. Hemsted was a separate manor within Benenden Parish and passed through many generations of the Guldeford family. It may have beenrebuilt around the time of Queen Elizabeth’s visit, in the 1570s. It was sold toAdmiral of the Fleet, Sir John Norris after 1719 and later to the Hodges family in 1788.At the time of the painting, which is extracted from an album used by severalgenerations of the family at Hemsted and at Jennings, near Maidstone, the house was in the possession of Thomas Law Hodges. He was Liberal MP for Kent from 1830-32 and for West Kent from 1832 until the dissolution of Parliament in 1841; he was again elected in 1847 and sat until defeated in 1852. He died 14 May 1857. Hemsted House was subsequently sold and demolished by its new owner, Gathorne Hardy, later Lord Cranbrook, and replaced by a new building which is the basis for Benenden School, one of thetop private girls’ schools in the country.An attractive watercolour, valuable for its portrayal of old Hemsted House before its demolition around 1860. Hasted [ref: 19760 ] £250

ORIGINAL WATERCOLOUR84. BENENDEN WATERCOLOUR PAINTING. BENENDEN

CHURCH, 1839 REV’D MR. BOYS’S HOUSE - THE RECTORY - 1839. 1839Watercolour. 21 x 14.25 inches. The titles and initials of the painter, FDF. fecit, are supplied by a separate caption, attached below the print in the original album. The watercolour shows the church at the top of a sloping field grazed by sheep, with three rustic figures on its edge (this land may have been the ‘Playstool,’ which Hasted records as ‘formerly used as a bowling-green by the local gentry.’) To the left is the ‘rectory,’ of the title (actually the vicarage). At the time of the painting, the Reverend Daniel Boys, MA, had been vicar since 1805. He died in 1857, aged eighty. The church had been partly rebuilt following a fire caused by lightning in 1672, which had destroyed its wooden belfry. Coincidentally, the Reverend Boys also held theliving of Brookland on Romney Marsh, a church which has managed to retain its detached wooden belfry. The church, was again partly remodelled to suit Victorian tastes in the early 1860s at the instigation of Gathorne

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Hardy, the new owner of the Hemsted estate and an aggressive rebuilder. Hasted (1798) records that before the Cranbrook-Tenterden turnpike road was completed, ‘the roads were so deep in winter...that within these fifty years Sir John Norris, whilst he resided at Hemsted, was forced to have his coach drawn to church in the common waggon track, by six oxen, one before the other, as the only means of conveyance to it.’This painting has been extracted from an album used by several generations of the family of Thomas Law Hodges at his properties of Hemsted, near Benenden and Jennings, near Maidstone. They had married into many of the other local landed families and were in the habit of visiting each other’s houses and estates. Hodges was Liberal M.P. for Kent from 1830-32 and for West Kent from 1832 until the dissolution of Parliament in 1841; he was again elected in 1847 and sat until defeated in 1852. He died 14 May 1857. Hemsted House was subsequently sold and demolished by its new owner, Gathorne Hardy, later Lord Cranbrook, and replaced by a new building which is the basis for Benenden School, one of the top private girls’ schools inthe country.An attractive watercolour, full of interesting detail, recording the appearance of Benenden Church before its mid-Victorian restoration. [ref: 19759 ] £250

85.BENHAM, HARVEY. DOWN TOPS'L. THE STORY OF THE EAST COAST SAILING- BARGES.

Harrap. 1971Second edition revised. 192 pp. with photo illustrations. Original blue cloth. A very good copy in a like dust wrapper.[ref: 20791 ] £20

86. BENHAM, HARVEY and ROGER FINCH. THE BIG BARGES. THE STORY OF BOOMIE AND KETCH BARGES.

George G. Harrap. 1983186 pp. with photo illustrations. Original blue cloth, gilt. A fine copy in like dust wrapper.Boomsail or ketch barges were the big brothers of the spritsail barges. [ref: 20807 ] £30

87.BENNETT, A.S. TIDE TIME. George Allen and Unwin. 19498vo. 165 pp. with numerous b/w photo illustrations. Original terracotta cloth. A very good copy.The author’s story of his nautical life from yachting via wartime Royal Navycoastal craft to barge sailing. [ref: 20818 ] £30

88. BENNETT, A.S. US BARGEMEN. [By] A.S. Bennett Author of ‘June of Rochester’ and ‘Tide Time.’

Rainham Meresborough Books, 7 Station Road, Rainham, Kent, ME8 7RS. 1980Large 8vo. 6 x 8.5 inches. 199 pp + [1] + [2] pp., including advertisements. Half-title. Illustrated with four maps on endpapers and black and white

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photographs. In pictorial boards. Extremities a little worn, otherwise fine condition. A story of life on the Sailing Barge Henry along the rivers and coasts of Kent and Essex. Arthur Bennett was born into a Kent barging family; although he never worked in the trade himself, he was thoroughly familiar with it andlived with his family on ’ June’ of Rochester before the war, buying ‘Henry’ in1949. [ref: 21123 ] £15

89. BERGESS, WYN and STEPHEN SAGE. FIVE MEDWAY VILLAGES. A pictorial history of Aylsford, Burham, Wouldham, Eccles and Borstal.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198348 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18644 ] £10

90. BETHERSDEN. A TRUE AND PERFECT INVENTORY OF ALL THE GOODS AND CHATTELS OF RICHARD WARD, LATE OF BETHERSDEN IN THE COUNTY OF KENT, TAYLOR, DECEASED: MADE, TAKEN AND APPRISED THE 1 AND 20TH DAY OF FEBRUARYIN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD ONE THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED AND SIXTIE FOUR

Old folds, vellum discoloured in places, but in very good condition.[ref: 15525 ] £200

91. BIGGS, HOWARD. THE SOUND OF MAROONS. THE STORY OF LIFE SAVING SERVICES ON THE KENT AND SUSSEX COASTS.

Lavenham, Terence Dalton, 1977.4to. 176 pp. with illustration throughout. Original white cloth. A very good copy in dust wrapper.Well-researched history. [ref: 21322 ] £25

92.BIGNELL, ALAN. HOPPING DOWN IN KENT. Robert Hale. 1977.176 pp., with illustrations. Original cloth, gilt in dust wrapper. A fine copy .A good general history of hops and hop pickers, and the trade therein. Out ofprint and now become quite scarce. [ref: 18038 ] £30

93.BIGNELL, ALAN. KENT HEADLINES. Countryside Books, Newbury. 1989127 pp. Pictorial soft cover. A very good copy.Headline news stories from the county’s past . [ref: 19606 ] £10

94.BIGNELL, ALAN. KENT SHIPWRECKS. Countryside Books, Newbury. 1991126 pp. with illustrations Paperback in original wrappers. A clean copy.

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A history and survey of some of the most interesting Kentish shipwrecks [ref: 13110 ] £10

95.BIGNELL, ALAN. THE KENT VILLAGE BOOK. With Illustrations by Arthur Prosser.

Countryside Books, Newbury. 1986192 pp. with illustrations. Paperback in original wrappers. A clean copy.A good general history and survey of most of the more interesting and picturesque villages in the county. [ref: 15834 ] £10

96.BIGNELL, ALAN. KENT VILLAGES. (The Village Series).London Robert Hale. 19758vo. 5.5 x 8.75 inches. 191 pp. + [1]. Half title. Illustrated with black and whitephotographic plates. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in likepictorial dust wrapper.A good general history and survey of most of the more interesting and picturesque villages in the county. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 18467 ] £12

97.BIRCHINGTON - BARRETT, J.P. A HISTORY OF THE VILLE OF BIRCHINGTON, THANET, KENT.

Printed at ‘Keble’s Gazette’ Office. 1893,1908Second edition. Comprising the original edition 227 pp. + 29 b/w illustrations with an additional 15 pp. printed and added later. Original printed paper-covered boards. Occasional foxing and repairs to 2 pages otherwise a very good copy of a scarce book.A well-compiled account. [ref: 18611 ] £100

COUNTY AVI-FAUNA WITH HAND-COLOURED PLATES98. BIRDS - BALSTON, R.J., REV. C.W. SHEPHERD and E.

BARTLETT. NOTES ON THE BIRDS OF KENT. R. H. Porter, 7 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London. 1907First Edition, 8vo. xix + 465 pp., with a photo frontis and 8 hand-coloured lithographic plates and a coloured folding map. Original cloth, gilt. Top edge gilt. Some foxing on the half title and the corresponding leaf at the rear of the book, which leads me to think that this sheet of paper is inferior to that used for the text and plates, as the book is otherwise clean and tidy. A very good copy.

The fine plates for this nicely produced book are by the famous bird artist J. Smit and are the last of their kind; a twentieth century survivor of the nineteenth century hand-finished bird book. Scarce work of county avifauna of which only 300 copies were printed. [ref: 17219 ] £375

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99.BIRDS - GILLHAM, E.H. and R.C. HOMES. THE BIRDS OF THE NORTH KENT MARSHES.

Collins. 1950First Edition. 8vo. 320 pp. with maps, diagrams and photo illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper designed by Stephen Russ. Wrapper chipped and repaired otherwise very good.Classic of modern ornithology describing the nationally important Kentish wetlands. [ref: 18523 ] £35

100. BIRDS - HARRISON, JAMES. M. THE BIRDS OF KENT. With illustrations in colour by the author.

Witherby. 1953Two volumes. 4to. 11 x 8 inches. Vol.I. xv + 510 pp.with 49 plates, some coloured. Vol.II. xi + 314 pp. +[1] with 31 plates, some coloured. Coloured plates are all full-page. Original cloth gilt. A fine example.The standard monograph now long out of print. [ref: 16311 ] £110

101. BIRDS - TAYLOR, D.W., D.L. DAVENPORT, and J.J.M. FLEGG. THE BIRDS OF KENT. A REVIEW OF THEIR STATUS AND DISTRIBUTION.

Kent Ornithological Society 1981440 pp. with maps, diagrams and photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper, upper part of wrapper slightly yellow, but a good copy of the originalhard bound edition.Standard work. Copies of the paperback edition available at £15 [ref: 17929 ] £25

102. BISHOP, C.H. FOLKESTONE. THE STORY OF A TOWN.Headley Bros., Ashford. 1982Revised edition 153 pp., with maps and photo illustration. Original cloth, gilt. Near fine in very good unclipped dust wrapper.Standard modern history of the town. Now long out of print. The revision was the addition of an index. [ref: 21737 ] £20

NEW BIOGRAPHY OF HASTED.103. BLACK, SHIRLEY BURGOYNE. EDWARD HASTED, THE

HISTORIAN OF KENT. Darenth Valley Publications, Otford, Kent. 2001xiv + 469 pp. + 23 monochrome plates. Blue cloth, gilt to spine, in dust wrapper. As new.The life of Edward Hasted, 1732-1812, whose popularity as an historian is undiminished today, was one of extremes. Despite his reduction from country squire to inmate of a debtor’s prison, he remained single-minded about his work of writing a definitive history of Kent, work which occupied forty years of his life. Here is the background to that magnum opus. [ref: 20094 ] £25

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104. BLACK'S. GUIDE TO KENT. J. E. Morris, Ed.Edinburgh, A. and C. Black. 1928122 + 36 pp. with folding maps and photo illustrations throughout. Original decorated cloth.A good copy of the standard Black's early 20th century guide to the county. [ref: 7692 ] £10

105. BLAEU, J. CANTIUM VERNACULE KENT. [ENGRAVED MAP OF KENT].

Amsterdam Joan Blaeu. 1646Double-page copper-engraved map, 15 x 21 inches, uncoloured with very large margins from the second Blaeu issue with latin text on the reverse. A very fineexample.Joan Blaeu’s attractive map of the county, combining all the fine points of Dutch cartography at the height of its influence. With eight coats of arms and a fine title cartouche, this sheet is finished with five well-engraved sailing ships dotting the sea . The map was first issued in 1645-62. This comes from the second issue, with latin text on the reverse, and is a fine dark impression. [ref: 17938 ] £500

106. BLAEU, J. CANTIUM VERNACULE KENT. [ENGRAVED MAP OF KENT].

[P. Mortier] Amsterdam 1645, but 1714-15Double-page copper-engraved map, 15 x 21 inches, in fine contemporaneous hand-colouring. Mounted in conservation board. A very fine example.Joan Blaeu’s attractive map of the county, combining all the fine points of Dutch cartography at the height of its influence. With eight coats of arms and fine title cartouche, this colourful sheet is finished with five well-engraved sailing ships dotting the sea. First issued in 1645-62.This impression of the plate is the very last issue of this map with a grid added, showing degrees and minutes. Issued in 1714-15 by P. Mortier in his composite Atlas. Despite the late date the plate is still very crisp and the quality of the original hand-colouring is very fine. [ref: 15471 ] £600

107. BLAKE, LEWIS. BROMLEY IN THE FRONT LINE. THE STORY OF THE LONDON BOROUGH OF BROMLEY UNDER ENEMY AIR ATTACK IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR....

Published by the author. 198396 pp.with b/w illustration. Original pictorial card wrappers. A little stained otherwise a very good copy signed by the author.Scarce. [ref: 18470 ] £15

108. BLAXLAND, GREGORY. SOUTH-EAST BRITAIN - ETERNAL BATTLEGROUND.

Rainham, Meresborough Books. 1981

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160 pp. with sketches by the author. Original cloth in dust wrapper.Useful. Contains a concise account of every battle fought in Kent, Sussex, Surrey, Middlesex and London. [ref: 12238 ] £12

109. BLIGH, ALLAN L. Compiled and edited by SEASHORE AND COUNTRYSIDE AN ILLUSTRATED HANDBOOK FOR HOMES AND HOLIDAYS IN DISTRICTS SERVED BY THE SOUTH-EASTERN AND CHATHAM RAILWAY

Published for the South Eastern and Chatham Railway Company by Killby, Bligh and Co., Ltd., 34 Essex Street, London, W.C. No date but c.1912Second edition. 170 pp. including numerous pictorial advertisements. Original coloured pictorial paper wrappers. Some loss to head and tail of spineotherwise a very good copy.Filled with details of 43 of the principal towns served by the railway, including rail fares and ticket prices. At the time of publication the fastest journey between London and Folkestone took 89 minutes. [ref: 19519 ] £45

110. BLOOMFIELD, AVRIL. STROOD A PICTORIAL HISTORY. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 1977Folio. 62 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial boards.Large format photographic history. [ref: 18686 ] £15

111. BONAVIA, MICHAEL R. THE HISTORY OF THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY.

Unwin Hyman, 1987. 195 pp. with photo illus. Original cloth in dustwrapper.[ref: 19559 ] £15

112. BOORMAN, H. R. PRATT. HELL'S CORNER 1940. KENT BECOMES THE BATTLEFIELD OF BRITAIN.

Kent Messenger, Maidstone 1942.8vo. 5 x 7.5 inches, vi + 128 pp. with photographic illustrations. Original pale blue cloth in scarce, unclipped, dust wrapper. Wrapper has been neatly preserved in self-adhesive film. A fine copy.The illustrations from the Messenger's archives and the conversational first hand accounts give a good idea of just what it was like to live and work in 'Hellfire Corner'. [ref: 21755 ] £25

113. BOORMAN, H. R. PRATT. KENT UNCONQUERED. By H. R. Pratt Boorman M.B.E., M.A., F.J.I. Editor and Proprietor of the ‘Kent Messenger,’ the County Paper of Kent.

[Maidstone]: Kent Messenger. 19514to. 8.5 x 10.5 inches. [218] pp. Illustrated with black and white photographs throughout. Bound in original red cloth, gilt, a very nice copy.

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A compilation of photographs from the Kent Messenger files on the county inthe Second World War. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 20743 ] £20

114. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT. ASHFORD’S PROGRESS; THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN IMPORTANT TOWN.

Kent Messenger. 1977203 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A good copy.[ref: 17968 ] £20

115. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT. KENT AND THE CINQUE PORTS. Ashford Kent Messenger. 19574to. 10.75 x 805 inches, 167 pp. with photo illustrations throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper.A very good photographic survey of the Cinque Ports. Completed just after the Second World War, much war damage is still evident.

[ref: 21074 ] £30

116. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT. KENT OUR GLORIOUS HERITAGE Kent Messenger 1950.4to. 10.75 x 8.5 inches, 152 pp. with photo illus throughout. Originalcloth in dust wrapper.Photographic record of the county before the motorcar became all-pervasive.

[ref: 20462 ] £30

117. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT. KENTISH PRIDE. Kent Messenger, Maidstone. 19524to. 10.75 x 8.5 inches, 180 pp., unpaginated with photo illustration throughout. Original cloth, gilt, in near mint condition.A great compilation of photographs from the Kent Messenger’s archives. A companion to ‘Kent Our Glorious Heritage’ [ref: 16825 ] £25

118. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT. PICTURES OF MAIDSTONE THE COUNTY TOWN OF KENT.

Kent Messenger, 1965.4to. 229 pp. with photo illus. throughout. Published to celebrate 150 years of service to the town by the Kentish Gazette. Scarce. [ref: 20853 ] £40

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119. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT. SPIRIT OF KENT. THE RT. HON. LORD CORNWALLIS.

Kent Messenger. 1968.458 pp. with illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper.[ref: 21751 ] £20.00

120. BOORMAN, H.R. PRATT and V.J. TORR. KENT CHURCHES. By H. R. Pratt Boorman M.B.E., M.A., F.J.I. AND V. J. Torr of the Kent Archaeological Survey.

Maidstone Kent Messenger. 19724to. 8.75 x 11 inches. [16] + 173 pp. + [3] pp. Half title. Illustrated by black and white photographs throughout. Original purple cloth, gilt in pictorial dust wrapper. A very good copy.1972 reprint of the 1954 edition. An excellent comparative photographic record, thoughtfully contrasting similar features in churches often miles apart.

We have a second similar copy. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19006 ] £35

121. BOSWORTH, GEORGE F. KENT. Cambridge University Press. 192212 mo. 7 x 4.5 inches, x + 146 pp. With maps and diagrams and numerous illustrations. Original cloth, gilt in near mint condition in the original dust wrapper.Wonderfully evocative old school textbook designed for the ‘Lower forms andclasses of our schools’. The text was first printed in 1901, by George Phillip, and this is a later issue now updated and taken over by C.U.P. and called ‘pocket edition’. [ref: 20888 ] £15

122. BOURGEOIS, SIR FRANCIS and R. EARLOW. SMUGGLERS ATTACK’D. FROM THE ORIGINAL PICTURE IN THE COLLECTION OF Tho. Sam. JOLLIFFE Esq. THIS PLATE IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED BY HIS MUCH OBLIGED AND OBEDIENT SERVANT B. B. EVANS.

B. B. Evans in the Poultry, London. October 1st. 1793Large black aquatint 17 x 25 inches. Old closed tear, but a good example. Large, separately published print. Dramatic engraving with a group of smugglers being attacked by mounted soldiers (dragoons?). There is a known partner to this view, ‘The Smugglers Defeated’. [ref: 8382 ] £300

DUTCH IN THE MEDWAY123. BOUTTATS, GÉRARD. L’ABBRUCCIAMENTO FATTO DA GLI

VASCELLI OLANDESI DI QUELLI DE GLI INGLESI NELLA REVEERA[?] DI CATTAM ANNO 1666 24 DI AGOSTO.

[THE BURNING BY DUTCH VESSELS OF THOSE OF THE ENGLISH IN THE PORT[?] OF CHATHAM AUGUST 24TH 1666]

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Amsterdam 1667Uncoloured copper engraving 17 x 13 inches. Even slight browning and traces of old folds but a very good example. A double-panel Dutch chart from an unidentified news sheet of the period. The chart on the left shows the entrance to the Thames and the coast of East Anglia and Kent. The plan on the right shows the Medway and Sheerness being attacked by the large Dutch flotilla. The date shown on this Dutch chart says the attack was in 1666. In fact the attack took place between 12-14th June 1667. The title inscription is in Italian. Very scarce. [ref: 17941 ] £350

SMALL BOWEN’S KENT 1751124. BOWEN, EMANUEL. [A MAP OF] KENT DRAWN FROM SURVEYS

AND THE BEST MODERN MAPS BY E. BOWEN GEOG., TO HIS MAJESTY. ENGRAVED FOR THE UNIVERSAL MAGAZINE.

London, Printed for J. Hinton at the Kings Arms in St. Paul’s Church Yard. 1751Copper-engraved map, 8 x 8 inches. Traces of old folds but a very good example.The county map engraved for the Universal Magazine, which was a fashionable periodical of the day. A small but detailed map with a decorativerococo cartouche and the arms of Canterbury. [ref: 18000 ] £80

SMALL BOWEN’S KENT 1756125. BOWEN, EMANUEL. KENT DIVIDED INTO ITS LATHES.

CONTAINING THE CITIES BOROUGHS AND MARKET TOWNS WITHTHE ROADS AND DISTANCES.

Engraved for the General Magazine of Arts & Sciences for W. Owen at Temple Bar. 1756Hand-coloured copper engraving 8 x 7.5 inches. Attractive map of Kent, similar to that published for the Universal Magazine in 1751 but with numerous differences. [ref: 17974 ] £100

SMALL BOWEN’S KENT 1751126. BOWEN, EMANUEL. KENT DRAWN FROM SURVEYS AND THE

BEST MODERN MAPS BY E. BOWEN GEOG., TO HIS MAJESTY. ENGRAVED FOR THE UNIVERSAL MAGAZINE.

London, Printed for J. Hinton at the Kings Arms in St. Paul’s Church Yard. 1751Hand-coloured copper-engraved map, 8 x 8 inches, mounted, framed and glazed using conservation materials. Overall size 14 x 14 inches. Traces of old folds but a very good example, nicely coloured.The county map engraved for the Universal Magazine, which was a fashionable periodical of the day. A small but detailed map with a decorativerococo cartouche and the arms of Canterbury. [ref: 15514 ] £165

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LARGEST BOWEN AND KITCHIN’S KENT 1760

127. BOWEN, EMANUEL AND THOMAS KITCHIN. AN ACCURATE MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT DIVIDED INTO ITS LATHES, AND SUBDIVIDED INTO HUNDREDS. DRAWN FROM SURVEYS, AND MOST APPROVED MODERN MAPS, WITH VARIOUS ADDITIONAL IMPROVEMENTS: ILLUSTRATED WITH HISTORICAL EXTRACTS, RELATIVE TO THE AIR, SOIL, NATURAL PRODUCE, MANUFACTURES, TRADE AND PRESENT STATE OF ITS CITIES ANDPRINCIPAL TOWNS. BY EMAN: BOWEN GEOGRAPHER TO HIS MAJESTY.

London printed for Robert Sayer in Fleet Street, Carington Bowles in St. Pauls Churchyard, n.d. but [1760]Copper-engraved map, 21 x 27.5 inches, in original hand-colouring. A fine, clean example with good margins.This is the largest of Bowen’s classic eighteenth century maps of the county. From Bowen and Kitchin’s Large English Atlas which was published over a period of eleven years between 1749 and 1760, and forms a highly importantseries of large scale English county maps, some of the best produced in the eighteenth century. Crammed with information, detailed notes of historical and topographical facts fill all the available space surrounding the map. Inset is a chart of the Downs and, completing this imposing sheet, a large pictorial and allegorical cartouche depicting the maritime and agricultural importance of the county [ref: 15659 ] £550

SMALLEST OF BOWEN AND KITCHIN’S KENT 1767128. BOWEN, EMANUEL AND THOMAS KITCHIN KENT DIVIDED

INTO ITS LATHES. AND SUBDIVIDED INTO HUNDREDS; EXHIBITING THE CITIES, BOROUGH AND MARKET TOWNS WITH CONCISE HISTORICAL EXTRACTS, RELATING TO TRADE AND MANUFACTURERS. DESCRIBING ALSO THE CHURCH LIVINGS WITH IMPROVEMENTS NOT INSERTED IN ANY OTHER SET OF HALF SHEET COUNTY MAPS EXTANT.

[Thomas Kitchin in Atlas Anglicanus] 1767Hand-coloured copper engraving. 9 x 12.5 inches. A fine example in very attractive colour.Atlas Anglicanus was first published in 1767 by Thomas Kitchin issuing the Bowens’ large maps on a reduced scale making them more easily affordable.Such was its popularity that a second edition was issued in 1777. [ref: 17976 ] £250

129. BOX, PETER. PADDLE STEAMERS OF THE THAMES. Tempus, Stroud. 2000128 pp. profusely illustrated in b/w. Original pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.[ref: 20795 ] £10

130. BOYLE, JOHN. IN QUEST OF HASTED. Phillimore. 1984

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4to.146 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper.The first book about Kent's great historian. Now out of print. [ref: 10754 ] £15

131. BOYLE, JOHN. RURAL KENT. With drawings by John L.Berbiers.Robert Hale. 1976Oblong 8vo. 192 pp. illustrated throughout with drawings. Original cloth gilt in pictorial dust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.Charming illustrated study of Kent countryside and villages. [ref: 19040 ] £12

RARE FIRST ISSUE OF BOYS’ AGRICULTURE OF KENT. 132. BOYS, JOHN. GENERAL VIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE OF THE

COUNTY OF KENT, WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE MEANS OF ITS IMPROVEMENT. By John Boys, of Betshanger, Farmer, Drawn up for the Consideration of the Board of Agriculture and Internal Improvement.

Brentford: Printed by P. Norbury. 17944to. 107 pp. + [1] + folding table. p.6 misnumbered 5. Illustrated by small woodcuts in text. Lacks half-title, and the extremely scarce map, which we have only seen once, and is not recorded in a large number of copies. Disbound copy in fine clean condition.This is the rare preliminary issue of Boys’ report, part of the extensive series of reports drawn up for the first Board of Agriculture on the conditions of farming throughout the country. It is the first draft format which Boys, a Kentish farmer from Betteshanger, circulated to the principal farmers in the county, 'in order that every person, interested in the welfare of that county may have it...to examine it fully before it is published....any remark or... observation which may occur to the reader....may be written on the margin, and...returned to the Board of Agriculture before the First of March next.' Thus most copies of this format were returned to the Board, and the observations incorporated into the first published edition (1796). This edition is not recorded in the Kent bibliography and is therefore very rare. ESTC T40369. Smith p.84. Kress B2655. Perkins, 207. [ref: 20664 ] £185

133. BOYS, JOHN. A GENERAL VIEW OF THE AGRICULTURE OF THE COUNTY OF KENT WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE MEANS OF ITS

IMPROVEMENT. For G. Nichol, 1796

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First edition. xiv + 206 + (1) pp. with a hand-coloured copper-engraved map, folding table and 2 engraved plates. On the front paste-down is the book plate of the Russell family (Dukes of Bedford) showing the crest, comprising a goat passant encircled by the motto ‘Che Sara Sara’, beneath a Ducal Coronet. Below are the words Woburn Abbey and the date 1873, contemporaneous withthe 11th Duke. Bound in original half calf, gilt, over paper boards. A very good, clean neat copy.Boys’ report was first issued two years earlier in draft form as part of the extensive series of reports drawn up for the Board of Agriculture on the conditions of farming throughout the country, designed to be returned to the Board with each farmer’s comments to be edited and incorporated into this final report. Thus, this is the first definitive edition. Boys, a Kentish farmer from Betteshanger, edited and considerably enlarged the original report with the additions and comments from other farmers in the county. [ref: 20912 ] £450

134. BRADLEY, A. G. ENGLAND'S OUTPOST. THE COUNTRY OF THE KENTISH CINQUE PORTS

Robert Scott n.d. but 1927First edition. 400 pp. with a map and illustrations by Fred. Adcock. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.Covers the whole of the Cinque Ports. Bradley's historical and conversationaltext and the charming line illustrations make this a highly readable depiction of Kent just after the First World War. [ref: 21332 ] £20

135. BRADLEY, A.G. AN OLD GATE OF ENGLAND. RYE, ROMNEY MARSH, AND THE WESTERN CINQUE PORTS.

Robert Scott. 1920Second impression. 374 pp., with original illustrations by Marian E.G. Bradley. Original cloth, gilt. Split at front hinge otherwise a very good copy.Contains a wealth of anecdotal and factual information on the Romney Marshes and the towns therein, as well as Rye and Hastings. [ref: 9709 ] £18

136. BRADLEY, A.G. AN OLD GATE OF ENGLAND. RYE, ROMNEY MARSH, AND THE WESTERN CINQUE PORTS.

Robert Scott. 1925Third Impression, 374 pp., with original illustrations by Marian E.G. Bradley. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.Contains a wealth of anecdotal and factual information on the Romney Marshes and the towns therein, as well as Rye and Hastings. [ref: 15386 ] £18

137. BRADSHAW, J. and others of the Kent Underground Research Group. KENT AND EAST SUSSEX UNDERGROUND.

Meresborough Books. 1991128 pp. with b/w photo illustration and diagrams and drawings to the text. Laminated pictorial card wrappers. Fine copy

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“..... South-East England has a huge variety of underground features ranging from simple pits dug for agricultural chalk (deneholes) to extensive subterranean quarries from which thousands of tons of stone were excavated. There are also natural caves, old military tunnels and shelters and countless wells and cess-pits.” [ref: 18472 ] £10

138. BRAMSTON, REV. W. A HISTORY OF THE ABBEY CHURCH OF MINSTER. ISLE OF SHEPPEY, KENT. With a Description of the Monuments, and other matters relating to the Ancient Parish.

London: Hazell, Watson, and Viney, Ld. No date but c.1903.Small 8vo. 5 x 7.5 inches. 92 pp. with one plate and a wood engravings. A scarce monograph on this ancient parish. [ref: 21665 ] £35

139. BRASTED - CAVE-BROWNE, J. THE HISTORY OF BRASTED, ITSMANOR, PARISH, AND CHURCH.

J.H. Jewell, Westerham. 1874vii + 55ac pp. + frontis albumen-type of Brasted Church + genealogical table of the owners of Brasted Park. Original cream cloth, gilt, Boards a little dusty, otherwise a very good copy.Inscribed ‘The Rev. Canon Marsden from his old friend E***** Shand ,May 1874’.

[ref: 19400 ] £150

CANTERBURY IN 1572 140. BRAUN, GEORG. and FRANS HOGENBERG. CANTVARBURY.

CANTUARIA VRBS FERTILIS SIMAE ANGLIAE CELEBRIS; ARCHIEPISCOPATI SEDE, COMMENDATA.

Cologne 1572Copper engraved plate, 17 x 12 inches, in fine hand-colouring. Latin text on verso. Mounted in conservation materials. A fine dark impression of the plate with good margins, some marginal discolouration but an outstanding example.The Canterbury plate from, Braun and Hogenberg’s Civitates Orbis Terrarum, the great celebration of the European city, published between 1572 and 1617 and illustrated with 363 plates. A remarkable series of engravings, incorporating an astonishing wealth of detail, giving an impression of the economy, status, wealth and the social structure of each town, even the costume of the local inhabitants is delineated. Canterbury was issued in the first volume published in 1572 with descriptive text on the verso of each plate. Three language versions were produced; Latin, Germanand Italian, this is the Latin edition. The Latin version was reissued several times before 1600 and, as the plate was unaltered, it is impossible to determine from which issue an individual map comes. [ref: 20645 ] £850

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141. BRENTNALL, MARGARET. THE CINQUE PORTS AND ROMNEY MARSH.

John Gifford. 1972266 pp., with folding map and numerous coloured illustrations. Original clothin dust wrapper.The first edition of this useful modern guide. [ref: 19624 ] £10

142. BRENTNALL, MARGARET. THE CINQUE PORTS AND ROMNEY MARSH.

John Gifford. 1980266 pp., with folding map and numerous coloured illustrations. Original clothin dust wrapper.The second enlarged edition of this useful modern guide. [ref: 8192 ] £10

143. BROADSIDE. TEN POUNDS REWARD. STOLEN - A BAY MARE. STOLEN From out of a Marsh in Woolwich Road, on the Morning of the 2nd Instant, A BAY MARE, Aged 5 Years, about Fifteen Hands high, two White Legs behind , and the off Leg before white, with a white blaze down her Face, a speck on the near Knee, had a long bushy Tail when stolen, and is a remarkably round barrelled neat Mare. Whoever will give Information to Mr. FARMER, Streights Mouth, Greenwich, shall receive a Reward of TEN POUNDS, on the Conviction of the Offender. Greenwich, June 2nd, 1830.

Greenwich 1830, Helyer, Printer, (Minerva Office) London Street, Greenwich, where Bills relating to Robberies, Losses, etc. are printed with allpossible dispatch. Broadside, 9 x 11 inches, printed one side as issued. The interesting use of typography brings attention to this rare broadside, few of which, by their very nature, survive. A good example. Slight loss and minor fraying of lower margin but text unaffected[ref: 18309 ] £150

144. BROADSIDE SONGSHEET. THE KENTISH GARLAND. Printed and sold by J. Pitts, Seven Dials. Price One Penny. No date but 18th C.Oblong folio. 13 x 8 inches. Printed folded sheet with woodcut portrait of a woman followed by 26 eight-line verses. Slight loss to upper and lower left corners, the latter affecting the first four lines of the second verse; fragmentation of top right corner affecting five lines but all lyrics still legible, and very small tears to right margin and lower corner without loss. The two halves have parted for three-quarters of the depth of the sheet, through seven of the verses, but without loss and leaving the lyrics legible. Rare.Julia Vaynes, in her 2-volume work ‘The Kentish Garland’, records a numberof differences between the Roxburghe, Douce and Cumberland versions of the Ballad, some of which are shared by this version. However, study of her notes suggests that this is another, possibly unrecorded version. The ballad was published as early as 1720 but we have been unable to date this version accurately.

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[ref: 14250 ] £100

145. BROADSTAIRS. THE BROADSTAIRS PIER ORDER AND SCHEDULE OF HARBOUR RATES.

Board of Trade and Carter, Printer, Broadstairs. 1883 and 1879Folio. ii + 13 pp + [iv] + [6] pp. Bound in modern half-calf, gilt. A very good copy. Scarce Board of Trade order for the management of Broadstairs Pier, together with the Schedule of Dues for landing goods at the pier.

[ref: 19513 ] £125

146. BROADY, JUNE. (Compiled by.) HYTHE. The Archive Photographs Series.

Chalford Publishing Co., Trowbridge. 1995128 pp. Illustrated throughout. Pictorial soft cover. A very good copy.From the library of author David Collyer. [ref: 18136 ] £10

147. BROOKE, JOCELYN. CONVENTIONAL WEAPONS, A NOVEL. Faber and Faber, 24 Russell Square. 19618vo. 192 pp. Original cloth in the scarce, unclipped, dust wrapper. A near mint copy in like dust wrapper.This late book, described as a ‘comedy of manners’ in the blurb, was his last published novel and very hard to find in good condition. ‘I was nearly fifty, and the coming winter became identified, in my mind, with the melancholy prospect of old age...’ In five years Jocelyn was dead. [ref: 17649 ] £100

148. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE CRISIS IN BULGARIA. OR IBSEN TO THE RESCUE!

Chatto and Windus. 19564to. 90 + [1] pp. illustrated throughout by the author. Original red cloth, gilt, in the scarce, and unclipped, dust wrapper designed by John Woodcock, which is slightly faded on spine and with some staining, but a very good copy.A curious Brooke item in which he indulged his fascination with the surreal, and his skill in producing collage, cut from Edwardian newspapers and ingeniously assembled, to produce bizarre images, reminiscent of the work of Terry Gilliam for Monty Python many years later. This is a near-mint example of a title very hard to find in good condition. [ref: 15379 ] £95

UNCORRECTED PROOF COPY149. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE CRISIS IN BULGARIA. OR IBSEN TO

THE RESCUE!Chatto & Windus. 1956

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4to. 90 + [1] pp. illustrated throughout by the author. Original card wrappers,a very good copy.An uncorrected publisher’s proof copy with a second printing of one of the illustrations pasted over the first, which seems to have been quite altered. Proof copies of Brooke’s books are not common. A curious Brooke item in which he indulged his fascination with the surreal, and his skill in producing collage, cut from Edwardian newspapers and ingeniously assembled, to produce bizarre images reminiscent of the work of Terry Gilliam for Monty Python many years later. [ref: 15380 ] £135

150. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE ELEMENTS OF DEATH AND OTHER POEMS. POEMS IN PAMPHLET 1952. XII JOCELYN BROOKE.

Hand and Flower Press, Aldington. 1952First edition, 36 pp., (paginated 351-383) with inserted compliments slip of The Listener, the BBC magazine, marked ‘With the Compliments of the Editor,and in Brooke’s hand ‘And a Happy New Year to you, dear Roy’ and initialled ‘JB’. Original printed card wrappers a very good copy.Jocelyn gave this copy to Roy Fuller, poet and literary figure. The Hand & Flower press was the child of Erica Marks who lived at Aldington and cultivated a literary circle, including young Jocelyn Brooke. The Poets in Pamphlet (this being number 12) were issued as a bound anthology as well as sold separately, hence the strange pagination. The print runs were very small and all their titles are scarce and this, Jocelyn’s second published book of poems was not a runaway success. [ref: 17776 ] £85

151. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE GOOSE CATHEDRAL. The Bodley Head. 1950First edition. 186 pp. Original cloth in the rare dust wrapper, which has a small chip missing from the shoulder of the front panel and small amount from the top of the spine, not affecting the lettering. Front free endpaper clipped.Centred on Folkestone, Sandgate and the Elham valley, this is the third part of Brooke’s brilliant autobiographical reminiscence which has become known as the ‘Orchid Trilogy’. [ref: 15509 ] £55

152. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE GOOSE CATHEDRAL. The Bodley Head. 1950First edition. 186 pp. Original cloth in the rare, unclipped dust wrapper, which has a small closed tear to the top of the spine, not affecting the lettering,and a small closed tear to the back upper edge. A near fine copy in a very good dust wrapper.Third part of Brooke’s brilliant autobiographical reminiscence, centred on Folkestone, Sandgate and the Elham valley, which has become known as the ‘Orchid Trilogy’. [ref: 17652 ] £85

153. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE GOOSE CATHEDRAL.

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The Bodley Head. 1950First edition. 186 pp. Original cloth, lacking wrapper. A good copy.Third part of Brooke’s brilliant autobiographical reminiscence, centred on Folkestone, Sandgate and the Elham valley, which has become known as the ‘Orchid Trilogy’. [ref: 17780 ] £20

154. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE GOOSE CATHEDRAL. The Bodley Head. 1950First edition. 186 pp. Original cloth in the rare dust wrapper, which is price-clipped. A little faded towards the fore-edge with tape-burns to the inside upper and lower edges that are visible from the outside and one or two small closed tears.Third part of Brooke’s brilliant autobiographical reminiscence, centred on Folkestone, Sandgate and the Elham valley, which has become known as the ‘Orchid Trilogy’. [ref: 17794 ] £85

155. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE MILITARY ORCHID. The Bodley Head. 1948First Edition, 134 pp. with coloured frontis and decorations by Stephen Bone. Original cloth in the scarce, unclipped dust wrapper, slightly chipped at the head and tail of the spine, and a little dust-stained, otherwise a very good copy.The scarce first issue of the first part of ‘The Orchid Trilogy’. [ref: 17783 ] £110

156. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE MILITARY ORCHID. The Bodley Head. 1948First Edition, second impression,134 pp., with coloured frontis and decorations by Stephen Bone. Original cloth in the second impression, price-clipped dust wrapper. Slightly chipped at the head and tail of the spine, and a little dust-stained, otherwise a very good copy.The scarce first issue of the first part of ‘The Orchid Trilogy’. The wrapper on this copy is from the second impression, which on the face of it is identicalbut the blurb at the front is different, the press comments on the rear flap do not appear in the first edition and the rear panel portrait of Brooke and small blurb below have been substituted with notices of the publication of thecompanion volumes ‘A Mine of Serpents’ and ‘The Goose Cathedral’. [ref: 19472 ] £85

157. BROOKE, JOCELYN. A MINE OF SERPENTS. Bodley Head. 1949First Edition. 252 pp. with photo illustration and decorations by Stephen Bone. Original cloth in the scarce dust wrapper which has a some large chips from the head and tail of the spine, affecting the lettering and design. Otherwise a very good copy.

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Second volume of the "Orchid Trilogy". [ref: 15612 ] £30

158. BROOKE, JOCELYN. A MINE OF SERPENTS. Bodley Head. 1949First Edition. 252 pp. with photo illustration and decorations by Stephen Bone. Original cloth in the scarce, unclipped dust wrapper, which has one or two small closed tears but lettering and design unaffected. A very good copy.[ref: 17651 ] £85

159. BROOKE, JOCELYN. THE PENGUIN NEW WRITING. EDITED BY JOHN LEHMANN. No. 37.

Penguin Books. 1949128 pp. + 16 pages of illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers as issued. A very good copy - hard to find in this condition.Contains a photogravure portrait of Jocelyn Brooke. [ref: 17779 ] £15

160. BROOKE, JOCELYN. PRIVATE VIEW, FOUR PORTRAITS. James Barrie. 1954First Edition. 178 pp. A very good copy in the scarce, unclipped dust wrapper. Fore edge a little foxed.A quartet of wonderfully observed character studies of people we have encountered elsewhere in his novels, all in Brooke’s inimitable style. [ref: 15427 ] £45

161. BROOKE, JOCELYN. RONALD FIRBANK. Arthur Barker, London. 1951First edition. 102 pp. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.Part of the ‘English Novelist’ series. Brooke’s full length critical essay on a favourite author. [ref: 15377 ] £35

162. BROOKE, JOCELYN. [CONTRIBUTES] THE PENGUIN NEW WRITING. EDITED BY JOHN LEHMANN. No. 25.

Penguin Books. 1945192 pp. + 8 pages of illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers as issued. A very good copy - hard to find in this condition.Jocelyn Brooke contributes a two-page poem entitled ‘April : Italy, 1944’, first published here. At this time Jocelyn has yet to drop his first Christian name of Bernard and signs himself as B. J. Brooke. [ref: 16893 ] £15

163. BROOKE, JOCELYN. [CONTRIBUTES] THE PENGUIN NEW WRITING. EDITED BY JOHN LEHMANN. No. 28.

Penguin Books. 1946187 pp. + 10 pages of illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers as issued. A very good copy - hard to find in this condition.

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Jocelyn Brooke contributes a one-page poem entitled ‘Equinox’, first published here. [ref: 16892 ] £15

164. BROOKE, JOCELYN. [CONTRIBUTES] THE PENGUIN NEW WRITING. EDITED BY JOHN LEHMANN. No. 36.

Penguin Books. 1947158 pp. + 17 pages of illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers as issued. A very good copy - hard to find in this condition.Jocelyn Brooke contributes a one-page poem entitled ‘February Evening’, first published here. [ref: 16890 ] £15

165. BROOKE, JOCELYN. [CONTRIBUTES] THE PENGUIN NEW WRITING. EDITED BY JOHN LEHMANN. No. 29.

Penguin Books. 1947186 pp. + 10 pages of illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers as issued. A very good copy - hard to find in this condition.Jocelyn Brooke contributes a short story of 14 pages entitled ‘The Blanket’, which is an interlude in Brooke’s army life during the Second World War in Italy, first published here. [ref: 16891 ] £15

166. BROOKE, JOCELYN. [CONTRIBUTES] THE PENGUIN NEW WRITING. EDITED BY JOHN LEHMANN. No. 31.

Penguin Books. 1947183 pp. + 8 pages of illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers as issued. A very good copy - hard to find in this condition.Jocelyn Brooke contributes a short story of 12 pages entitled ‘Blackthorn Winter’, about a ‘brief encounter’ during wartime, first published here. [ref: 17778 ] £15

167. BROOKS, ROBIN J. KENT AIRFIELDS IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR.

Countryside Books, Newbury. 19988vo., 287 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original laminated boards. As new.Useful history, now out of print. [ref: 16930 ] £15

168. BROOKS, ROBIN J. KENT’S OWN. THE HISTORY OF 500 (COUNTY OF KENT) SQUADRON ROYAL AUXILIARY AIR FORCE.

Meresborough Books. 1982158 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated boards. A fine copy with the bookplate of historian David Collyer.Useful history now out of print. ref: [18408 ] £15

169. BROWN, R.J. OLD HOUSES AND COTTAGES OF KENT. London Robert Hale. 1994

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8vo. 6.25 x 9.5 inches. 270 pp. Half-title. Illustrated by 132 pen and ink drawings by author, including 20 double page. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Near fine condition. Of the numerous books on Kent vernacular architecture, this title is certainlyone of the finest. The well researched study of medieval and post-medieval houses and of the different building types and materials, is profusely illustrated by the author’s own splendid pen and ink drawings. [ref: 21227 ] £15

170. BUCKNALL, RIXON. BOAT TRAINS AND CHANNEL PACKETS. The English Short Sea Routes.

London Vincent Stuart 1957First edition. 4to. 7.5 x 10 inches. xi + [i] + 218 pp. Half title. Illustrated by coloured frontispiece, numerous maps and plans in text in text and section of photographic plates at end, pp. 173-218. Bound in original yellow cloth in the scarce coloured pictorial dust wrapper, which is in fine condition, as is the book.This remains the standard work on the subject, and the only one to bring the cross-channel steamers and the boat trains together in one volume, covering both Dover and Folkestone; very well illustrated.We have another similar copy, with slightly chipped dust wrapper, at the same price. [ref: 20876 ] £45

171. BURNHAM, P. and S. MCRAE. KENT THE GARDEN OF ENGLAND.

Paul Norbury Publications, Tenterden, 19784to. xviii + 176 pp. Illus throughout. A very good copy in dust wrapper.An interesting work by two environmental scientists from Wye College, who using their expertise relate the history and development of Kent to agriculture and geology showing why and how our landscape has developedas it has. [ref: 19804 ] £20

172. BURTT, FRANK. STEAMERS OF THE THAMES AND MEDWAY. Richard Tilling, 1949First edition. 192 pp. with colour frontispiece and photo illustrations. Originalcloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.Covering vessels from the early nineteenth century to the date of publication,with numerous illustrations. A scarce title on the river steamers; scarcer stillin a dust wrapper. [ref: 19654 ] £75

173. BURTT, FRANK. STEAMERS OF THE THAMES AND MEDWAY. Richard Tilling, 1949.First Edition, 8vo. 192 pp. with colour frontis and photo illustrations throughout. Original red cloth, gilt.Scarce and most comprehensive title on the Passenger Steam Boats confined to the Thames and Medway and Estuary, forming a companion work to his

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well known Cross-Channel and Coastal Paddle Steamers. These are still the best works on the subject. [ref: 21325 ] £45

174. BURTT, FRANK. STEAMERS OF THE THAMES AND MEDWAY. Roadmaster Publishing, Chatham. 1997Facsimile reprint of the 1949 first edition. 192 pp. with b/w frontispiece and photo illustrations. Original dark blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dustwrapper.Covering vessels from the early nineteenth century to the date of publication,with numerous illustrations. Scarce as a first edition. [ref: 20789 ] £25

175. BUSHELL, T. A. THE BARRACUDA GUIDE TO COUNTY HISTORY SERIES, VOLUME 1, KENT.

Barracuda Books Ltd. Buckingham. 19768vo. xii +134 pp. + xiii-xlii with photo illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper, a very good copy.The principal people, places and events of the county’s history in date order, 2500BC-AD1973; with indices to places and people and a comprehensive entry-related source index. A useful work in which I often find surprising information. [ref: 17460 ] £25

176. BUTLER, DEREK. (Compiled by) CANTERBURY IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS.

Alan Sutton. 1989159 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original glossy paper wrappers.Part of the popular soft-bound ‘Britain in old photographs’ series. [ref: 15019 ] £10

177. CALDER, NIGEL. THE ENGLISH CHANNEL Chatto and Windus. 1986First edition. 373 pp., with photo illustration. A very good copy in dust wrapper.Calder, well-known for his science writing, is also a yachtsman who cruises the channel. This book is a mix of science, history and travel from his own experience. [ref: 10757 ] £12

178. CALTON, ROBERT BELL. ANNALS AND LEGENDS OF CALAIS. WITH SKETCHES OF ÉMIGRÉ NOTABILITIES, AND MEMOIR OF LADY HAMILTON.

John Russell Smith, London. 1852First Edition. 8vo. viii + 220 pp. + 4 pp. publisher's catalogue. Illustrated with a

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lithographic frontis and some small wood-engravings in the text. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Spine faded and worn at extremities but a very good copy.An entertaining and interesting work on the history of Calais, whose history is so bound up with England and the English. [ref: 16415 ] £75

CAMDEN'S BRITANNIA. KENT. From the Edition of 1789 by Richard Gough. Annotated and edited by Gordon J. Copley.London Hutchinson. 19774to. 7.5 x 10 inches. xxvii + [v] + 96 pp. with illustrations. Half title. Illustratedwith reproductions of black and white engravings in text, with portrait frontispiece. Bound in original maroon cloth, gilt, in pictorial dust wrapper. Infine condition.First published in 1586 and one of the fundamental source books of any county's history. This edition has been comprehensively annotated in the light of modern research. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21364 ] £15

179. CAMPBELL, MARJORIE A. THE STORY OF GUIDING IN KENT 1910-1960. Compiled by Marjorie A. Campbell.

[s.l.] [The Girl Guides Association. County of Kent]. Printed by Perry, Son and Lack Ltd. Lowfield Works, Dartford. No date but 19618vo. 5 x 7.25 inches. [ii] + 81 pp. + [1]. Illustrated by 16 pages of black and white photographic plates and by facsimiles in text. Decorated with Association’s badge on title page. Bound in stiff blue card wrappers with county badge on front. Spine and edges of wrappers sunned and a little foxing;otherwise good condition.Kent Bibliography. [ref: 21715 ] £15

180. CANTERBURY. DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF CANTERBURY, ILLUSTRATED WITH TEN HIGHLY-FINISHED LINE ENGRAVINGS, FROM DRAWINGS TAKEN

EXPRESSLY FOR THIS WORK, WITH A SHORT DESCRIPTION OF ST. AUGUSTINE’S MONASTERY, NOW CONVERTED INTO A MISSIONARY COLLEGE, FOR THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. FIFTH EDITION.

Published by Henry Ward, 8, Mercery Lane, Canterbury. 18504to. 48 pp. + 10 full-page steel engraved plates, one a folding ground plan. Period cloth, rebacked, and internal hingesreinforced. Somefoxing to plates

otherwise a very good copy.A curious work by Henry Ward, despitehis assertion that the ‘plates were from

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drawings taken expressly for this work’ they are off-prints from Winkles well-known work on Cathedrals and the only original material is that on the new repairs, death of W. Howley Late Archbishop of Canterbury and the founding of the new Missionary College of St. Augustine’s. [ref: 17488 ] £200

181. CANTERBURY. PILGRIM'S GUIDE TO THE ROYAL AND ANCIENTCITY OF CANTERBURY.

Cross and Jackman 1927138 pp. + [2 pp.] with folding street plan and photo illustration throughout. Original printed wrappers. Very good copy of this 1920's guide to the city with interesting adverts and photographs.

[ref: 19617 ] £30

182. CANTERBURY. S.E. VIEW OF THE ABBEY OF ST. AUGUSTINE WITH ETHELBERT’S TOWER IN THE ENVIRONS OF CANTERBURY. T. Hastings, sculp.

Published by the author. 1812Hand-coloured etching, 8 x 9 inches, mounted in conservation board. An attractive view. Published in “Vestiges of Antiquity, or a series of Etchings and Engravings of the ancient Monastery of St. Augustine, with theCathedral, Castle, and other Antiquities in the Suburbs of the Metropolitan City of Canterbury”. A rare work of 12 engraved plates. [ref: 8866 ] £55

ORIGINAL SOURCES ON THOMAS BECKET183. CANTERBURY - ABBOTT, EDWIN A. ST. THOMAS OF

CANTERBURY HIS DEATH AND MIRACLES. By Edwin A. Abbott, M.A., D.D. Formerly Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge and Hulsean Lecturer, author of ‘Philochristus’ ‘Onesimus’ Etc. Vol. I and Vol. II.

Adam and Charles Black, London. 1898Two volumes. Large 8vo. 6 x 9.25 inches. Vol.I. Frontis + xv + [1] + 333 pp. + [1] + [2] pp. advertisements. Illustrated with one plate, serving as frontispiece.Vol.II. vii + [1] + 326 pp. + [2] pp. advertisements. Both volumes have half-title. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. Spines and top of boards faded, extremities lightly worn. Pages deckle edged. Bookplate of Museum and Public Library, Maidstone, 1915, on front paste-downs.A scholarly edition of the original sources concerned with the martyrdom and subsequent miracles attributed to Thomas Becket (c.1120-1170), Archbishop of Canterbury. The accounts are translated into English, with theLatin versions in notes below. In Vol.II the extracts detailing the miracles arearranged in parallel texts. Edwin Abbott Abbott (1838-1926) spent most of his career as an innovative Headmaster of the City of London School and was notable for his teaching of languages and of English literature. His writings included studies of English grammar and numerous theological works. An essential source for the study of Becket. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20127 ] £145

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ROMAN STATION AT RICHBOROUGH, 1745184. CANTERBURY - BATTELY, JOHN. JOANNIS BATTELY S.T.P.

ARCHIADIACONI CANTUARIENSIS OPERA POSTHUMA. VIZ. ANTIQUATES RUTUPINAE ET ANTIQUATATES S. EDMUNDI BURGI AD ANNUM 1272 PERDUCTAE. [With a separate title page to each part:] ANTIQUITATES RUTUPINAE. Autore Joanne Battely S.T.P. Archiacono Cantuariensi. Editio Secunda. ANTIQUITATES S. EDMUNDI BURGI AD ANNUM MCCLXXII

PERDUCTAE. Autore Joanne Battely S.T.P. Archidiacono Cantuariensi. Opus Posthumum. Text in Latin.

E Theatro Sheldoniano, Oxoniae. 1745Second edition. 4to. 8.5 x 11 inches. [ii]; Rutupinae, [xiv] + 138 pp. Illustrated with 13 plates, including four folding and three vignettes including one title page, and capital at beginning of text; [8], A-R4, S-S1; [ii]; S. Edmundi Burgi, [ii] + 164 pp. Illustrated with three plates, including one folding and one vignette at beginning of text. [2], A-U4, X-X2. General title page and separatetitle page and register for each part with additional half title for part two. Bound in original full calf with gilt borders to boards. Spine rebacked with original cloth decorated gilt, divided into compartments with decorated raisedbands; new red morocco label and marbled endpapers. Slight traces of browning but otherwise a clean crisp interior.John Battely (1646-1708), clergyman and antiquary, was educated in his home town of Bury St Edmunds and at Trinity, Cambridge. He was ordained in 1675 and his links to his adopted county of Kent developed after his appointment as chaplain to two successive Archbishops of Canterbury. He was collated to the rectories of Hunton and Adisham, Kent in 1684, to the achdeaconry of Canterbury in 1688 and in the following year he received a canonry of the cathedral and was inducted as master of Eastbridge Hospital,Canterbury. His own religion being ‘untainted by superstition on the one side, or enthusiasm on the other,’ his main concern was the study of the history of Kent and to demonstrate the Anglo-Saxon roots of the Anglican church (DNB). He became a member of the Society of Antiquaries in 1708. None of his research was published in his lifetime and the Antiquitates Rutupinae did not appear until 1711. This account in Latin of the Roman stations of Thanet, and especially of Richborough, the Roman Rutupiae, was cast as a dialogue between Battely and Henry Wharton and Henry Maurice, two of his fellow chaplains at Lambeth Palace. The second edition was published by his nephew, Oliver Battely (1697-1762) with the hitherto unprinted history of Bury St Edmunds to the year 1272, the two works together recording the Battely’s range of historical research from Suffolk to Kent. The Rev. John Duncombe, one of the Six Preachers, published an English translation in an octavo format in 1774. A handsomely printed, large format edition illustrated with sixteen engraved plates and maps and four vignettes. ESTC T91281 Smith, p.273-4 [ref: 20009 ] £250

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185. CANTERBURY - BENNETT-GOLDNEY, FRANCIS. (Compiled by). THE ROYAL AND ANCIENT CITY OF CANTERBURY. OFFICIAL

GUIDE. FULLY ILLUSTRATED.Cross and Jackman. Canterbury 1923Fourth edition. 100 pp. + original yellow wrappers, with folding street plan and photo illustrations throughout. Original printedwrappers.Very good copy of this early guide to the city, with interesting adverts and photographs. These early twentieth-century guides have now become scarce.

[ref: 19662 ] £40

ST. THOMAS BECKET IN ART186. CANTERBURY - BORENIUS, TANCRED. ST.THOMAS BECKET

IN ART. London: Methuen & Co.Ltd. 1932

4to. xix + 122 pp. illustrated with 44 black and white plates. Original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. Some pages uncut. Small neat bookplate on front paste down. Slight discolouration on edges of front boards and dust wrapper but generally fine condition for age.The first adequate survey of the images of the Archbishop-Saint in European art, abundantly illustrated, mostly from little-known material.

A scarce title. [ref: 19013 ] £45

187. CANTERBURY - BOYLE, JOHN. PORTRAIT OF CANTERBURY. Robert Hale. 19748vo. 192 pp. Photographic illustrations. First edition. Original cloth gilt in edge worn dust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.A readable and interesting modern survey, with good illustrations. [ref: 19045 ] £25

FINE VIEW OF CANTERBURY IN 1572188. CANTERBURY - BRAUN, GEORG and FRANS HOGENBERG.

CANTVARBURY. CANTUARIA VRBS FERTILIS SIMAE ANGLIAE CELEBRIS; ARCHIEPISCOPATI SEDE, COMMENDATA.

Cologne 1572Copper engraved plate, 17 x 12 inches in fine original hand-colouring. Latin text on verso. Mounted framed and double glazed with conservation materials. A fine dark impression of the plate with good margins. An outstanding example.

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The Canterbury plate from Braun & Hogenberg’s Civitates orbis Terrarum, the great celebration of the European city published between 1572 and 1617 and illustrated with 363 plates. A remarkable series of engravings incorporating an astonishing detail, giving an impression of the economy, status, wealth and the social structure of each town; even the costume of the local inhabitants is depicted. Canterbury was issued in the first volume published in 1572 with descriptive text on the verso of each plate. Three language versions were produced; Latin, German and Italian, this is the Latin edition, which was reissued several times. [ref: 20605 ] £1000

189. CANTERBURY - BRENT, JOHN. CANTERBURY IN THE OLDEN TIME. bound with FELIX SUMMERLY’S HAND-BOOK FOR

CANTERBURY: Its Historical Associations and Works of Art... [edited by] John Brent

A.Ginder, Publisher, Canterbury, Bell and Daldy, London. 1860Small 8vo. 5 x 7 inches. JOHN BRENT: First edition. Wood-engraved frontis, lithographed title page + vi + 117 pp. FELIX SUMMERLY: ANew Edition, Revised, with Additions. A

folding map of the City and its vicinity, a folding plan of the Cathedral + wood-engraved frontis + 3 wood-engraved plates + vi + 118 pp. with numerous woodcuts to the text + [20] pp. adverts. Bound in original green cloth, with gilt title to spine and embossed titles to upper and lower boards.John Brent, a Canterbury councillor and Alderman had a keen interest in thehistory of Canterbury and Kent. He became a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in April 1853, and was also a member of the British Archaeological Association and the Kent Archaeological Society. In 1855 Brent was asked to revise Felix Summerly's Handbook for Canterbury, and in 1860 his own well-received book on the city appeared, Canterbury in the Olden Time, which was an enlarged version of a paper originally published in the Journal of the British Archaeological Association and which appeared as a companion volume to the Handbook. Felix Summerly was a pseudonym for Sir Henry Cole, whose Hand-Book for Canterbury had originally been published in 1843. Cole was a remarkable man whose achievements are too great to list here. Suffice it to say that he was at the centre of the group of people that organized the Great Exhibition and, rather more prosaically, commissioned and published the first Christmas card. The two authors’ works complimented one another, as the former concentrated on the institutions (justice, political history, guilds and fraternities, etc.), whereas the latter focussed on the fabric of the city (the cathedral and churches, the city walls and Dane John, St. Augustine’s Monastery, the nunneries, hospitals, etc.). Each work is scarce in its own right and doubly so as a combined volume. [ref: 19945 ] £175

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190. CANTERBURY - BRENT, JOHN. CANTERBURY IN THE OLDEN TIME. Second Edition - Enlarged with numerous illustrations. By John Brent, F.S.A.

London Simpkin Marshall, and Co.; Hal Drury and A. Grinder, Canterbury. 1879.8vo. 6.25 x 9.25 inches. viii + 312 pp. Illustrated by 31 lithographed (3 hand coloured) and wood engraved plates, two additional numbered plates and by numerous woodcuts in text Bound in original purple cloth, gilt, with bevelled edges, decorated with blind stamped

borders and gilt roundel on front board. Extremities a little worn and spine sunned; otherwise a very good copy. Bookseller’s label of F. Wetherhead 17, George Lane Folkestone on front pastedown and bookplate.The much enlarged edition - contains a wealth of detail on the city. John Brent, a Canterbury councillor and Alderman had a keen interest in the history of Canterbury and Kent. He became a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in April 1853, and was also a member of the British Archaeological Association and the Kent Archaeological Society. In 1855 Brent was asked to revise Felix Summerly's Handbook for Canterbury, and in 1860 the first edition of his own well-received book on the city appeared, Canterbury in the Olden Time, which was an enlarged version of a paper originally published in the Journal of the British Archaeological Association and which appeared as a companion volume to the Handbook. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 18531 ] £65

191. CANTERBURY - BRENT, JOHN. CANTERBURY IN THE OLDEN TIME. Second Edition - Enlarged, with numerous illustrations. By John Brent, F.S.A.

London Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.; Hal Drury and A. Ginder, Canterbury. 1879.8vo. 6.25 x 9.25 inches. viii + 312 pp., with errata slip tipped-in at end. Illustrated by 31 lithographed (3 coloured) and wood engraved plates, two additional unnumbered plates and by numerous woodcuts in text. Bound in original brown cloth, gilt, with bevelled edges, decorated with blind stamped borders and gilt roundel on front board. Extremities worn and some past damage due to damp on lower left hand edge of front board; otherwise in goodcondition.The much enlarged edition - contains a wealth of detail on the city. John Brent, a Canterbury councillor and Alderman had a keen interest in the history of Canterbury and Kent. He became a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in April 1853, and was also a member of the British Archaeological Association and the Kent Archaeological Society. In 1855 Brent was asked to revise Felix Summerly's Handbook for Canterbury, and in 1860 the first edition of his own well-received book on the city appeared, Canterbury in the Olden Time, which was an enlarged version of a paper originally published in the Journal of the British Archaeological Association and which appeared as a companion volume to the Handbook. Kent Bibliography Supplement

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[ref: 21749 ] £65

FINE ENGRAVINGS OF CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL192. CANTERBURY - BRITTON, JOHN THE HISTORY AND

ANTIQUITIES OF THE METROPOLITICAL CHURCH OF CANTERBURY; Illustrated by a Series of Engraving of Views, Elevations, Plans, and Details of the Architecture of that Edifice withBiographical Anecdotes of the Archbishops, etc. By John Britton, F.S.A. etc.

M.A.Nattali,19, Southampton-Street, Covent Garden, London. 18364to. 9.5 x 12 inches. [ii] + 114 pp. [2], [A]-[A4], B-O4, P1. Illustrated by 26 engraved plates, plate 20, serving as the engraved title. Plates (other than architectural) drawn by George Cattermole and engraved by J. Le Keux. Bound in original green cloth, with black morocco label, gilt. Extremities

slightly worn and sunning to top and inside of rear board. Pages deckle edged and occasional foxing. Otherwise fine and clean interior. John Britton (1771-1857) was an antiquary and photographer, born near Chippenham, Wiltshire. In 1789 he first met Edward Brayley in a Clerkenwell bookshop and began a long partnership with him, including the twenty-seven volume compilation of The Beauties of England from 1801, based on extensive fieldwork, which he partly wrote and edited. His architectural work culminated in the Cathedral Antiquities of England, published in fourteen volumes, 1814-1835. These pioneered the use of measured plans, sections and elevations to explain the principles of English Gothic to the reader but seven planned volumes did not appear as the substitution of steel engraving for copperplate made further work on the series uneconomic. This 1836 reprint of the Canterbury volume is less common in libraries than the original 1821 edition. A fine copy of this very scarce volume which is still one of the best essays on the architecture of the cathedral. COPAC Smith (1821 edn.) DNB [ref: 19967 ] £250

CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL DESCRIBED, 1783193. CANTERBURY - BURNBY, JOHN. AN HISTORICAL

DESCRIPTION OF THE METROPOLITICAL CHURCH OF CHRIST, CANTERBURY; CONTAINING AN ACCOUNT OF ITS ANTIQUITIES, AND OF ITS ACCIDENTS AND IMPROVEMENTS, SINCE THE FIRST ESTABLISHMENT. WITH AN ENGLISH

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TRANSLATION OF THE EPITAPHS, AND A SOUTH PROSPECT OF THE CATHEDRAL. The Second Edition, Greatly Enlarged, With a Preface, containing Observations on the Gothic Architecture, And an Historical Account of the Archbishops of Canterbury, From Augustin to the Present Time. Together with An Elegy, written By the Rev. John Duncomb, M.A.

Canterbury: Printed and sold by Simmons and Kirkby. 17838vo. Approx. 6 x 9 inches. [ii] + frontis. + [ii] + viii + 138, 137-156 pp. (latter section includes appendix, elegy and index). [2], A-R4, S-S5, T-U4, X-X2. (some signatures labelled incorrectly). Illustrated with one engraved plate, serving as frontispiece. Original off-white heavy paper wrappers with another layer of laid-on blue paper giving the impression of a quarter binding, with original printed title label to front. Leavesuntrimmed and occasionally unopenedSome worming in latter part, not affectinglegibility, otherwise a very clean interior.The first edition appeared in 1772 andanother came out in 1799. Publishedanonymously, but known to be the workof John Burnby as Smith notes: ‘This wascompiled by the late Mr. John Burnby, anAttorney of Cambridge, although from theElegy by the Rev. John Duncombe beinginserted it is generally attributed to the latter’.Duncombe (1729-86) was educated at Cambridge and after ordination in 1753 held a number of Kentish livings. He acquired a contemporary reputation as a writer and poet, and in 1773, wrote an account of a cricket match, Surry Triumphant, or, The Kentish-Men’s Defeat, a parody of the ballad Chevy Chase, to which Burnby replied in The Kentish Cricketers of the same year. A fine copy in very original condition, thus rare. ESTC T61876 Smith DNB [ref: 19641 ] £175

194. CANTERBURY - BUTLER, JOHN. THE QUEST FOR BECKET’S BONES. THE MYSTERY OF THE RELICS OF ST THOMAS BECKET OF CANTERBURY.

Yale University Press 19954to. xii + 180 pp. Original blue cloth. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.The newest addition to the long running speculation as to the real burial place of Becket. [ref: 18191 ] £25

195. CANTERBURY - COTTON, CHARLES. THE GREY FRIARS OF CANTERBURY 1224 TO 1538, Together with a chapter on the remains of the Friary and its restoration by R. H. Goodsall

Manchester U. P. 1924First edition. 8vo. 6 x 9 inches. xvi + 112 pp. with 6 b/w plates and figures to the text. Bound in original brown cloth, gilt. Some edge spotting otherwise a very good copy. Fewer than half of the gatherings have been opened.

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A useful summation of Franciscan Canterbury. The first edition benefits from 3 useful appendices, lacking in the later edition. With the bookplate of Ernest Ridley Debenham, Bt., of the well-known department stores. [ref: 19955 ] £30

196. CANTERBURY - COTTON, CHARLES. THE GREY FRIARS OF CANTERBURY 1224 TO 1538, Together with a chapter on the remains of the Friary and its restoration by R.A. Goodsall

Manchester U.P. 1926Second Edn. [6] + 73 pp. with plan and illustrations. Original boards with label on spine and upper board, a very good copy.A useful summation of Franciscan Canterbury. [ref: 18753 ] £25

197. CANTERBURY - COTTON, CHARLES. A KENTISH CARTULARY OF THE ORDER OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM.

Kent Archælogical Society. 1930.188 pp. with illustrations. Original cloth, gilt. Spine faded otherwise a very good copy.[ref: 17711 ] £35

198. CANTERBURY - COTTON, CHARLES. THE SAXON CATHEDRAL OF CANTERBURY AND THE SAXON SAINTS BURIED THEREIN.

Manchester University Press. 19294to. 111 pp. with illustration. Original cloth, gilt.Scarce. [ref: 18524 ] £50

199. CANTERBURY - COTTON, CHARLES (EDITOR). KENT RECORDS - THE CANTERBURY CHANTRIES AND HOSPITALS TOGETHER WITH SOME OTHERS IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD IN 1546. A SUPPLEMENT TO KENT CHANTRIES.

Kent Archaelogical Society, 193480 pp. Original cloth, gilt. Book plate and previous owner’s library stamp on front paste-down.

[ref: 19642 ] £35

200.CANTERBURY - COZENS, WALTER. OLD CANTERBURY. Cross & Jackman, Canterbury. 1906.First Edition. 8vo. 120 pp. with photographs and other illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers.A useful work containing some interesting information on old city plans and detailing the changes the author had seen in his lifetime. [ref: 18534 ] £30

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201. CANTERBURY - CROSS, F.W. and J.R. HALL. RAMBLES ROUND OLD CANTERBURY.

Canterbury, Cross & Jackman, 1884Third edition, revised. 4to. 148 pp.+ 4 pp. index with wood engravings throughout. Original pictorial cloth, gilt. A very good example.Extends to include Fordwich and Chilham. An interesting and well- produced book, printed in Canterbury. [ref: 18533 ] £50

202. CANTERBURY - DAWSON, ROBERT, Lieut. R.E. CANTERBURY. (FROM THE ORDNANCE SURVEY) BOUNDARY COMMISSION MAP.

House of Commons. n.d. but 1831Lithographic map, 14 x 12 inches, with contemporary hand-colouring. A fine example with very attractive colouring.These maps were produced from the Ordnance Survey maps on a scale of 2 inches to one mile, to redefine the parliamentary boundaries, in this case joining the parishes or wards to become one constituency. The map is sold together with the pages of text and statistics which accompanied the map in the report. [ref: 16652 ] £60

203. CANTERBURY - DEANE, REV. JOHN BATHURST. THE WILL OF HENRY DENE, ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, DECEASED 15 FEBRUARY, 1502-3. EXTRACTED FROM THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, VOL. XVIII. 1861.

Royal Archaeological Institute, London. 18618vo. Extract 12 pp. Bound in boards with dark red cloth and gilt title to spine.This extract from the prestigious Archaeological Journal gives a good deal of biographical information about Dene and includes the will, written in Latin, in full with copious notes. From the library of antiquary F. William Cock with his attractive bookplate. [ref: 18517 ] £85

SCARCE 12TH C. SURVEY OF KENT CHURCHES204. CANTERBURY - DOUGLAS, DAVID C. THE DOMESDAY

MONACHORUM OF CHRIST CHURCH CANTERBURY. Edited with an Introduction by David C. Douglas, M.A. Professor of Medieval History in the University of Leeds.

Offices of the Royal Historical Society, 96 Cheyne Walk, London, S.W.10. 1944Large folio. 13.5 x 17.25 inches. vi + 127 pp. Illustrated by [16] facsimile plates at end. [A-B4], C-R4. Text in English and Latin. Bound in original black

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cloth, gilt and deckle edges. Extremities worn, bumped on lower edges, front board sunned on right edge with stain that also affects endpapers and free endpapers. Slight staining to margin edges of end facsimile pages. Otherwise a fine clean copy.A twelfth century survey of the churches, knights and lands of Christ Church Cathedral Priory, Canterbury: ‘The manuscript which is here edited was written at the monastery of Christ Church in Canterbury, and is now preserved in the library of the dean and chapter of that place’ (MS. E. 28). It is written in three scripts, dated c. 1100, 1150 and 1200 and the text falls into four main groups, 1. Documents relating to Kentish churches and to payments due from them; 2. Surveys of the lands of the archbishop and the monks of Christ Church, of the see of Rochester and other Kentish landowners; 3. A list of the knights of the archbishop; 4. Documents concerning the affairs of Christ Church and its property. The editor’s introduction supplies a detailed and scholarly analysis of the texts, includinga discussion on possible links to the great Domesday survey of 1085-86. A complete transliteration of the Latin documents is followed by an index and facsimile reproductions of all the manuscripts. The editor, David Charles Douglas (1898-1982), became a distinguished historian of the Norman period and was author of William the Conqueror (1964) and other works on the Normans and their achievements. A very large book with some superficial wear and tear but now quite scarce. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20204 ] £185

205. CANTERBURY - DU BOULAY, F.R.H. (Edited by.) DOCUMENTS ILLUSTRATIVE OF MEDIEVAL KENTISH SOCIETY. General Editor: F. R. H. Du Boulay, M.A. Prepared for the Records Publication Committee of the Kent Archaeological Society.

( Kent Records. Volume XVIII).Ashford Kent Archæological Society. Records Publication Committee. 19648vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. xviii + 390 pp. Series title page. Illustrated with

folding map of medieval Kent. Original blue cloth, gilt, with Society’s device on front boards. In fine condition.Based on six sets of records covering the medieval history of the county:-1/ A list of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s tenants - reign of Henry II.2/ The Pipe Roll of Canterbury 1292 -5.3/ Kent Lay Subsidy Roll 1334 - 5.4/ Earliest Canterbury Freemen’s rolls 1298-1363.5/ King’s Bench referring to Kent 1503-1532.6/ Calendar of archbishopric demesne leases 1503-1532

Together with copious indexes. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21172 ] £35

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206. CANTERBURY - EVANS, S. & F. BENNETT-GOLDNEY. EDITORS. CANTERBURY, MOTHER-CITY OF THE ANGLO-SAXON RACE. THE CATHEDRAL BY F.W. FARRAR, ST AUGUSTINE'S ABBEY

& ST MARTIN’S CHURCH BY C.F. ROUTLEDGE.Published by Canterbury Chamber of Trade and the Corporation of the City. Cross and Jackman, n.d. c 1903Folio [2] + 135 pp. with text and photo illustration on recto of each page, and fine advertisements on verso. Red cloth, gilt, as issued. A very good example.This is a presentation copy from the editors dated March 1903. A sort of elaborate guide book and history, with almost a trades directory contained within the splendid adverts, many with photographs of their shops

and wares. A nice production. [ref: F ] £65

207. CANTERBURY - FOWLER, REV. MONTAGUE. SOME NOTABLE ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY.

S.P.C.K. 1895222 pp. + 6 chromolithographic portraits. Original decorated purple cloth, gilt. Spine faded and rather rubbed and bumped.Fourteen illustrious archbishops are dealt with in some detail, and a list of the complete sequence of archbishops is included. The colour-printed plates are quite attractive. [ref: 14436 ] £25

208.CANTERBURY - GOSTLING, WILLIAM. A WALK IN AND ABOUT THE CITY OF CANTERBURY, WITH MANY OBSERVATIONS NOT TO BE FOUND IN ANY DESCRIPTION HITHERTO PUBLISHED. THE SECOND EDITION.

Canterbury, Simmons and Kirkby. 1777402 pp. + (16) pp index. with folding engraved map and table, and 23 engraved plates, some folding. All folding embellishments have been backed with linen.. Later half-calf with gilt ruling and three-coloured monogram, gilt,to upper board. Top edges gilt. A very good copy.The second edition was considerably enlarged with the addition of some fine engraved plates by Grose, Hawkins, and others. A particularly attractive copy. We have another copy of this title at the same price. [ref: 19510 ] £200

209. CANTERBURY - GOSTLING, WILLIAM. A WALK IN AND ABOUT THE CITY OF CANTERBURY, WITH MANY OBSERVATIONS NOT TO BE FOUND IN ANY DESCRIPTION HITHERTO PUBLISHED.

By William Gostling, M.A., a native of the place, and minor canon of the Cathedral. A new

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edition with considerable additions, and embellished with numerous engravings.

Canterbury Published and sold by William Blackley; sold also in London, by Baynes and Son, and Longman and Co., Paternoster Row, and Nichols and Son, Parliament Street, Westminster. [W. Batcheller, Printer, Dover.] 18258vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xxiv + 366 pp. + [16] pp. index + 402 pp. + (16) pp index + [2] pp. publisher’s advertisements. With list of subscribers. Illustrated by folding plan of the City of Canterbury (with table of references), 2 folding maps, of East Kent and Sandwich, and 31 copperplate engravings, 4 of which folding, and including portraitfrontispiece (with 11 plates new to thisedition). Bound in original publisher’squarter cloth, over plain stiff card boardswith original paper spine label, with price.Extremities a little worn but very goodinternally.The work by William Gostling (1696-1777) was first published in 1774 and proved immediately popular, with five editions appearing by 1804. It contains some fine plates, including the folding view of the castle. This sixth and last edition of 1825 includes eleven additional plates (Plate 5. Westgate without, with intended improvements, has not been bound in this copy, nor does it appear in the list of plates quotedby Smith and it is possible that it was never issued). It also incorporates many additions to the letterpress and an extra chapter on recent alterations and improvements, which could not be conveniently introduced into the bodyof the work, including the gas works, water works, proposed canal and the ‘Iron Rail Way from Whitstable to Canterbury,’ begun in October of that year. An appendix includes a tour of East Kent. Smith, 9. 114-5. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21691 ] £75

210. CANTERBURY - G.S. [G. SMITH] CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL. By G. S., With illustrations.

Printed and published by H.S.Claris, ‘Kent Herald’ Office. 18838vo. 5.25 x 7.25 inches. Frontis. + x + 388 pp.+ [5], illustrated with 28 plates, 8 folding (26 numbered), including frontispiece. Bound in original brown cloth, gilt, double blind stamped borders and single inner panel on boards andred edges. Spine, decorated gilt at top and bottom, chipped and worn; joints weak. A detailed historical survey of Canterbury Cathedral, well-illustrated with photo-lithographs, engravings and plans: all the information is arranged in chronological order; the various changes in the fabric and in the government of the church are noticed as each occurred, and all recorded events of any interest, that have happened in connection with the Cathedral and Monastery, are, in like manner, narrated or referred to.’ Similarly the careers of the Archbishops, Priors and Deans ‘are interwoven in the body of the work.’ (Preface). Although the author has styled himself G.S.on the title page, the plan at the end states, ‘Measured and Drawn by G. Smith’ and he has been identified as George Smith. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20113 ] £35

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211. CANTERBURY - HALL, F. MARCUS, RICHARD S. STEVENS, and JOHN WYMAN. THE KENT AND CANTERBURY HOSPITAL 1790-1987.

Kent Postgraduate Medical Centre, Canterbury. 1987xi + 229 pp. with b/w illustrations throughout. Original laminated pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.* Signed and dedicated by the authors to fellow author Ivan Green. [ref: 18059 ] £25

212. CANTERBURY - HASTINGS, THOMAS. VESTIGES OF ANTIQUITY; OR, A SERIES OF ETCHINGS AND ENGRAVINGS OF THE ANCIENT MONASTERY OF ST. AUGUSTINE, WITH THE CATHEDRAL, CASTLE, AND OTHER ANTIQUITIES, IN THE SUBURBS OF THE METROPOLITAN CITY OF CANTERBURY.

Published by the Author and Sold by Murray, Albemarle Street, London. 1813Large folio. 12 x 19 inches. [ii] + [12] pp. + [1]. Unpaginated. Frontispiece and 11 fine large etched engravings. Bound in contemporary red half-morocco, gilt. A little rubbed at extremities, one or two pages of letterpress foxed but a very good copy. The original label stating this set to be ‘Proofs’ is affixed on the rear paste-down endpaper.A scarce work. The list of subscribers accounts for 125 copies, of which 70 are proofs and it is likely that only 200 or so were printed. The engravings are very fine and interesting and are in the style of the picturesque works coming back from the antique lands of the Grand Tour. [ref: 19620 ] £650

DIOCESAN HISTORY OF CANTERBURY.213. CANTERBURY - JENKINS, ROBERT C. CANTERBURY. By

Robert C. Jenkins, M.A. Rector and Vicar of Lyminge, Hon. Canon of Canterbury. With map. (Diocesan Histories).

Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, Northumberland Avenue, Charing Cross; 43, Queen Victoria Street, E.C.; and 48, Piccadilly, W., London. Pott, Young, and Co., New York. 18808vo. 4.75 x 6.75 inches. [vi] + 428 pp. + [4] pp. advertisements. Illustrated by coloured folding ‘map to illustrate the annals of Canterbury’ (Stanford’s), serving as frontispiece. Bound in original blue cloth, decorated in black and gilt, with diocesan arms on front board and SPCK monogram on rear. Buff endpapers. Some foxing and spotting, especially on edges, but otherwise a finecopy. 1882 inscription on first free endpaper.A still useful compact history of Canterbury diocese from the Roman and Anglo Saxon periods, largely concerned with the period before 1688. It includes a list of archbishops from Augustine (597) to Tait (1868) and of the priors and later, the deans. Robert Charles Jenkins (1815-96) was rector of Lyminge and a noted antiquarian, who also published The Chartulary of the Monastery of Lyminge founded A.D. 633 by St AEthelburga the Queen (c.1880). [ref: 20563 ] £45

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SIGNED PRESENTATION COPY214. CANTERBURY - KEESEY, WALTER. CANTERBURY SKETCH

BOOK. A. and C. Black. 1915First Edition. Slim 8vo. 24 sketches by Walter Keesey without text. Original boards with paper label to upper cover. Spine slightly rubbed but a good copy.This copy is signed by Keesey on the title page. Published in A. and C. Black’s ‘Artist’s Sketch Book Series’, with very attractive pencil drawings of the city from the beginning of the motor age. We have some unsigned reprints of this title priced at £10 [ref: 15603 ] £35

215. CANTERBURY - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF CANTERBURY. Kelly's Directories. 19708vo. 344 pp. Original printed card wrappers. A good copy.[ref: 19542 ] £20

216. CANTERBURY - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF CANTERBURY, WHITSTABLE, HERNE BAY AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19368vo. 56 + 812 pp. + 2. Complete with the map. Original printed boards, spine faded. A good copy.Scarce pre-war directory of Canterbury together with the surrounding villages. [ref: 18738 ] £100

217. CANTERBURY - MASON, A.J. A GUIDE TO THE ANCIENT GLASS IN CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL.

H.J. Goulden, Canterbury. 1925Booklet. 56 pp. Original printed paper wrappers. A near fine copy.Each window in the Cathedral is carefully described by the author, Canon of Canterbury Cathedral. [ref: 18469 ] £20

218. CANTERBURY - MASON, ARTHUR JAMES. WHAT BECAME OF THE BONES OF ST. THOMAS? A CONTRIBUTION TO HIS FIFTEENTH JUBILEE.

C.U.P. 19208vo. 196 pp. with folding plan of Canterbury Cathedral. Original plain card wrappers with title label to spine.A consideration of the bones, excavated at Canterbury in 1888, as to the possibilty of their being those of St. Thomas a Becket. Scarce [ref: 18457 ] £30

CANTERBURY PROVINCE PROBATE ABSTRACTS219. CANTERBURY - MATHEWS, JOHN AND GEORGE F.

MATTHEWS. YEAR BOOKS OF PROBATES . Abstracts of Probate Acts

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in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Vol.1, 1630-4 (1902), Vol.2, 1635-39 (1903), Vol.3, 1640-44 (1905), Vol.4, 1645-49 (1906); Sentences and Complete Index Nominum (Probates and Sentences) for the Years 1630-1639. (1907); Abstracts of Probate Acts in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Commonwealth Probates, Vol.1 (1650-1) (1909), Vol. 2 (1652-3) (1911), Vol.3 (1654-5) (1914); Abstracts of Probates and Sentences in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, 1620-4 (1911). Edited by John Matthews and George F. Matthews, B.A.

London: Issued to Subscribers from 93 and 94 Chancery Lane, London, W.C.1902-19144to. Ten volumes. 6.25 x 10 inches. 349 pp.; 431 pp.; 292 pp.; 582 + [2] pp. advertisements; 171 pp.; 389 + [1] pp. advertisements; 506 pp.; 352 pp.; 341 pp. Bound in original green cloth, gilt, with PCC device on front boards. Some wrinkling of cloth and a few stains. Occasional light pencil marks in clean interiors. Armorial bookplate on front paste-down of Vol.2, 1635-39 only.Abstracts of Probates and Sentences is Vol.1 (1620-4); Vol.2 (1625-29) was never published.‘The Probate Act Books of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury exist in an almost unbroken series from the year 1526, and are of great value to Antiquarians...they afford a means of obtaining a list of the Wills, Registeredand Unregistered, in the Principal Court of Probate, more complete even than the Official Calendars themselves...’ The abstract volumes include indexes of stray names and of places (the places index not included in Commonwealth Abstracts, Vol.3) , including English and Welsh counties. Although the entries are largely drawn from the southern province of Canterbury, ‘the Wills of persons resident in the Province of York, in Scotland, Ireland, the sometime American Colonies, and elsewhere, have been registered there, when the necessary grants of Probate have been made for the administration of property lying within the Provinceof Canterbury.’ The 1620-24 volume does not include indexes. [ref: 19468 ] £550

220. MAUDSON, CHEMIST, WESTGATE CANTERBURY. MANUSCRIPT PRESCRIPTION BOOK COMMENCING 21/7/1909 AND CONCLUDING 13/1/1927. OVER SIX HUNDRED PRESCRIPTIONS WERE ADMINISTERED IN THE PERIOD.

Ledger manufactured by H.J. Goulden Canterbury. c.1909Tall, thin ledger with ruled lines. Approximately 80 pages, used recto and verso, in ink in several hands. All the handwriting is clear despite some stains and torn pages. The original quarter-roan binding has been renewed, retaining the original old marbled boards which are much rubbed and worn. There are several inserted pieces of paper, as memoranda or as formulae.Apart from the interesting thought ‘What did the chemist give them?’ we do know who the recipients are by the name and, sometimes, the address of the patient, and this makes interesting reading - From the Archbishop of Canterbury, and numerous clergy, Lords and Ladies, Mrs. and Misses, even Miss Sackville-West and, as time moves through the years of the First WorldWar, more and more military men, of all ranks. Turning to the end of the book and turning it up-side-down, the chemist has analyzed the numbers of prescriptions from Canterbury, and those from Kent generally. He has listed

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the N.H.S. prescriptions from their introduction in 1923 to beyond the date inwhich he completed the book, (working from the other end) and has filled theblanks at the rear with tables detailing the amound paid by the N.H.S. This analysis is continued right up until 1954. A prime piece of social history inviting the labour of a researcher. [ref: 19663 ] £125

221. CANTERBURY - MESSENGER, A.W.B. THE HERALDRY OF CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL. VOLUME I, THE GREAT CLOISTER VAULT. By Commander (S.) A.W.B.Messenger F.S.A, L.R.I.B.A., (Retd.),R.N.

The Office of the Friends, Christ Church Gateway, Canterbury. 19478vo. 6 x 8.75 inches. [iv] +148 pp. Illustrated by one colour plate, serving as frontispiece, 3 black and white key plates, 64 black and white photographic plates and three folding plates (two pedigrees and one plan) at end. Errata slip tipped in. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. Slight wear to extremities with good clean interior. Ex-Library copy, with Folkestone Public Libraries. Reference Dept. label and library stamps repeated inside. Pencil note on contents page.Very good reference work long out of print. Although other volumes were projected by the Friends of Canterbury Cathedral, Volume I, by Arthur William Bryant Messenger, was the only one to appear. It was first issued inquarterly parts in 1939-40 as a Supplement to the Reports and Chronicles of the Friends of Canterbury Cathedral. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20214 ] £40

222. CANTERBURY - PENNELL, JOSEPH AND ELIZABETH. A CANTERBURY PILGRIMAGE. RIDDEN WRITTEN AND ILLUSTRATED.

Seeley and Co. 1885Small 4to. 78 pp. with full page and other illustrations by Joseph Pennell. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.A charming account of a tricycle ride from London to Canterbury, with Pennell's fine illustrations depicting their early cycle, and other machines being ridden through the empty roads of Kent. As it was hopping time several illustrations are devoted to this subject.

Scarce. [ref: 17679 ] £80

223. CANTERBURY - PIKE’S CANTERBURY AND DISTRICT, HERNE BAY and WHITSTABLE LOCAL DIRECTORY 1932-33.

Garnett, Mepham and Fisher Ltd. 1933498 pp. + 18 pp. adverts. Lacking the map, as is usual. Bound in original blue cloth only very slightly worn. A very good copy.A very good copy of the annual 'Blue Book'. Pre-war editions are now difficult to find. [ref: 20029 ] £100

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224. CANTERBURY - RACKHAM, BERNARD. THE ANCIENT GLASS OF CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL.

Published for the Friends of Canterbury by Lund Humphries and Co. Ltd. 1949Folio. xv + 194 pp. + 21 coloured plates with descriptive guards and 80 monochrome plates. Original blue cloth with gilt titles and gilt device to front board. Near mint in publisher’s plain dust wrapper. There is a neat school library stamp on the front and rear paste-down endpapers, but the book was never seen by students as it shows no signs of use, and is preserved in the original slipcase which is a little worn on the extremities.A superb production with heavy paper and magnificent photographic illustrations, combined with comprehensive descriptions and commentaries, this remains the definitive work on the subject. It was expensive at the time and issued in a very small edition. Bernard Rackham was Keeper of the Department of Ceramics at the Victoria and Albert Museum. [ref: 16182 ] £200

225. CANTERBURY - ROUTLEDGE, REV. C.F. THE HISTORY OF ST. MARTIN'S CHURCH CANTERBURY. A MONOGRAPH.

Kegan, Paul. 1891189 pp. with wood engraved illustrations. Original cloth, gilt.Scarce first issue of this standard history of St. Martin's. [ref: 19612 ] £40

226. CANTERBURY - RULE, MARTIN. (EDITOR). THE MISSAL OF ST. AUGUSTINE'S ABBEY CANTERBURY. WITH EXCERPTS FROM THE ANTIPHONARY AND LECTIONARY OF THE SAME MONASTERY.

Cambridge University Press. 1896Small folio. clxxxiv + 174 pp. printed in red and black. With 2 photo facsimile leaves. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.Very scarce. This copy presented by the Syndics of the Cambridge UniversityPress and the Editor. No recipient is named but there is the ownership inscription of C[harles] W[alter] Moule, dated 1896, who was a member of Corpus Christi college. [ref: 18526 ] £90

227. CANTERBURY - SAYERS, JANE. E. PAPAL JUDGES DELEGATE IN THE PROVINCE OF CANTERBURY 1198-1254. A STUDY IN ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION AND ADMINISTRATION.

Oxford University Press for Sandpiper Press. 19978vo. xxv + 398 pp. Original cloth gilt, fine copy in dust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.The first account of how papal jurisdiction operated in pre-reformation England through a series of special courts in the southern province. It describes and assesses their origins, procedure, personnel and judicial business and contains appendices of documents in Latin with a full bibliography. First published as part of the Oxford Historical Monographs, 1971.

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[ref: 18978 ] £30

FINE CANTERBURY HISTORY228. CANTERBURY - SOMNER, WILLIAM. THE ANTIQUITIES OF

CANTERBURY. aOR A SVRVEY OF THAT ANCIENT CITIE, WITH THE SUBVRBS, AND CATHEDRALL. Containing principally matters of Antiquity in them all. Collected chiefly from old Manuscripts, Lieger-bookes, and other like Records,for the most part, never as yet Printed. With an Appendix here annexed: Wherein (for better satisfaction to the learned the Manuscripts, and Records of chiefest consequence, are faithfully exhibited. All (for the honour of that ancient Metropolis, and his good affection to Antiquities)

Sought out and Published By the Industry, and Goodwill of William Somner.

Printed by I.L. [i.e.John Legat] for Richard Thrale, and are to be sold at his Shop at Pauls-Gate at the signe of the Crosse-Keyes, London. 1640.First edition. 4to. 6.75 x 9 inches. [xvi] + 516 + [12] pp. ([8], A-3U4). Illustrated by three folding plates, including The Mapp of Canterbury [engraved by Hollar] and, on verso of title, a full page coat of arms of the See, and vignettes, including royal devices, at heads of sections. Bound in recent full speckled calf, gilt; spine with raised bands in compartments and gilt tooling; early ink ownership inscription in Latin above title, ‘Gul. Betham 1806, repeated in Greek. Some light pencil annotations and marks in text and small missing area to foot of one page, not affecting text. A fine copy of the first published history and topography of Canterbury.First edition of the earliest printedhistory and topography of Canterbury. Itis based on original sources and some ofthese records are printed in the appendix,said to be the first published book toprovide this. It describes both the city(according to its six wards) including thewall and gates, castle, river andcathedral, and its churches and suburbsand includes a list of mayors.William Somner (1598-1669) was born and educated in Canterbury, the son of the registrar of the court. His patron, Archbishop Laud, to whom the bookis dedicated, appointed him registrar of the ecclesiastical courts and the lengthy description of the cathedral is thoroughly Laudian in tone. As an ardent royalist, Somner attempted to protect the cathedral and its muniments from the ravages of parliamentary soldiers. He published works in praise of Charles I after his execution and was briefly imprisoned in Deal Castle in 1659. After the Restoration, he was made Master of St John’s Hospital in the city and the office of auditor of the cathedral. The firstedition of the Antiquities provided the frame work for Battely (an equally famous antiquarian) to make additions and revisions for the second edition of 1703, which remains a cornerstone for the Canterbury collector, much used by all later historians.

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The William Betham of the inscription is possibly Sir William Betham (1779-1853), the antiquary, who may have used it for his research; he revised part of Camden’s Britannia for a new edition of 1806, the year of the inscription. Betham spent much of his career in Dublin, working on the Irish records, and was appointed Ulster King of Arms in 1820. ESTC 121902 Smith DNB [ref: 19908 ] £1250

CANTERBURY HISTORY229. CANTERBURY - SOMNER, WILLIAM. THE ANTIQUITIES OF

CANTERBURY. IN TWO PARTS. The First Part. The Antiquities of Canterbury; or a Survey of that AncientCity, with the Suburbs and Cathedral, &c. Sought out and Published by the Industry and Good Will of WILLIAM SOMNER. The Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged by Nicolas Battely, M.A. Also, Mr Somner's Discourse called CHARTHAM-NEWS: Or aRelation of some Strange Bones found at Chartham in Kent. To which are added some Observations concerning the Roman Antiquities of Canterbury. And a Praface, giving an Account of the Works and Remains of the Learned Antiquary Mr. William

Somner, by N.B.The Second Part. Cantuaria Sacra; Or the Antiquities I. Of the Cathedral and Metropolitical Church. II. Of the Archbishoprick. III. Of the late Priory of Christ-Church; and of the present Collegiate Church, Founded by K. Hen. VIII. With a Catalogue of all the Deans and Canonsthereof. IV. Of the Archdeaconry of Canterbury. V. Ofthe Monastery of St. Augustin; of the Parish-Churches, Hospitals, and other Religious Places,that are or have been in or near that City;Enquired into, by NICOLAS BATTELY, Vicar ofBeaksborn. Illustrated and Adorned with severalUseful and Fair Sculptures.Printed for R. Knaplock, at the Angel and Crown inSt. Paul's Church-Yard. 1703Folio, with copper-engraved prospect of the Cityafter J. Kip, and 19 copper-engraved plates and aplan of the city, including a fine folding view of theCathedral by W. Holler. Bound in full contemporary panelled calf, skillfuly rebacked, preserving the original label . A fine copy.Second and best edition of this fine work. First published in 1640. Somner, who was a famous antiquarian and scholar of Anglo-Saxon, provided the framework for Battely (an equally famous antiquarian) to make additions and revisions. This remains a cornerstone for the Canterbury collector, much used by all later historians. [ref: 20498 ] £700

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CANTERBURY HISTORY230. CANTERBURY - SOMNER, WILLIAM. THE ANTIQUITIES OF

CANTERBURY. OR A SVRVEY OF THAT ANCIENT CITIE, WITH THE SUBVRBS, AND CATHEDRALL. Containing principally matters of

Antiquity in them all. Collected chiefly from old Manuscripts, Lieger-bookes, and other like Records, for the most part, never as yet Printed. With an Appendix here annexed: Wherein (for better satisfaction to the learned the Manuscripts, and Records of chiefest consequence, are faithfully exhibited. All (for the honour of that ancient Metropolis, and his good affection to Antiquities) Sought out and Published By the Industry, and Goodwill of William Somner.

Printed by I.L. [i.e.John Legat] for Richard Thrale, and are to be sold at his Shop at Pauls-Gate at the signe of the Crosse-Keyes, London. 1640.First edition. 4to. 6.75 x 9 inches. [xvi] + 516 + [12] pp. ([8], A-3U4). Illustrated by three folding plates, (one withan old repair) including The Map ofCanterbury [engraved by Hollar] and, onverso of title, a full-page coat of arms of theSee, and vignettes, including royal devices,at heads of sections. Bound in 19th centuryecclesiastical full calf, with ruled andstamped decoration to bevelled boards andgilt edge decoration and blind decoration to dentelles, and marbled end papers. All edges red. Spine with raised bands in compartments and blind tooling with contrasting title label, gilt.; early ink ownership inscription above title, also initials R.H. and a more modern pencil signature. On one of the rear end papers, in ink, is written in an early hand an extract from Dr. Ridley’s last speech. Occasional light foxing and several dilute ink stains to pp.1-6, not

affecting text. A small rust hole to one leaf otherwise a finecopy of the first published history and topography of Canterbury. Engraved book plate of [Sir] John Boys to front paste down.First edition of the earliest printed history and topography of Canterbury. It is based on original sources and some of these records are printed in the appendix, said to be the first published book to provide this. It describes both the city (according to its six wards)including the wall and gates, castle, river and cathedral, and its churches and suburbs and includes a list of

mayors.William Somner (1598-1669) was born and educated in Canterbury, the son of the registrar of the court. His patron, Archbishop Laud, to whom the bookis dedicated, appointed him registrar of the ecclesiastical courts and the lengthy description of the cathedral is thoroughly Laudian in tone. As an ardent royalist, Somner attempted to protect the cathedral and its muniments from the ravages of parliamentary soldiers. He published works in praise of Charles I after his execution and was briefly imprisoned

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in Deal Castle in 1659. After the Restoration, he was made Master of St. John’s Hospital in the city and given the office of auditor of the cathedral. The first edition of the Antiquities provided the frame work for Battely (an equally famous antiquarian) to make additions and revisions for the second edition of 1703, which remains a cornerstone for the Canterbury collector, much used by all later historians.ESTC 121902 Smith DNB [ref: 21632 ] £850

231. CANTERBURY - STANLEY, ARTHUR P. HISTORICAL MEMORIALS OF CANTERBURY. The Landing of Augustine. The Murder of Becket. Edward the Black Prince. Becket’s Shrine. By Arthur P. Stanley, D.D. Dean of Westminster, formerly Canon of Canterbury. Seventh edition. With illustrations.

London: John Murray. 18758vo. Seventh Edition. 5x 7.5 inches. 304 pp. [6], B-U2. illustrated with with a folding plan and wood-engravings, including frontispiece and map in text. Bound with vellum, gilt, with maroon morocco label, marbled endpapers and red edges Front hinges and joints weak Slight foxing on front free endpapersand half title, otherwise clean interior. Small neat bookplate on front paste-down. 1889 ink inscription on first front free endpaper.Arthur Penrhyn Stanley (1815-1881) was born in Cheshire into an ecclesiastical family and educated at Rugby and Oxford. The essays forming the Historical Memorials of Canterbury were expanded from an article and from lectures delivered in the city and were first published in late 1854: 'herehis gift of writing powerful dramatic narrative found full scope, particularlyin his account of the murder of Becket.' An appendix prints medieval accounts of the Archbishop's shrine and documents from the Cathedral Treasury that relate to it. The Plan of Canterbury Cathedral at the time of Becket's murder depicts routes and spots linked to the event in red. This copy of the standard work is handsomely bound in vellum but we also have other copies in cloth at more modest prices DNB [ref: 19363 ] £35

232. CANTERBURY - STEWART, BRIAN. THOMAS SIDNEY COOPER OF CANTERBURY

Rainham: Meresborough Books. 19834to. 8.75 x 12.5 inches. 52 pp. Illustrated throughout in colour and black and white. Bound in original pictorial paper wrappers.A useful summary of the life and work of ‘Britain’s most accomplished cattle painter.’ Cooper, of course, painted livestock other than cattle and was also an accomplished lithographer. [ref: 19681 ] £20

233. CANTERBURY - WALCOTT, MACKENZIE, E.C. MEMORIALS OF CANTERBURY

Hal Drury, Mercery Lane, Canterbury. 1868

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8vo. 74 pp. + [1] Neatly bound in green half-morocco, gilt, over marbled boards.This copy has been specially bound by Robert Hovenden, and an impression of his bookplate has been used as a frontispiece in this copy, later acquired by Sir Thomas Neame with his bookplate, and later still by James Hobbs with his book label. The book is an off-print of a portion of a collective History of English Cathedrals, and issued by Hal Drury in Canterbury. Scarce. [ref: 16370 ] £60

234. CANTERBURY - WARD, LOCK AND CO. PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO CANTERBURY, HERNE BAY, WHITSTABLE, AND THE ISLE OF THANET. with a special section for Motorists. Maps of the District and Plans of Canterbury, Herne Bay, Margate, Broadstairs, Ramsgate, and Sandwich. Eighty illustrations.

Ward, Lock & Co. 1934Ninth edition. xxxii + 32 pp. + 24 pp. + 32 pp. + 12 pp. + 32 pp. + [2] index + 50 pp. adverts with maps and photo illustrations. Original red pictorial cloth. A clean, bright copy.Universally popular guides now becoming more difficult to find. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 17377 ] £20

CANTERBURY MARRIAGE LICENCES, 1751-1837235. CANTERBURY - WILLIS, ARTHUR J. CANTERBURY

MARRIAGE LICENCES 1751-1780; 1781-1809; 1810-1837. Compiled by Arthur J.Willis, F.R.I.C.S., F.S.G.

Lyminge; Arthur J. Willis. [1751-1780, 1781-1809] London and Chichester, Phillimore 1967, 1969, 19714to. Three volumes, 6.25 x 10 inches. 1751-1780, 372 pp., 1781-1809, 407 pp., 1810-1837, xi + 258 pp. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with pale blue dust wrappers. Some foxing and page edge staining to first two volumes. Wrappers creased and stained with some edge tears and abrasions, that of first volume having faded spine and tape repairs. All interiors generally clean with occasional neat pencil annotations. This edition is limited to 250 copies. The first two volumes were privately published by the author. A continuation of ‘Canterbury Marriage Licences,’ edited in six series, by Joseph Meadows Cowper, 1568-1618 - 1726-1750, published from 1892. The records abstracted are contained in contemporary MS registers from the Diocesan Registrar’s archives, now deposited in the Cathedral Library atCanterbury. There are indexes of surnames of the parties, of miscellaneous surnames and of places in the appendix and, additionally for the second and third volumes, of service units (ships of the Royal Navy and Regiments of theArmy). [ref: 19467 ] £300

236. CANTERBURY - WOODCOCK, AUDREY. (Editor) CARTULARYOF THE PRIORY OF ST. GREGORY, CANTERBURY.

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Royal Historical Society, 1956.4to. 209 pp. Original cloth, gilt. Some small library stamps but a very good copy.One of the earliest Canterbury manuscripts. [ref: 18752 ] £20

237. CANTERBURY - WOODCOCK, BRIAN L. MEDIEVAL ECCLESIASTICAL COURTS IN THE DIOCESE OF CANTERBURY.

O.U.P. 1952.8vo.160 pp. Original cloth. Dust wrapper torn with small loss to upper panel, but a very good copy.A study of the day-to-day operation of Canon Law from the thirteenth century to the Reformation. Scarce. [ref: 18754 ] £35

CANTERBURY WILLS238. CANTERBURY - WOODRUFF, C. EVELEIGH. SEDE VACANTE

WILLS: A CALENDAR OF WILLS PROVED BEFORE THE COMMISSARY OF THE PRIOR AND CHAPTER OF CHRIST CHURCH, CANTERBURY. DURING VACANCIES IN THE PRIMACY, With an Appendix containing transcripts of archiepiscopal and other wills of importance. Compiled and Edited by C. Eveleigh Woodruff, M.A., Hon Librarian to the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury. Kent Archaeological Society. Records Branch, Volume 3 (Kent Records).

Canterbury: Printed for the Records Branch by Cross & Jackman 19148vo. 5.5 x 8.75 inches. [ix] + xxii + 146 + vii pp. [6]. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with Society’s device on front boards. Light fraying to top and bottom of spine and some staining on endpapers, otherwise a fine, clean copy.The calendar of wills includes an index of parishes. The copies of wills in the appendix are in Latin and English. [ref: 19469 ] £40

PRESENTATION COPY, 1912239. CANTERBURY - WOODRUFF, C. EVELEIGH and WILLIAM

DANKS. THE MEMORIALS OF THE CATHEDRAL AND PRIORY OF CHRIST IN CANTERBURY. By C. Eveleigh Woodruff, M.A. Six-Preacher of Canterbury Cathedral and Honorary Librarian to the Dean and Chapter and William Danks, M.A. Canon Residentiary. With illustrations by Louis Weirter, R.B.A.

Chapman and Hall, London 1912First Edition. 8vo. 6 x 9 inches. [2] + frontis. + xxi + [i] + 489 + [3] pp. [a1-8], b1-4, A-2H4, 2I-[2I2] Illustrated with 34 plates, including frontispiece, and numerous text drawings. Original publisher’s blue cloth, gilt, with illustrated front board. Top edges gilt. Inscription on front free endpaper.First edition of the standard early twentieth-century history of Canterbury Cathedral and its Priory, with chapters on the library, stained glass, choir, organ and bells. A sound presentation copy from the author. [ref: 19493 ] £85

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240. CANTERBURY - WRIGHT, CHRISTOPHER JOHN. A GUIDE TO THE PILGRIMS' WAY AND NORTH DOWNS WAY.

London: Constable and Company Ltd. 1981Third edition. 8vo. [1] + 325 + [1] pp. Illustrated with maps and black and white photographs. Original cloth, gilt, in coloured pictorial dust wrapper.First edition published 1971. A comprehensive guide to walking from Winchester to Canterbury, Folkestone and Dover. [ref: 19217 ] £20

CANTERBURY DRAWINGS241. CANTERBURY - YOUNGMAN, E. 64 BLACK AND WHITE

DRAWINGS OF CANTERBURY By E.Youngman.[Canterbury]: [Youngman and Son] c.1920Small 8vo. [32] pp. of pen and ink illustrations, without text. Sewn and boundin original pictorial card wrappers. Slight signs of wear to edges of front wrapper and small ink numeral inside wrapper.Title taken from front cover as no title page is provided.Does not appear in The Kent Bibliography or Supplement although similar titles are listed. [ref: 19210 ] £25

242. CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL. THE STATUTES OF THE CATHEDRAL AND METROPOLITICAL CHURCH OF CHRIST, CANTERBURY.

Privately printed for the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury. 19258vo. 141 pp. Original blue cloth, gilt. Upper board a little damp-stained otherwise a very good copy.This copy was presented to Rev.William Douglas Springett, (author of ‘ Handbook for Travellers in Sussex’) and is inscribed ‘ W.D. Springett from The Dean and Chapter of Canterbury K.A. Bell Dean. F. of S. John Baptist 1925’ and bears Springett’s attractive engraved bookplate. Rev. Springett was sometime Curate at Pluckley and later Vicar at St. Matthew’s, Brixton. [ref: 18466 ] £30

243. CANTERBURY GUIDE. AUSTEN’S HAND-BOOK TO CANTERBURY AND THE CATHEDRAL.

Austen’s, 17, St. George’s Street, Canterbury. No date but c.192491 pp. with 23 illustrations + folding map. Original pictorial wrappers. Slight crease to front wrapper otherwise a very good copy.[ref: 17200 ] £40

244. CAPPER, Douglas Parode. ON THE PILGRIMS' WAY. By D. P. Capper. With twelve illustrations and a map.

London Methuen and Co. Ltd. 36 Essex Street W.C. 1928

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8vo. 5.25 x 7.75 inches. x + 84 pp. + [2] . Half title. Illustrated with 12 tipped in photo plates, including frontispiece and front endpaper map. Bound in half green cloth over buff stiff paper boards. Paper label on spine, with additional label tipped into last page. Bookseller’s label, Bryant and Rackstraw, Ltd., Gravesend on front pastedown. Extremities a little worn and slight foxing, otherwise a fine copy.Reflections arising from a walk along the Pilgrims’ Way to Canterbury. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21292 ] £15

245. CARPENTER, EDWARD. OLD ROMNEY MARSH IN CAMERA. Birlings Limited, Ashford. 19844to. [48] pp. with sepia illustrations throughout. Original card wrappers.Now out of print and quite difficult to find. [ref: 19778 ] £15

SIGNED COPY246. CARPENTER, EDWARD. ROMNEY MARSH IN OLD

PHOTOGRAPHS. Alan Sutton 1994First Edition, 8to.,160 pp., with illustrations throughout. Bound in the original card wrappers, as issued. Now out of print and quite difficult to find. [ref: 18723 ] £15

247. CARPENTER, EDWARD. WRECKS AND RESCUES OFF THE ROMNEY MARSH COAST

E. Carpenter, Lydd, 1985[6] + 93 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original printed card wrappers. A near fine copy with the bookplate of historian David Collyer.Now out of print and quite difficult to find. [ref: 19728 ] £12

248. CARR, FRANK G.G. SAILING BARGES. Hodder and Stoughton, London. 1931First edition. 328 pp. with drawings and photo illustrations throughout. Original black cloth gilt. Wear to extremities but a fair copy.The standard history on the subject, with particular detail on the Thames and Medway barges. [ref: 20809 ] £15

249. CARR, FRANK G.G. SAILING BARGES. Peter Davies. 1951Revised Edition. 350 pp. with original and photo illustration throughout. Original terracotta cloth gilt. Spotting to edges otherwise a good copy in a poordust wrapper.The standard history on the subject, with particular detail on the Thames and Medway barges. [ref: 20790 ] £25

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250. CARTER, G.C. THE GOODWIN SANDS. With a Foreword by Ronald Jessup.

Constable and Co. 1955148 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth. A good copy in dustwrapper.Authoritative account - Carter served for two and a half years on the North Goodwin Lightship. [ref: 12451 ] £20

251. CARTER, GEORGE GOLDSMITH. FORGOTTEN PORTS OF ENGLAND.

Evans Brothers Ltd., London 1952First reprint, 8vo. 9x6 inches. x. + 206 pp. with maps and photographic illustrations. A good copy in a very good dust wrapper with one or two minor chips to edges, not affecting the design or overall appearance. A very good copy.An interesting work concentrating on the silted-up harbours of England. The local examples are Richborough, Reculver, Sandwich, Lympne, Fordwich, Lydd, and Rye and Winchelsea. [ref: 19595 ] £20

252. CAVE, C.J.P. THE ROOF BOSSES OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST, CANTERBURY.

Published by The Friends of Canterbury Cathedral and produced by RaphaelTuck & Sons. 1934Booklet. 22 pp., including 27 b/w illustrations. Original blue printed card wrappers. Wrappers a little dusty otherwise a very good copy.Among many other works, the author made a speciality of recording and describing roof bosses in the vaulted roofs of many of our finest medieval churches and cathedrals. An invaluable companion for any visit to the cathedral at Canterbury. [ref: 17454 ] £15

253. CHALKLIN, C. W., Editor. NEW MAIDSTONE GAOL ORDER BOOK, 1805 - 1823. Edited by C. W. Chalklin.

(Kent Records. Volume XXIII).Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19848vo. 5.5 x 8.75 inches. [vi] + 186 pp. Serial title. Illustrated with plans in text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt with Society’s device on front board in pictorial dust wrapper. In fine condition. Detailed analysis of the construction and costing of the new Maidstone Gaol, set in the context of prison building nationally and in Kent in the eighteenth and early nineteenthcenturies.

[ref: 21186 ] £20

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254. CHALKLIN, C.W. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY KENT A social and economic history

Longmans. 19658vo., xv + 294 pp., with plates, maps and plans. Original cloth gilt with dust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste down. Slight wear to top of dustwrapper otherwise a fine copy.The book examines Kent’s position as a Home County on its agriculture, industry and trade and the special character of Kentish society. Classic text, all editions now out of print. [ref: 19016 ] £35

255. CHALKLIN, C.W. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY KENT. A SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY.

Longmans. 1965294 pp. with illus. A good copy of the first edition with unclipped dust wrapper. With ownership signature of Elizabeth Melling to front free endpaper.Classic text. All editions now out of print.

[ref: 21192 ] £25

256. CHALKLIN, C.W. (Editor) GEORGIAN TONBRIDGE. Tonbridge Historical Society. 1984200 pp. with several illustrations. Original coloured, laminated pictorial card wrappers. A fine copy with historian Elizabeth Melling’s ownership signature.The usual high standard from Christopher Chalklin, Kent historian and President of the Tonbridge Historical Society.

[ref: 21154 ] £15

SIGNED COPY257. CHAMBERLAIN, DAVID. THE GOODWIN SANDS MAN-OF-WAR

1703-2003. By the same author ‘Forgotten Shipwrecks of the Downs. A Heritage from the Goodwins.’

[s.l.] [the author] 20024to pamphlet. 7 x 10 inches. 39 pp. Illustrated with sepia and coloured photographs, drawings, maps and facsimiles. In coloured pictorial card wrappers. Signed by author.A well-illustrated, and now scarce, account of the loss of the seventy gun third rate warship, HMS Stirling Castle on the Goodwin Sands, during the great storm of November 1703. It also describes the 1979 rediscovery of the wreck, the subsequent underwater investigation and the raising of several artefacts and a cannon. [ref: 21301 ] £25

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ROMNEY MARSH258. CHAMPNEYS, BASIL. A QUIET CORNER OF ENGLAND. STUDIES

OF LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE IN WINCHELSEA, RYE, AND THE ROMNEY MARSH.

WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS BY ALFRED DAWSON.Seeley, Jackson and Halliday, 54 Fleet St., London. 1875First Edition. Small folio. 11 x 8 inches, 64 pp. + eight engraved plates, including frontispiece, plus other text illustrations and a ground-plan of Winchelsea restored. All edges gilt. Bound in the original green cloth decorated in

gilt. One or two leaves have marginal foxing otherwise a very good copy.A charming and scarce work devoted to the western marsh area and Rye. Champney’s keen architectural eye captures much that has now disappearedin old Rye and Lydd. [ref: 21030 ] £145

CHANNEL BRIDGE PLAN, 1892259. THE CHANNEL BRIDGE AND RAILWAY COMPANY

LIMITED. LE PONT SUR LA MANCHE. Expose complet de la question avec documents, cartes et planches.

The Channel Bridge and Railway Company Limited (Societe d’Etudes et de laConstruction d’un Pont sur la Manche). Siege administratif: 69, Rue de la Victoire, Paris. Siege social: 110 Cannon Street, Londres, E.C. 1892Large 8vo. 6.75 x 10.75 inches. [iv] + 185 pp. Illustrated with one folding coloured map, and eleven plates, ten of which are folding and diagrams in text. It appears to lack one double page plate called for. Contains tables in textand four appendices. Text in French. Original green paper wrappers. Spine wrapping largely absent and edges chipped and frayed. Interior clean if slightly browned, with occasional small tear not affecting text. The idea of a fixed cross-Channel link via a bridge rather than a tunnel, was first suggested in the 1830s-40s by Thome de Gamond, ingenieur en chef du departement du Pas-de-Calais. It received new impetus in the 1880s, following the British government’s order to close the trial tunnel borings, commenced in 1880, two years later on the grounds of national security. Publications advocating a bridge had appeared as early as 1874 but the mostinfluential was thatof Schneider and Hersent (collaborating with Fowler andBaker, the Forth Railway Bridge engineers) of 1889. The Channel Bridge and Railway Company had been registered in London in 1884. In spite of the plan to install lights and fog signals on the bridge piers, the scheme was ultimately rejected on the grounds that it would form a hazard to shipping. One also suspects that the actual construction of such a large scale underwater project, even with the ingenious system illustrated in the plates, would have severely taxed the engineering resources of the day, not to mention the enormity of the task of repainting the ironwork Nevertheless the idea of a channel bridge resurfaced again in 1960 with a new group being formed in France and in 1985 Eurobridge was one of the the three alternative schemes that competed against the successful Eurotunnel bid.

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A very rare original copy of this bridge proposal of the late nineteenth century, a period when fixed channel links were much debated and, in fact, actually started. It considers the engineering problems in detail, tackles thequestion of safe navigation and looks at the economic and financial background that would make the link viable. COPAC [ref: 19837 ] £

260. CHANNEL TUNNEL. COPY OF A REPORT ON THE STATE OF THE CHANNEL TUNNEL WORKS MADE TO THE BOARD OF TRADE BY MAJOR MARANDIN, R.E., C.M.G., ONE OF THEIR INSPECTING OFFICERS. (Sir Michael Hicks Beach.)

London: Printed by Henry Hansard and Son .. Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed 30 July 1888Folio. Single sheet designed to be folded twice to display the title details. Slightly dusty otherwise a very good example.A rare survivor, the report relates to the inspection of the Tunnel workings and the state of their maintenance, with details. [ref: 17747 ] £50

261. CHANNEL TUNNEL. CORRESPONDENCE REFLECTING THE PROPOSED CHANNEL TUNNEL AND RAILWAY. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of Her Majesty.

Printed by Harrison and Sons. 1875Folio. iv + 72 pp. + 5 large coloured lithographed folding plans and maps. Original blue paper wrappers. A very good copy.The table of contents lists fifty-one items of correspondence, in English and French, between the various parties and individuals concerned. The folding plates are profiles, plans and maps both English and French. [ref: 17656 ] £350

262. CHANNEL TUNNEL. DEPUTATION TO THE PRIME MINISTER. FULL DETAILS OF THE PRESENT SCHEME - MILITARY, ENGINEERING, FINANCIAL. SPECIAL ARTICLES. FOOD SUPPLIES IN TIME OF WAR. BENEFIT OF THE CHANNEL TUNNEL TO BRITISH TRADE. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. EDITED BY W. TURNERPERKINS.

Channel Tunnel Co. Ltd. 19134to.136 pp. with long folding section and illustrations in the text. Original printed wrappers, which have been neatly repaired.Scarce early 20th century report. [ref: 18024 ] £140

263. CHANNEL TUNNEL. DEPUTATION TO THE PRIME MINISTER. FULL DETAILS OF THE PRESENT SCHEME - MILITARY, ENGINEERING, FINANCIAL. SPECIAL ARTICLES. FOOD SUPPLIES IN TIME OF WAR. BENEFIT OF THE CHANNEL TUNNEL TO BRITISH TRADE. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. EDITED BY W. TURNERPERKINS.

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Channel Tunnel Co. Ltd. 19134to.136 pp. with long folding sectionand illustrations in the text. Bound in modern quarter-calf, gilt. Originalprinted front wrapper preserved. A very good example

Scarce early 20th century report. [ref: 19512 ] £150

264. CHANNEL TUNNEL. ECONOMIC ADVISORY COUNCIL. CHANNEL TUNNEL COMMITTEE REPORT. Presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty, March 1930.

Together with:- CHANNEL TUNNEL COMPANY Ltd. NOTES ON THE REPORT OF THE ADVISORY COUNCIL CHANNEL TUNNEL COMMITTEE. PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.H.M.S.O. 19308vo. 2 volumes. 111 pp. with a large folding coloured lithographic plan, and 3 other folding charts, and 21 pp. Original blue printed wrapper. Near mint examples.Detailed report with the scarce confidential notes from the tunnel company. [ref: 15460 ] £100

265. CHANNEL TUNNEL. REPORT FROM THE JOINT SELECT COMMITTEE OF THE HOUSE OF LORDS AND THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ON THE CHANNEL TUNNEL; TOGETHER WITH THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMMITTEE, MINUTES OF EVIDENCE, AND APPENDIX. In addition INDEX TO THE REPORT ... ON THE CHANNEL TUNNEL.

London: Henry Hansard and Son. 1883Report: Folio. xlv + 574 pp. + 1 large folding plate showing plan and sectionsthrough Mr. Fowler’s proposed Train Ferry Boat. Index: Folio. pp.575 to 695.Report in original blue paper wrappers with repair to lower corner and index in original white paper wrappers. A very good copy.A full account of the proceedings in committee, which took place between the 24th April and the 21st June 1883. Among those giving evidence were Sir Edward Watkin, Chairman of the South Eastern Railway, James Staats Forbes, Chairman of the London Chatham and Dover Railway; the civil engineers involved with the proposed schemes, Frederick Bramwell, consulting engineer, a Vice-President of the Institution of Civil Engineers, and John Hawkshaw, the Engineer of the Channel Tunnel Company, representatives of the Railway Inspectorate and Col. F.E.B. Beaumont, inventor of a tunnel-boring machine and deviser of a system of compressed-air powered locomotives for hauling trains through the tunnel. Also containsnumerous tables describing the traffic between the channel ports and France. [ref: 17666 ] £600

266. CHANNEL TUNNEL. 1986 AGREEMENT. THE CHANNEL FIXED LINK DATED AS OF 14TH MARCH, 1986. The Secretary of State

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for Transport and Le Ministre de L’Urbanisme, du Logement et des Transports and The Channel Tunnel Group Limited and France-Manche S. A. Concession Agreement. Presented to Parliament by the Secretary of State for Transport by Command of Her Majesty April 1986. (Cmnd. 9769).

HMSO, London. 19868vo. 6 x 9.5 inches. iv + [i] + 45 pp. + [1] with large folding map of the French concession area at Coquelles/Frethun. Original stapled blue paper wrappers,repeating title page, with royal arms on front. Library stamps, but otherwise fine condition.By the Treaty of Canterbury, 12 February 1986, the British and French governments agreed to construct and operate a Channel fixed link by privateconcessionaires. This publication gives details of the provisions for constructing and operating the link by the British and French concession holders. Four annexes describe the engineering parameters of terminals, track, rolling stock, signalling. etc., the question of frontier controls, the acquisition and purchase of land and insurance. The boundaries of the French concession are shown in the detailed map included. Subsequently a joint Anglo-French company, TransManche Link was established to construct the link on behalf of the British and French operating companies. [ref: 20783 ] £20

267. CHANNEL TUNNEL. MEMORANDUM BY SIR PERCY TEMPEST, JULY 1923. THE CHANNEL TUNNEL. With Compliments from W. Turner Perkins, Hon Sec., House of Commons Channel Tunnel Committee. Memorandum by Sir Percy Tempest, Engineer of the Channel Tunnel, and Joint General Manager of the Southern Railway Company, relating to the general aspects of the project of the Channel Tunnel and its construction, as well as to the methods proposed for expediting the work and reducing its cost.

[s.l.]: [n.p.]. 1923Folio. 8.25 x 13 inches. 3 pp. folded. A few small creases and slight wear to extremities; otherwise fine condition.This brief memorandum reflects a revival of interest in the Channel Tunnel scheme (in abeyance since the 1906-07 projects) in the inter-war years, but which lasted only until the early thirties, when the possibility of another European war once again caused the project to be abandoned. [ref: 20862 ] £75

268. CHANNEL TUNNEL. PROPOSED SCHEME OF 1906-07. A COLLECTION COMPRISING FIVE PAMPHLETS RELATING TO PROPOSED CHANNEL SCHEME OF 1906-07.

[s.l.]: [n.p.]; [s.l.]: [n.p.]; [s.l.]: [n.p.]; [s.l..]: [n.p.];[s.l.]: [n.p.]. 1906-078vo, 4to and folio pamphlets, or single sheets. 1. Illustrated by a plan and two diagrams; 2. Illustrated by two coloured maps of English and French coasts. 1. Bound in blue paper wrappers, with library stamps; 2. Bound in buff paper wrappers. 1906 report in fine condition. 2 and 3 have slight wear to extremities and 4. has small tears along one edge of fold; otherwise all in fine condition. 1, 2 and 3 have ink inscriptions, Bruton Haywood and date.

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1. The Channel Tunnel: Its Commercial Advantages. The Joint Parliamentary Committee. Opinions of Experts (May 1906) 2. The Channel Tunnel. By a Military Railway Expert (March 1907, 6 pp.). 3. The Channel Tunnel. (Reprinted by permission from ‘The Westminster Review’ of February, 1907), by Thomas Barclay, 4 pp. 4. The Channel Tunnel. A few notable opinions in support. ([1907], [4] leaves, folded, stapled, foolscap). 5. The Channel Tunnel. Its chimerical dangers. By Major-General Sir Alfred E. Turner, K.C.B., Late Inspector-General of Auxiliary Forces. ([n.d.] but c.1907, [1] leaf, folded proof sheet). A collection of pamphlets compiled at the time of a resolution in favour of the Channel Tunnel scheme to be submitted to the House of Commons, 1906-07. The 1906 report (1) includes asummary of the evidence offered by commercial witnesses before the Joint Parliamentary Committee of 1883. It adds statistics of passengers passing through the ports of Calais and Boulogne from 1850 and imports and exports through Calais, 1904-05. To inspire supporters of the scheme it even reproduces a rail map of London to New York via Siberia, a Bering Strait tunnel and Alaska! The March 1907 pamphlet (2) has two coloured maps, showing the locations of the proposed stations at Maxton, near Dover and atWissant. In general there is a strong emphasis on the commercial advantages of the scheme and a reasoned refutation of the military fears of asudden French invasion. General Turner points out that it would take twelveto twenty days for a French army corps to disembark in Dover using the Tunnel, which could be easily closed by portcullises, flooding and the switching off of the power supply. [ref: 20781 ] £150

269. CHANNEL TUNNEL SCHEME OF 1973. A COLLECTION OF TWO PAMPHLETS. 1. THE CHANNEL TUNNEL PROJECT. Presented to Parliament by the Secretary of State for the Environment by Command of Her Majesty March 1973 (Cmnd. 5256). 2. THE CHANNEL TUNNEL. Presented to Parliament by the Secretary of State for the Environment by Command of Her Majesty, September 1973 (Cmnd. 5430).

HMSO, London. 19732 items. 8vo. 9.5 x 6 inches. 1. vi + 33 pp. + [1]. Illustrated by 4 plates and 2 maps. 2. iv + 75 pp. + [1] pp. Includes 14 annexes and bibliography at end. Illustrated by 7 plates, including one double page, and two maps. Original stapled green/blue paper wrappers. Library stamps, but otherwise fine condition. These two studies, produced by the Department of the Environment, relate tothe 1973 Channel Tunnel scheme. The first is a short summary and the second presents the proposal in much greater detail, with an extensive rangeof statistical forecasts. Work was begun at Dover in the following year, but the project was cancelled by the incoming Labour government in 1975. The Folkestone terminal was to be situated in the same area as the 1980s scheme that actually came to fruition, although the location of the passenger station was moved to Ashford. [ref: 20782 ] £40

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270. CHAPLIN, LIEUT. COL. H.D. THE 97TH OR EARL OF ULSTER'S REGIMENT 1824 - 1881.

Q.O.R.W.K. Museum Committee. 197373 pp. with maps and photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A mint copy.[ref: 19810 ] £35

271. CHAPMAN, HENRY S. THE STORY OF DOLA. JULIUS CAESAR’S LANDING PLACE. A ROMANTIC HISTORY OF EARLY BRITAIN

Newnes. 1921174 pp. with maps and illustrations. Original paper wrappers in chipped dust wrapper.Fine copy of the account of the landing at Deal in the cheaper paper bound issue. [ref: 18473 ] £15

272. CHAPMAN, HENRY STEPHEN. DEAL: PAST AND PRESENT. A FULL AND COMPREHENSIVE HISTORY OF THIS NEIGHBOURHOOD, FROM THE LANDING OF JULIUS CAESAR TO THE CLOSE OF THE LAST CENTURY, Comprising many matters of distinctive interest from the earliest ages, mainly obtained from Contemporary Chronicles; Municipal Records; and from Miscellaneous Sources: including a great variety of Anecdotes, Maritime Lore, Stories of Heroism, Narratives of Disaster, Biographical Sketches; the

origin and growth of Ancient Institutions and Industries; the Legends, Chronology, Traditions and Archaeology of the Locality; with many othermatters of equal interest, by Henry Stephen Chapman, Member of Deal Town Council.

London Reeves & Turner, 1890.4to. 7.5 x 9.5 inches. [4] + iii +[i] + 98 pp. Bound in original decorated browncloth, gilt. Foxing throughout, largely confined to margins, otherwise a good copy. Early inscription at top of title.Scarce history of the town with a wealth of information not found in more academic works. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21300 ] £150

273. CHAPMAN, H.T. REMINISCENCES OF A HIGHWAY SURVEYOR 1886-1932.

Privately by the Author. 1932148 pp. on art paper. Numerous photo illustrations and portraits. Original

embossed blue cloth. A little bumped but a very good copy.The author was latterly the County Surveyor for Kent, having previously been surveyor for several other counties, and is largely responsible for the shape of the county’s roads and transport system,

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including early proposals for the building of the Dartford Tunnel. There are many interesting photographs of buildings, bridges and road schemes and also much fascinating detail. Chapman had many friends and acquaintancesamong the county’s dignitaries and he mentions and provides photographs of many of them. [ref: 14401 ] £45

274. CHEVENING PARISH HISTORY GROUP. THE HISTORY OF THE PARISH OF CHEVENING Edited by Ian Watson.

Chipstead Chevening Parish History Group, 29 High Street, Chipstead, Sevenoaks, TN13 2RW. 19994to. 6.75 x 9.5 inches. [8] + 238 pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs, drawings, maps and facsimiles in text. In original laminated pictorial card wrappers. Extremities a little worn and edges a little sunned, otherwise fine condition.A well produced and illustrated history of Chevening parish,

which also includes Chipstead. [ref: 21178 ] £12

SIGNED COPY275. CHILDS, BOB. ROCHESTER SAILING BARGES OF THE

VICTORIAN ERA. bOB cHILDS/ Rochester sAILING bARGES pUBLICATIONS. 1993Folio. 212 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations. Original colour printed laminated card wrappers[ref: 20815 ] £75

276. CHISLET - HASLEWOOD, REV. FRANCIS. THE PARISH OF CHISLET, KENT: ITS MONUMENTS, VICARS, AND PARISH OFFICERS; WITH A DIGEST OF ANCIENT DOCUMENTS NOW REMAINING IN THE PARISH CHEST.

Privately published in Ipswich. 1887

First Edition. 4to. xiii + 193 pp. with plates and folding pedigrees. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Spine faded otherwise a very good copy of this rare book. Limited edition of two hundred and five copies. Haslewood’s monograms on Kentish villages are always accurate and preserve much that has now been lost (gravestone inscriptions etc.). The genealogical

information is always good. [ref: 21388 ] £175

277. CHRISTIE’S SALE CATALOGUE. GODMERSHAM PARK CANTERBURY, KENT. The Property of The late Mrs Robert Tritton Sold by order of the Executors. Volume I. Objects of Art, Furniture, Porcelain,Pictures, Silver and Linen. Which will be sold at Auction on the premises

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by Christie, Manson and Woods, Ltd. Monday to Thursday, 6-9 June 1983 at 11.00 a.m. and 2.30 p.m. each day. (Christie’s On the Premises).

London. Christie, Manson and Woods Ltd. 8 King Street, St. James’s, London, SW1Y 6QT. 19834to. 8x 10.5 inches. 461 pp. + [15], including [4] blank, pp. Illustrated with 437 photographs, including 113 in colour. Bound in original green cloth, gilt with pictorial dust wrapper. Fine condition. Jane Austen frequently visited her brother, Edward Austen Knight, at Godmersham Park, near Ashford. The estate was bought by Robert (d.1956) and Elsie Tritton in 1936 and some of the atmosphere of the late thirties is captured in Rex Whistler’s enormously evocative Tea in the Garden, painted at Godmersham in 1938; and in Somerset Maugham’s introduction to Pride and Prejudice written while staying at Godmersham before the war.’ Fine copy of this now scarce sale catalogue. [ref: 21042 ] £45

278. CHURCH, RICHARD. THE CRAB-APPLE TREE. Heinemann. 1959First Edition. 238 pp. Original cloth in slightly faded dust wrapper designed by Charles Stewart. A very good copy in a very good wrapper, fore-edges a little foxed.Fine Kentish novel. [ref: 15455 ] £25

279. CHURCH, RICHARD. DOWN RIVER Children’s Book Club, London. 1959First Edition. 150 pp. Original cloth. A very good copy in a good wrapper.One of Church’s novels for children where the members of the Tomahawk club explore an underground river. [ref: 21376 ] £20

SIGNED COPY280.CHURCH, RICHARD. THE GOLDEN SOVEREIGN. A

CONCLUSION TO OVER THE BRIDGE.Heinemann. 1957First Edition. 245 pp . Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy of the book in a like wrapper.His second volume of autobiography. Signed on the title page by the author. [ref: 16585 ] £45

TUNNICLIFFE ILLUSTRATIONS281. CHURCH, RICHARD GREEN TIDE

Country Life 1945First Edition 4to,112 pp.Illustrated throughout by C.F. Tunnicliffe. original geen boards with gilt titles very good. Dust wrapper repaired just front panal remains

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His main theme is country life in wartime life in the Weald of Kent but the book also covers aspects of London. Contains over forty illustrations by Tunnicliffe. [ref: 19380 ] £15

SIGNED COPY282. CHURCH, RICHARD. KENT.

Robert Hale. 1948289 pp. with folding map and photo illustration Original cloth in a dust wrapper, which is a little worn at the head of the spine and has two closed tears but is complete. A good copy.This copy is signed by the author on the front free endpaper.***We also have unsigned copies at £10*** [ref: 16586 ] £25

283. CHURCH, RICHARD. THE LAMP. Dent, London. 1946First Edition. 95 pp. Original cloth gilt in dustwrapper. Spine sunned otherwise a fine copy.A dramatic narrative poem set in France during the German occupation. [ref: 18036 ] £10

284. CHURCH, RICHARD. THE LITTLE KINGDOM. A Kentish collection. Illustrated by John Ward ARA.

London Hutchinson. 1964First Edition. 5.5 x 8.75 inches. 300 pp. Half title. Illustrated by drawings in text by John Ward. Bound in original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy in a like wrapper. A collection of essays, poems and stories from Caesar to Churchhimself, all with a Kentish theme and dedicated to Vita Sackville-West.

We have two similar copies. Kent Bibliography [ref: 16619 ] £10

SIGNED COPY285. CHURCH, RICHARD. THE PORCH.

Heinemann. 1961A new edition. 355 pp., with a new introduction by the author. Original cloth. A very good copy in like wrapper.A later reprint of this popular novel. This copy is inscribed on the front free endpaper ‘To Jean and Robert in friendship. Richard Church July 1961’ . [ref: 16599 ] £35

286. CHURCH, RICHARD. A PORTRAIT OF CANTERBURY. Hutchinson. 1953

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234 pp., with photo illustration. Original cloth in the scarce, slightly chipped and repaired dust wrapper.The first issue of Church's affectionate look at Canterbury. Still in print in a much changed edition. [ref: 17455 ] £15

SIGNED COPY287. CHURCH, RICHARD. SPEAKING ALOUD

Heinemann, London. 1968First Edition. 276 pp. Original cloth. A very good copy in like wrapper.A collection of talks and lectures given by Church. This copy is inscribed on the front free endpaper ‘To Jean and Robert with love from Richard Church ’ . [ref: 21375 ] £20

288. CHURCH, RICHARD. THE VOYAGE HOME. Heinemann, London. 1964First edition. 223 pp. Original cloth gilt in price clipped dustwrapper. Spine sunned oth erwise a very good copy.The last volume of the author’s autobiographical trilogy. [ref: 13751 ] £20

289. CHURCHILL, IRENE JOSEPHINE EAST KENT RECORDS. A Calendar of some unpublished Deeds and Court Rolls in the Library of Lambeth Palace, With Appendices referring especially to the Manors of Knowlton, Sandown, South Court, and North Court. Edited by Irene Josephine Churchill, Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. (Kent Records. Volume 7, 1920-22).

Printed for the Records Branch [of Kent Archaeological Society] by Mitchel Hughes and Clarke. 19228vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. l + 224 pp. [8], b-c8, d1, B-D8, E-E2, F-P8, Q-Q4, R-R2. Separate title pages for series and individual

title. Bound in blue cloth, gilt with double gilt bands and gilt crest of Society on front boards. Small ink stain on first title page. Ink and pencil comments in introduction. [ref: 19843 ] £35

290. CINQUE PORTS. INDEXES OF THE GREAT WHITE BOOK AND OF THE BLACK BOOK OF THE CINQUE PORTS.

Elliot Stock, London. 19054to., 139 pp. Original decorated burgundy cloth, gilt.Important indices. [ref: 13975 ] £45

291. CINQUE PORTS - BURROWS, MONTAGUE. HISTORIC TOWNS- CINQUE PORTS.

Longmans. 1888

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261 pp., with folding maps. Original cloth gilt spine faded, otherwise a good copy. A very good monograph on the subject. [ref: 17204 ] £20

292. CINQUE PORTS - GREEN, IVAN. THE BOOK OF THE CINQUE PORTS THEIR ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT, HAYDAY AND DECLINE.

Barracuda Books Ltd. Buckingham 1984.8vo. 144 pp. with photographs and illustrations. in original. Rexine in dust wrapper. A very good copy.A well illustrated account, signed by the author. [ref: 19573 ] £25

293. CINQUE PORTS - HUEFFER, FORD MADOX. [FORD MADOX FORD]. THE CINQUE PORTS - A HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE RECORD.

William Blackwood and Sons. Edinburgh and London. 1900.First edition. Large 4to. xiv + 413 pp. with 14 photogravure plates with printed tissue guards and 19 black and white full page plates and text illustrations by William Hyde. Decorated cloth gilt. Top edge gilt. Head and tail of spine and corners very slightly bumped. Slight foxing to text block but a very good copy.Ford Madox Hueffer was the real name of the well known writer Ford Madox Ford. In the late nineteenth century he was one of the group of writers who settled in and about Rye and the Romney

Marsh, of whom Henry James, H.G. Wells andJoseph Conrad are now the most famous.Hueffer’s delightful book is this group’s onlycontribution to topographical literature, and afine book it is, greatly enhanced by WilliamHyde’s brooding illustrations, which capture theremote and isolated feel of the marshcountryside. As a portrait of the Marsh at the turn of last century, it is oftenoverlooked and become scarce, as the writer has a large American following and many copies are now overseas. [ref: 18106 ] £240

294. CINQUE PORTS - HULL, FELIX. (Edited by). A CALENDAR OF THE WHITE AND BLACK BOOKS OF THE CINQUE PORTS. 1432 - 1955.

H.M.S.O. 1966818 pp. Original cloth, gilt. Small split in front hinge, otherwise, a good copy.The minutes of all the meetings of the Cinque Ports Confederation since the mid 15th century. [ref: 16647 ] £20

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295. CITY OF ROCHESTER SOCIETY. ROCHESTER From old photographs.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 1985Unpaginated 60 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18634 ] £10

296. CLAIR, COLIN. A KENTISH GARNER. Warford, Bruce & Gawthorn, in Assoc. with the Friends of St. Lawrence College. n.d. but c.19594to. 160 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy. An interesting compendium including articles on Kentish cricket, Caxton, hop-growing in Tudor times, and the Battleof Bossenden Wood. [ref: 10768 ] £10

SIGNED COPY297. CLARK, F.C. KENTISH FIRE.

Adams and Son, Rye. 19474to.111 pp. with photographic illustrations. Original boards with dust wrapper. Author’s inscription on prelims. Two small neat bookplates inside front paste down. Signs of removed adhesive tape and repairs to edges of dust wrapper, otherwise good condition.Now scarce work which includes accounts of traditional farming practices and rural industries with several chapters on windmills. [ref: 19028 ] £20

298. CLARKE, DENNIS and STOYEL, ANTHONY. OTFORD IN KENT. A HISTORY.

[s.l.] Otford and District Historical Society. 1975First edition. 8vo. 6.25 x 9 inches. xiv + 297 pp. + [1]. Illustrated with 16 black and white photographic plates, and drawings and maps in text. Original cloth, gilt, in pictorial dust wrapper. Spine slightly sunned and light foxing to foredge, otherwise fine condition. Elizabeth Melling’s own copy with inscription on first free endpaper and complimentsslip from publisher inserted.

The standard modern history, well researched and compiled. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21185 ] £30

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299. CLUNN, HAROLD. FAMOUS SOUTH COAST PLEASURE RESORTSPAST AND PRESENT, THEIR HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS, THEIR

RISE TO FAME AND A FORECAST OF THEIR FUTURE DEVELOPMENT.

T. Wittingham, 1929First Edition. Large 8vo. 404 pp. with numerous illustrations. Original blue cloth, gilt.Quite scarce now, this book gives a fascinating picture of the rise of the seaside resorts, and their present state (1929). The towns in Mr Clunn's survey are Brighton, Hastings, Torquay, Folkestone and Worthing. [ref: 17191 ] £45

300.COCKBURN, J. S. CALENDAR OF KENT ASSIZE RECORDS Kent Indictments 1649-1659.

London H.M.S.O. 19894to. 6.25 x 10 inches. vii +[i] + 436 pp. Bound in original red cloth, gilt, decorated with royal seal on front board and spine.As new in dust wrapper.This volume contains in calendar form the official record of criminal trials at Kent assizes during the period of the Commonwealth and Protectorate and which throw light notonly upon the administration of criminal justice but on a wide range of social and economic topics. One of a series of four which will contain a full calendar of all the material

relating to Kent from 1625 to 1688 which survives among the assize indictment files for the Home Circuit. [ref: 21752 ] £40

301. COCKBURN, J .S. (Edited by). CALENDAR OF ASSIZE RECORDS KENT INDICTMENTS CHARLES II 1676-1688.

Woodbridge The Boydell Press and London: The Public Record Office. 19974to. 6 x 10 inches. ix + [1] + 468 pp. Decorated with vignette of seal on title page. Bound in original red cloth, with vignette of seal on front board and spine. Top of front board and spine sunned; otherwise a fine copy.One of a series of volumes that contain, in calendar form, the official record of criminal trials at Kent Assizes duringthe later part of the reign of Charles II and that of James II. The indictments throw light not only upon the administration of criminal justice, but on a wide range of social and economic topics.

[ref: 21352 ] £35

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302. COLLYER, DAVID. PRELUDE TO WAR. KENT AVIATION 1938-39.Kent Aviation Historical Research Society. 198960 pp. with b/w illustrations. Pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy with aletter, loosely inserted, from the author to Tony Arnold at The East Kent Mercury. [ref: 18037 ] £10

303. COLLYER, DAVID. PRELUDE TO WAR. KENT AVIATION 1938-39.Kent Aviation Historical Research Society. 19898vo., 60 pp., with b/w illustrations. Pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.[ref: 19265 ] £8

304. COLTHUP, WILLIAM. A MAN OF KENT AT HOME AND ABROAD,GROWER OF HOPS AND FRUIT.

Canterbury: Privately printed for the Author by Messrs J.A. Jennings, Ltd. 1953. 8vo. 7.5 x 5.5 inches, 32 pp. Printed on one side only, with portrait frontis. Bound in full blue morocco, gilt. A very good copy.Signed presentation copy of this scarce, privately printed memoir of a Harbledown hop farmer. Jennings printed the book in Hall Place, Harbledown. The paper was hand-made at Hollingworth's Turkey Mill at Maidstone and bound in Canterbury by Arthur Bell, Butchery Lane. [ref: 21590 ] £75

INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR305. CONNELL, CHARLES. THE HOUSE IN THE BAY. THE STORY OF

SOUTH SANDS HOUSE FORMERLY THE HERMITAGE.St Margaret's Bay Trust. 19744to. 76 pp. with photo illustrations. Inscribed and signed by the author and Frederick Cleary, the house’s owner. Original burgundy cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper .Dedicated to one house but forming a broader history of St Margaret's-at-Cliffe near Dover.

[ref: 20845 ] £25

306. CONSERVATORS OF THE RIVER THAMES. RULES AND BYE-LAWS FOR THE REGULATION OF THE NAVIGATION OF THE RIVERTHAMES

London: Geo. Walker, Printer, Water Lane, E.C. 18858vo. 9 x 6 inches approx. 71 pp. + {smaller and bound in at rear}4 pp. + 4 pp. + 4 pp. Original embossed green-blue cloth, with gilt title to upper board. A little worn at head of spine otherwise very good.Commencing at 1872 with a Notice of Repeal of a number of former Bye-Laws from 1857, the Bye-Laws and updates to the Bye-Laws, run until 19th March 1883 in the main part, and continue in the added parts until 5th August 1892. Areas of the text showing repealed Bye-Laws are overstamped in coloured ink, red or purple, with date of repeal and/or page number to which to refer. A working copy of the Rules and Bye-Laws for Officers of the Thames Conservancy. [ref: 19550 ] £125

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307. COOKE, GEORGE ALEXANDER. TOPOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE COUNTY OF KENT.

Bound together with :-TOPOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE COUNTY OF ESSEX. Containing an Account of its Situation, Extent, Towns, Roads, Rivers, Minerals, Fisheries, Manufactures, Commerce, Fairs, Agriculture, Markets, Curiosities, Antiquities, Natural History, Civil and Ecclesiastical Jurisdictions &c. To which is prefixed, a Copious Travelling Guide; Exhibiting The District and PrincipalCross Roads, Inns and Distance of Stages. Noblemen’s and Gentlemen’s Seats, Forming a Complete County Itinerary. Also a list of the Markets and Fairs; and an index table, showing, at one view, the distances of all the towns from London, and from each other.

Illustrated with a Map of The County.Printed for C. Cooke. 17, Paternoster Row, By Brimmer and Co. Water Lane, Fleet Street. n.d. but c.180012 mo. 2 volumes bound as one, 360pp. and 168 pp. with a hand-coloured, folding engraved map ofeach county. Bound incontemporary half-calf over marbledboards with contrasting title labels,gilt. A little rubbed at extremitiesbut a very good, clean copy.This volume has here been bound upwith the volume for Essex, with anunber 4 stamped on the binding, so at some time it was part of a set of all Cooke’s county volumes. A most interesting pocket compendium of the counties for the traveller, containing a mass of information. The descriptionsof Dover and Hythe make no reference to the works undertaken for the Napoleonic Wars, from which I conjecture the date to be about the turn of the eighteenth century. Not recorded by Smith. [ref: 17383 ] £250

308.COOKRIDGE, E H. ORIENT EXPRESS THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE WORLDS MOST FAMOUS TRAIN

Allen Lane. 1979First Edition 288 pp. Original ochre cloth in good dust wrapper.Definitive history of the Orient Express [ref: 19560 ] £25

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309. COOKSON, E.W. (Compiled by) FROM GARDEN TO GATEWAY. The changing face of Kent.

Heathrow Publications. 1992128 pp. Photo illustrations throughout. Blue cloth in dustwrapper. Unmarked,as new.‘A record by Kentish people of dramatic changes taking place (now) in the early nineties, as Kent adapts to its pivotal role in Britain’s new European setting.’ [ref: 10361 ] £10

310. COOMBE, DEREK. FISHERMEN FROM THE KENTISH SHORE. Meresborough Books. 19899.5 x 6 inches, 184 pp. with b/w photo illustrations, diagrams and plan drawings. Original pictorial boards. A mint copy.Documents the history of the operators and owners of small inshore fishing boats, covering the Northern shores of Kent from Broadstairs up to Gravesend. [ref: 20788 ] £25

311. COOPER, F. S. A HANDBOOK OF SAILING BARGES. Evolution and details of hull and rigging. F. S. Cooper. Illustrated by John Chancellor. Foreword by John Leather.

London Adlard Coles, 8 Grafton Street, W1. 1989Oblong 8vo. 7.5 x 5 inches. 111 pp. + [1] pp. Half-title. Illustrated by black andwhite drawings. Bound in original cloth with coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Fine condition. ‘The best compact reference to the design, construction, rig and handling, as well as the basic lore of the spritsail barges of south east England.’ Facsimilereprint of the original edition. ‘The text of the book has not been altered fromthe original. The Index of Barge Owners’ Bobs (or house flags) and the illustrations of them, the lists of Commercial Barges (active), Auxiliary Sail, Motor Barges and the List of Barge Owners have been retained as published in 1955 to provide a record of the spritsail barge fleet in its last years of commercial operation.’ [ref: 21127 ] £15

312. COOPER, F.S. RACING SAILORMEN. Percival Marshall, London. 1963109 pp. with numerous b/w photo illustrations. Original pale blue cloth, gilt. A good copy in a fair dust wrapper.A history of Barge racing on the East coast. [ref: 20808 ] £25

COPUS, GEOFFREY. CHELSFIELD CHRONICLES. Annals of a Kentish parish. [Cover title adds 1450-1920].[Tunbridge Wells] [the author] 20038vo. 5.75 x 8 inches. 180 pp. List of subscribers at end. Illustrated by 12 pp. of 21 black and white plates, drawings in text and folding map at end. In laminated pictorial card

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wrappers. Inscribed by author to Elizabeth Melling on title page. Fine condition.A well researched local history. There is a note on the artists associated with the area, including Randolph Caldecott. [ref: 21180 ] £15

313. CORDELL, ALAN AND LESLIE WILLIAMS. THE PAST GLORIES OF MILTON CREEK. Tales of Slipways, Sails and Setting Booms: Compiled by Alan Cordell and Leslie Williams.

Rainham Meresborough Books, 7 Station Road, Rainham, Gillingham, Kent,ME8 7RS. 19854to. 6.25 x 9.5 inches. 255 pp. (pp. 249-252 blank, pp. 253-55 advertisements). Half-title. Illustrated with black and white photographs, drawings and facsimiles and 10 maps. In pictorial boards. Extremities a little worn, but otherwise good condition. A well-illustrated history of the coastal sailing trade of Milton Creek (Sittingbourne). The barges supplied the transport requirements of the nearby brick, cement, paper making and farming industries: ‘Accounts of thriving commerce are woven together with those of wreck and rescue, record-breaking feats, witty personalities and brave deeds. The characteristic local sailing barges are strongly featured.’ Both the authors worked in the trade or had strong family connections with it. Five appendices list the Milton Creek barges, and also print a selection of barge lore and poems with ten detailed, annotated maps of the Creek. At the end is a photographic miscellany. [ref: 21122 ] £30

314. COUNCER, C.R. LOST GLASS FROM KENT CHURCHES. A COLLECTION OF RECORDS FROM THE SIXTEENTH TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.

Kent Archæological Society. 19808vo. 9 x 6 inches, 170 pp. with colour plates and other illustrations..Blue cloth, gilt. Very good in the original dust wrapper.[ref: 20763 ] £12

315. FAVERSHAM AND EAST KENT FLORACOWELL, M. H. A FLORAL GUIDE FOR EAST KENT, Etc., BEING A

RECORD OF THE HABITATS OF INDIGENOUS PLANTS FOUND IN THE EASTERN DIVISION OF THE COUNTY OF KENT, WITH THOSE OF FAVERSHAM PARTICULARLY DETAILED, AND DEFINITELY EXHIBITED; Together with brief remarks on the uses of theseveral species in rural or domestic economy, Agriculture, Medicine, and historical associations; deduced from variousauthorities. IN TWO DIVISIONS, illustrated with two maps.By M. H. COWELL, Corresponding Member, and Local Secretary for Kent, of the Botanical Society of London.

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W. Ratcliffe, Court Street; Faversham W. Pamplin, Jun Botanical Bookseller,Lavender Hill Wandsworth, Surrey, and all Booksellers . 1839First Edition, 8vo. xiv + [ii] + 98 pp. + [6]pp. catalogue. Illustrated with one double-page hand-coloured lithographic map ofFaversham and district and one engraveduncoloured map of the Isle of Thanet.Bound in twentieth century cloth with theoriginal label affixed to upper board. A verygood copy of this rare item.This work was only produced once, and theprint-run must have been very small, as wehave not catalogued a single example forover 30 years. As a comment on Jacob’s ‘Flora of Faversham’ this gives an update and retrospect to that work and adds a further 21 ‘first’ records for the county. Very little seems to be known about Mr Cowell other than his membership of various Botanical Societies: and this - his lasting memorial. [ref: 19458 ] £375

316. COWPER, J. MEADOWS. THE LIVES OF THE DEANS OF CANTERBURY, 1541 TO 1900.

Canterbury, Cross & Jackman, 1900. First Edition, 8vo. 9 x6 inches, 247 pp. with an illustration of every Dean. Orig. cloth, gilt. A very good sound copy.The work contains 31 memoirs in all. Like most of Cowper's works this was produced in very small numbers, the subscribers list amounts to 144 copies in all.

[ref: 21581 ] £65

317. COX, BERNARD. PADDLE STEAMERS. Blandford Press, Poole. 1979Folio. Ex-library copy with usual markings. Illustrated front free endpaper neatly excised but illustration repeated at rear. 222 pp. with b/w photo illustration throuhgout. Original red cloth, gilt. Upper spine and boards marked, otherwise a very good copy in a like dust wrapper.From Brunel to the modern holiday cruisers of Australia via the iconic Mississippi stern-wheelers but concentrating on the British coastal craft. Very well-illustrated. [ref: 20814 ] £10

318. COX, BERNARD. PLEASURE STEAMERS. David and Charles. 198364 pp. with b/w photo illustration throughout. Original laminated pictorial boards. A very good copy.Covers the development and decline, concentrating on the North Wales coastand the North West; the Bristol Channel; the South Coast; and the Thames. [ref: 20800 ] £10

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SURVEY AND MAP OF KENT, 1720

319. COX, THOMAS. KENT. Taken from MAGNA BRITANNIA ET HIBERNIA, ANTIQUA and NOVA [Or, A New Survey of Great Britain; wherein to the Topographical Account given by Mr.Cambden, and the late Editors of his Britannia, is added a more large History, not only of theCities, Boroughs, Towns, and Parishes mentioned by them, but also of many other Places of Note, and Antiquities since discovered. Collected and composed by an Impartial Hand. [In Six Volumes.]

[In the Savoy: printed by Eliz. Nutt; and sold by M. Nutt, and J. Morphew, London.] [1720]4to. 9 x 7 inches pp. 1071-1270 comprising the entire section on the County of Kent, extracted from vol. 2 of the complete work and hence lacks title page. 6Y2-8A1. Illustrated with

folding map of Kent by Robert Morden at beginning of text. Rebound in half calf with maroon morocco boards and black morocco labels, gilt and raised bands. Interior slightly browned with occasional foxing and pencil notes, with some early water stains on bottom margins not affecting text. Edges darkened with a few ink stains. Otherwise a clean neat copy.Magna Britannia was intended to be an enlargement of the sixth edition of Britannia by William Camden (1607) and was originally published in monthly parts as a supplement to the Atlas Geographus (5 vols., 1711-17). Only the sections on the English counties were published in six volumes from 1720-31. Vols.1 and 2 (the latterincluding Kent) werecontinuously paginated and bothappeared in 1720. The serieshas generally been attributed toThomas Cox (1655/6-1734),rector of Stoke Harvard andvicar of Broomfield, Essex whopublished a number of works onecclesiastical and nationalhistory. His DNB author,however, considers that ‘this was probably a confusion arising from the name of the bookseller who took over the publication from 1724, who was also a Thomas Cox.’ ESTC follows the traditional attribution of the work to the Rev. Thomas Cox, although it notes that the vendor of the remainder of

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the Magna Britannia stock advertised in a sale catalogue of 1738 was probably Thomas Cox (i.e. the printer). The work was reissued in the same year by another printer. The cartographer Robert Morden (d. 1703) produced the English county maps for the 1695 edition of Camden’s Britannia and these remained standard for fifty years, hence their later use in Magna Britannia. Upcott ESTC T107759 (full set) DNB [ref: 19968 ] £200

SURVEY AND MAP OF KENT, 1720320. COX, THOMAS. KENT. Taken from MAGNA BRITANNIA ET

HIBERNIA, ANTIQUA and NOVA [Or, A New Survey of Great Britain; wherein to the Topographical Account given by Mr.Cambden, and the late Editors of his Britannia, is added a more large History, not only of the Cities, Boroughs, Towns, and Parishes mentioned by them, but also of many other Places of Note, and Antiquities since discovered. Collected and composed by an Impartial Hand. [In Six Volumes.]

[In the Savoy: printed by Eliz. Nutt; and sold by M. Nutt, and J. Morphew, London.] [1720]4to. 7 x 9 inches pp.1071-1270 comprising the entire section on the County of Kent, extracted from vol. 2 of the complete work and hence lacks title page. Illustrated by folding map of Kent by Robert Morden at beginning of text. Rebound in half calf, gilt, with marbled boards. Extremities worn and top edge darkened; oherwise a clean neat copy. Armorial bookplate of Gilbert Compton Elliot (1871-1931) of Hull Place, Sholden, Kent and ink note on Cox on second free endpaper.Magna Britannia was intended to be an enlargement of the sixth edition of Britannia by William Camden (1607) and was originally published in monthly parts as a supplement to the Atlas Geographus (5 vols., 1711-17). Only the sections on the English counties were published in six volumes from 1720-31. Vols.1 and 2 (the latter including Kent) were continuously paginated and both appeared in 1720. The series has generally been attributed to Thomas Cox (1655/6-1734), rector of Stoke Harvard and vicar of Broomfield, Essex who published a number of works on ecclesiastical and national history. His DNBauthor, however, considers that‘this was probably a confusionarising from the name of thebookseller who took over thepublication from 1724, who wasalso a Thomas Cox.’ ESTCfollows the traditionalattribution of the work to theRev. Thomas Cox, although itnotes that the vendor of the remainder of the Magna Britannia stock advertised in a sale catalogue of 1738 was probably Thomas Cox (i.e. the

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printer). The work was reissued in the same year by another printer. The cartographer Robert Morden (d.1703) produced the English county maps, in a larger format, for the 1695 edition of Camden’s Britannia and these remained standard for fifty years, hence their later use (in small format, compiled in 1701 and revised after 1704) in Magna Britannia. Upcott. ESTC T107759 (full set). Burgess, Printed Maps of Kent, 29/ii. DNB. [ref: 20719 ] £200

321. CRAMPTON, PAUL BEFORE AND AFTER THE HURRICANE IN AND AROUND CANTERBURY

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198848 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18658 ] £10

322. CRAMPTON, PAUL. THE BLITZ OF CANTERBURY Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198948 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Documents the blitz of canterbury with many photographs and first hand accounts. [ref: 18183 ] £12

323. CRAMPTON, PAUL. CANTERBURY THEN AND NOW THE LOST SCENES AND BUILDINGS.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 199148 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18656 ] £12

324. CRAWFORD, O.G.S. ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE FIELD. Phoenix House. 1953280 pp. + 24 plates and 43 figures to the text. Original green cloth, gilt. A verygood copy in price-clipped dust wrapper.One of the standard texts on the subject but eminently readable. [ref: 17415 ] £20

325. CRAYFORD - CARR, WILLIAM. THE SPOT THAT IS CALLED CRAYFORD. HISTORICAL NOTES ON THE URBAN DISTRICT OF CRAYFORD FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES.

Crayford UDC. 1965Revised and enlarged edition . 152 pp. with 19 illustrations including coloured frontis. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy signed by the author.[ref: 16941 ] £20

326. CROUCH, MARCUS AND WYN BURGESS. VICTORIAN AND EDWARDIAN KENT FROM OLD PHOTOGRAPHS.

Batsford. 19744to. 168 pages of photographic illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper.

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A fine selection of early photographs. [ref: 17210 ] £10

327. CUNLIFFE, BARRY. IRON AGE COMMUNITIES IN BRITAIN. An account of England, Scotland and Wales from the seventh century BC until the Roman conquest.

Routledge and Kegan Paul. 1978Second edition, 4to. xviii + 439 pp. + Photo plates 28 pp. Original dark blue cloth, gilt. Very good in like, unclipped, dust wrapperStandard authoritative text. [ref: 19002 ] £60

328. CURTIS, NEIL and JIM WALKER. NORTH DOWNS WAY. National trail guides, photographs by Mike Williams. Revised edition

Aurum Press Ltd in association with the Countryside Agency. 2000168 pp. Illustrated throughout in colour. Pictorial softcover. Very good.Comprehensive guide to the North Downs Way whichruns from Farnham in Surrey to the coast at Dover. OS 1:25000 maps accompany the text.

[ref: 21760 ] £10

329. CUXTON - CHURCH, DEREK. CUXTON. A KENTISH VILLAGE.Cassell, Sheerness. 1976177 pp., with diagrams and illustration throughout. Original pictorial boards.A well-researched history of this village on the banks of the Medway. Becoming difficult to find. [ref: 19611 ] £25

330. DALY, AUGUSTUS A. THE HISTORY OF THE ISLE OF SHEPPEY. From the Roman Occupation to the Reign of His Most Gracious Majesty King Edward VII. By Augustus A. Daly. Author of ‘The History of Canvey Island,’ ‘Greater Lessons in massacre,’ ‘A Warning Cry to Russia.’ ‘The Missing Baronet,’ etc., etc. With 90 Illustrations by James Proctor. Reprint title; HISTORY OF THE ISLE OF SHEPPEY.

London Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co., Limited, 1904. Reprinted,Sheerness: Arthur J. Cassell. 1975xiv + 313 pp. + [1]. Separate title page for reprint. Illustrated by 90 drawings in text. Bound in original green cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. A very good copy.An original is now rare, and even this reprint is hard to find. Combines charming illustrations and thorough text with an index, missing from the original edition. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21721 ] £25

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331. DALY, AUGUSTUS A. THE HISTORY OF THE ISLE OF SHEPPEY FROM THE ROMAN OCCUPATION TO THE REIGN OF HIS MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY KING EDWARD VII.

Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. 1904297 pp. with 90 illustrations by J. James Proctor. Bound in original red, printed cloth. Very slightly worn at the head and tail of the spine, but a very good copy.A rare guide. Combines charming illustrations and thorough text. [ref: 21664 ] £85

332. DARELL,Rev.Wm THE HISTORY OF DOVER CASTLE, ILLUSTRATED WITH 10 VIEWS AND A PLAN OF THE CASTLE.

Printed for S. Hooper. 1786Small folio. vi + 68 pp. Illustrated with frontispiece vignette and 9 copper engraved plates and a folding plan. Bound in eighteenth century panelled calf, blind and gilt, neatly rebacked.A very nice copy of this printing of the work of William Darell, chaplainto Queen Elizabeth I, here translatedfrom the Latin manuscript in the College of Arms.

[ref: 18950 ] £175

333. DARENT VALLEY - ALEXANDER, WILLIAM G.G. A FARMING CENTURY. THE DARENT VALLEY 1892-1992.

Quiller Press, London. 19911st edition. 4to. 7.5 x 10 inches. 176 pp. with numerous black and white illustrations. Original green cloth, gilt. A fine copy in like dust wrapper. Signed by author on half title.Account of a farming family from Scotland who moved to the Darent Valley, Kent in 1892 and founded a farming dynasty. Now out of print.We also have a similar, but unsigned copy, in stock for £20. [ref: 20556 ] £25

RARE HISTORY OF DARTFORD334. DARTFORD - DUNKIN, A. J. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES

OF DARTFORD TOGETHER WITH AN APPENDIX CONTAINING TOPOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE NEIGHBOURHOOD.

John Russell Smith, 4, Old Compton Street, Soho Square. 1844Large 8vo. xxvi + 478 pp. + [2] with 9 plates including an engraved frontispiece. Neatly pasted to one of the blank prelims is a black-bordered slip in memory of Ann Chapman Dunkin. This gives her details, and those of her husband, with dates, and has two photographic miniature portraits of Ann

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and John Dunkin. That of John Dunkin is a photograph of his engraved portrait whilst that of his wife appears to be a reduction of an original photograph. Original red cloth, gilt. Re-spined with the original spine laid-on.A very good copy.From the imprint it appears that this edition of Dunkin's history of Dartford was issued at a later date by John Russell Smith, using the remaining sheets from Dunkin’s own press, possibly for the benefit of Dunkin’s widow or, in light of the memorial slip, in her memory. As with all Dunkin’s books the collations are difficult and this copy demonstrates the eccentricity of his books, which were printed in very small numbers. The pagination is contrary to normal practice in that the verso of page 1 is page 3, thus throughout the book the recto has an even number. Pages 22 and 23 do not exist but comparison with another copy shows that the text is uninterrupted. There is an instance where a cancel has been inserted producing no less thanthree pages numbered 233, two on the same leaf. The list of plates calls for fourteen plates including the frontis. This copy has nine, two of which are different to those called for, and few plates appear where they are listed. Again it is clear, from comparison with other copies, that the plates varied from copy to copy, and there is no evidence that any of the errant plates were ever actually included in this issue. [ref: 16900 ] £250

HISTORY OF DARTFORD335. DARTFORD - DUNKIN, A.J. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES

OF DARTFORD WITH TOPOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF THE NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Printed and published by J. and W. Davis, Dartford. 1904Large 8vo. xxviii + 477 pp. + [2] illustrated with 18 plates including an engraved frontispiece. Bound in recent red half-morocco, gilt. A very good copy, with some old ink inscriptions and annotations by a previous owner in the text, that provide additional first hand information. Combined with an attractive binding by our Bookbinder, this is a desirable example.

This is the later facsimile edition of Dunkin's history of Dartford, originally published in 1844, and it retains the flavour of the original but corrects the ‘palpable mistakes’ of the earlier printing. Thus it is free from the entertaining foibles of the original in respect of variety of plates and odd pagination and represents a very good alternative to the scarce first edition. [ref: 19083 ] £250

336. DARTFORD - DUNKIN, A.J.c MEMORANDA OF SPRINGHEAD AND

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ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD. DURING THE PRESENT PERIOD. One Hundred Copies.

Printed for Private circulation. 18488vo. 152 pp. with a frontis portrait and 6 plates. Bound in the original cloth but re-spined at a later date. Rather worn at the extremities and covers rather stained, otherwise a good example.Printed at the Private Press of J. Dunkin, in an edition of one hundred copies only. Dunkin’s somewhat eccentric books are all very scarce, but contain interesting information. [ref: 16860 ] £165

337. DARTFORD - KEYES, SIDNEY KILWORTH. DARTFORD. SOME HISTORICAL NOTES.

Dartford, Perry, Son, and Lack, 1933 Thick Royal. 8vo. 727 pp. with maps, plans, and illustrations throughout. Original blue cloth, gilt.With a signed portrait of the author and a presentation inscription in the author’s hand pasted on the front free endpaper. A fine copy of the first volume of the author's monumental history of Dartford. [ref: 18908 ] £150

PROOF COPY338. DARTON, F.J. HARVEY. A PARCEL OF KENT.

Nisbet and Co. Ltd., London. 1924xv + 291 pp. + 5 illustrations by L. Russell Conway and T. Mackenzie. Faded blue paper wrappers with title label to spine. Some gatherings rather unsympathetically opened, others unopened. Untrimmed.An evocative appreciation of the Weald of Kent from the first quarter of the twentieth century. [ref: 21333 ] £10

339. DARTON, F.J.HARVEY. A PARCEL OF KENT. Nisbet and Co. Ltd., London. 1924xv + 291 pp. + 5 illustrations. Original green cloth, gilt. A very good, bright copy. An evocative appreciation of the Weald of Kent from the first quarter of the twentieth century. *** We also have an uncorrected proof copy ***

[ref: 20260 ] £10

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340. DAVIS, J. J. DAVIS'S DEAL AND DOVER ILLUSTRATED VISITORS GUIDE. WHAT TO SEE AND HOW TO SEE IT. J. DAVIS’S SERIES OF HOLIDAY HANDBOOKS. Tenth Edition. Ent. Stat. Hall. Price 3d., with maps of Town and District.

John Davis, 24 Queen Victoria St.,London. No date but c.1900.Tenth edition. Small 8vo. pp.1 - 32 + [4] adverts and contents + pp.52 - 82 + folding view of Dover from the sea and wood engravings to the text, and one photographic

illustration. These guides typically have a map but none is called for in the contents and there is no obvious indication of where one should or would havebeen. The contents comprise two 32 page guides with two leaves and the folding view inserted between. The Dover section was certainly published in another of the guides, Folkestone, and this may explain the unusual pagination. Original generic printed paper wrappers. Browned as usual with asmall chip or two, and loss of an inch of plain backstrip. A very good copy.Attractive pre-First World War guide to the Deal and Dover area. The first 32 pages are devoted to Deal and district, while the last 32 are for Dover anddistrict. One of a series of guides published by J. Davis, all having the same printed design on the wrappers but with the name of the town, printed on a diagonal panel, varying from guide to guide, along with local advertising, also printed in a panel left for the purpose. These guides are now scarce. [ref: 21251 ] £75

341. DEAL OFFICIAL GUIDE Borough of Deal Publicity Committee, n.d. c.19658vo. 72 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original illustrated paper wrappers, as issued.[ref: 14936 ] £12

342. DEAL - BURNAND, F.C. THE ZIG-ZAG GUIDE ROUND AND ABOUT THE BOLD AND BEAUTIFUL KENTISH COAST.

A. and C. Black. 1897First Edition. viii + 188 pp. + 32 with folding frontis and illustrations throughout by Phil May. Original pictorial cloth. Spine darkened and a little worn, but a good copy.Primarily concerned with Deal, Sandwich and the Isle of Thanet. Attractively illustrated in Phil May's distinctive comic style. [ref: 18127 ] £65

343. DEAL - PAIN, E.C. HISTORY OF DEAL (1914 - 1953). Deal: T.F.Pain & Sons. 1953148 pp. with photo and other illustrations. Half-cloth over original boards, which are slightly damp-stained. Otherwise a good copy.Scarce modern history of Deal encompassing the two World Wars - intendedas an update to complete Laker's history. [ref: 18010 ] £85

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IN DUST WRAPPER344. DEAL - PAIN, E.C. THE LAST OF OUR LUGGERS AND THE MEN

WHO SAILED IN THEM. Sketches and etchings by H.W. Pain and T.A.N. Bent.

Deal T.F. Pain and Sons. 1929Tall 8vo. 6.5 x 9.75 inches. 174 pp. + [2]. Illustrated throughout with etchings and photographs. Original cloth, gilt, in the very rare dust wrapper, which has a closed tear in

the front panel and a piece missing from the head of the spine, not affecting the design. Rebacked, with scratching and wear on spine and boards Newspaper photograph pasted on front free endpaper. The rare, Deal-published account of the luggers and the men who sailed them in the period 1858 - 1909. A cornerstone in any Deal / Goodwin Sands collection. The best work on the subject with much firsthand detail and anecdotes, collected and recorded when the last of the nineteenth-century sailors were still alive. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19525 ] £200

CLASSIC ACCOUNT OF THE DEAL LUGGERS345. DEAL - PAIN, E.C. THE LAST OF OUR LUGGERS AND THE MEN

WHO SAILED IN THEM. Sketches and etchings by H.W. Pain and T.A.N. Bent.

Deal T.F. Pain and Sons. 1929Tall 8vo. 6.5 x 9.75 inches. 174 pp. + [2]. Illustrated throughout with etchings and photographs. Original cloth, gilt, extremities a little worn and small damp stains on front boards, but otherwise good condition.

The rare, Deal-published account of the luggers and the men who sailed them in the period 1858 - 1909. A cornerstone in any Deal / Goodwin Sands collection. The best work on the subject with much firsthand detail and anecdotes, collected and recorded when the last of the nineteenth-century sailors were still alive. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21345 ] £175

346. DEAL - TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. THE LOG OF A SKY PILOT. OR WORK AND ADVENTURE AROUND THE GOODWIN SANDS.

Religious Tract Society. 1893256 pp. with illustration throughout. Original pictorial cloth, gilt. Front free endpa per torn out and amateurishly re-attached with stamp paper, otherwise a very good copy.A very good copy of this scarce book which continues the history of the Deal boatmen and the Goodwin sands.

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[ref: 10898 ] £65

347. DEAL - TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. THE LOG OF A SKY PILOT.

Religious Tract Society. 1894Second Editon, 256 pp. with illustration throughout. Original pictorial cloth, gilt. Front free endpaper removed, otherwise a very good copy with the binding very fresh and bright.A very good copy of this scarce book which continues the history of the Deal boatmen and the Goodwin Sands.

[ref: 20248 ] £65

348. DEAL - TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. THE LOG OF A SKY PILOT. Or, Work and Adventure around the Goodwin Sands. By the Rev. Thomas Stanley Treanor, M.A. Chaplain, Missions to Seamen, Deal and the Downs. Author of ‘Heroes of the Goodwin Sands.’

[London] The Religious Tract Society, 56 Paternoster Row, and 65, St Paul’s Churchyard. 1894Second Edition. 8vo. 5.5 x 8 inches. 256 pp. with illustration throughout. Illustrated with 24 engravings, including many full page. Bound in original coloured pictorial cloth, gilt. Extremities lightly worn and spine slightly sunned, but front boards still fresh and bright. A fine copy. 1896 inscription on front free endpaper.A very good copy of this scarce book which continues the history of the Deal boatmen and the Goodwin Sands begun in the first, and very popular work, by the Rev. Thomas Stanley Treanor (1873-1910) and very popular work, Heroes of the Goodwin Sands. (1892). The first edition of this title was published in 1893. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21289 ] £65

349. DEAL. NORTHEY, S.T. Publisher. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEWS OF DEAL, WALMER AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Published by S.T. Northey, The Central Library, 35 High Street, Deal. 1880.Oblong view-book, 7 x 5 inches, containing 15 photos and an advertisement for S.T. Northey. Original printed red paper-covered boards, gilt. Contents loose but complete.

[ref: 20838 ] £25

350. DEARN, T.D.W. AN HISTORICAL, TOPOGRAPHICAL, AND DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE WEALD OF KENT.

Cranbrook. Printed for and sold by S. Reader. 1814First Edition, 8vo. lvi + 277 pp. + [5] index and [1] advert. Illustrated with map and 8 sepia aquatint plates after drawings by the author. Original half-calf over marbled boards with decorative spine. Worn at extremities but, apartfrom some offsetting from plates and a little light browning, a very good copy.

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Neat ownership inscriptions to front paste down in pencil and verso of frontis in ink.Rare history of the Weald with fine engraved illustrations including the well-known view of the High Street at Cranbrook. [ref: 21624 ] £300

FISHING AND OYSTER REARING, 1868351. DEMPSTER, HENRY. THE DECKED-WELLED FISHING BOAT,

FISHERIES AND FISH-MARKET REFORM: Being Dialogues on these Important Subjects with Full Information on the Oyster Question. By Henry Dempster, H.E.I.C.S.

Printed for the Author by Aird and Coghill, Glasgow. 18688vo. 4.5 x 6.5 inches. 138 pp. + [1] p. [A-A4], [B-B8], C-I8, [K1]. Illustrated by coloured lithograph plan serving as frontispiece, two folding plans of vessels, one at the end and engravings in text. Bound in original blue cloth; blind stamped borders enclosing decorative patterns on boards, front gilt image of fishing craft. Title ‘Fishing’ in white on front board and spine. Extremities worn and some staining on boards. Yellow endpapers. Slight browning but otherwise clean inside.

An investigation into the state of British fisheries and fish markets, largely written in the form of a dialogue, featuring Tom, Dick and Harry and a number of fishermen, etc. It has a particular emphasis on oyster culture and some detailed boat plans (one showing deck and elevation plans, the other the rigging) and descriptions of the decked-welled craft recommended for fishing. The coloured lithograph shows the proposed oyster tanks at Kinghorn, Fife. Although biased towards the southern part of the east coast of Scotland, there are frequent references to other areas, including Billingsgate Market in London and the Herne Bay Oyster Fishing Company. A very scarce work with much useful information on fishing boats and the fishing industry in the late nineteenth century. [ref: 20213 ] £175

352. DENNY, ERNEST. ALL-OF-A-SUDDEN PEGGY. A Light Comedy in Three Acts.

Samuel French, London. 1910159 pp. inscribed and signed by the author. Original green half-calf over marbled boards with gilt title to spine. A very good copy.Two of the three acts are set in Hawkhurst. A smartly bound presentation copy inscribed on, and incorporating, the half-title: To Miss Marjorie Dawson in old days just ‘Peggy’ from the author of her namesake:- ALL-OF-A-SUDDEN PEGGY in both old days, and these, & in future days, - her friend Ernest Denny. Dec: 2. 1910. Loosely

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inserted is a two-page letter of the same date from Denny to Marjorie on his printed notepaper. This play was subsequently made into a silent movie withMarguerite Clark and Jack Mulhall and was one in a number of movies made from Denny’s original plays. [ref: 18153 ] £175

PRESENTATION COPY353. DEPTFORD - DEWS, NATHAN. THE HISTORY OF DEPTFORD

IN THE COUNTIES OF KENT AND SURREY. Compiled from Authentic Records and Manuscripts. By Nathan Dews, Author of the ‘History of Somersham,’ ‘The Banks of Calder.’ etc., etc. Second edition. Revised and Enlarged, with Illustrations.

London Simpkin, Marshall, and Co., Stationers’ Hall Court. Deptford: J. D. Smith, Printer, etc., Broadway. 18848vo. 5 x 7.25 inches. 328 pp. Errata et addenda

sheet paste to verso of contents page. Illustrated by 4 plates, including one frontispiece plates and three folding (two genealogical tables and facsimile map) and other engravings in text. Numerous decorated initials. Bound in original blue cloth, decorated gilt. Bevelled edges. All page edges gilt. Slight wear to extremities and some light foxing, but otherwise fine condition. Printed presentation page, with name Arthur Crane in ink, from Mr. Evelyn, M.P. on the day of Queen Victoria’s Jubilee. Wotton, 21st June, 1887.Revised and enlarged second edition of the standardnineteenth century history of Deptford, firstpublished in 1883. The book includes chapters on themanors and Evelyn family, ecclesiastical sites,charities and schools and on commercial andindustrial history, including a list of all vesselslaunched from the Royal Dockyard, 1551 to 1869,when naval shipbuilding ceased. The presentation leaf from the Deptford Conservative MP, William JohnEvelyn (1822-1908), has been included three years after publication of the book and must have been added to unbound copies. He was a descendant of the Evelyn family of Deptford and Wotton, Surrey and, through his purchaseand donation of land served as a public benefactor to the inhabitants of the town. He served as MP, 1885-88, resigning in protest against the government’s Irish policy. Fine copy of a scarce book. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21707 ] £100

354. DEPTFORD - DEWS, NATHAN. THE HISTORY OF DEPTFORD IN THE COUNTIES OF

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KENT AND SURREY. Compiled from Authentic Records and Manuscripts. By Nathan Dews, second edition. Revised and Enlarged, with Illustrations. (The Thamesmead Histories, Vol. III).

Conway Maritime Press, 7 Nelson Road, Greenwich, London, S.E.10. 1971Facsimile reprint. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. 328 pp. Illustrated by [four] plates,including three folding (two genealogical tables and facsimile map) and other illustrations in text. Bound in original green cloth, gilt, with pictorial dust wrapper. Top edges green. Bookplate. Fine condition. A facsimile reprint of the standard nineteenth century history of Deptford, itself now scarce. First published in 1883, the second edition, reprinted here, was revised and enlarged. The book includes chapters on the manors and Evelyn family, ecclesiastical sites, charities and schools and on commercial and industrial history. There is a list of all warships launched at the Royal Dockyard from 1551 to 1869, when naval shipbuilding at Deptford ceased. Fine copy of a now scarce book. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 20263 ] £65

355. DETSICAS, ALEC. COLLECTANEA HISTORICA Essays in memory of Stuart Rigold.

Kent Archæological Society. 19814to. 315 pp. including 64 b/w plates and 65 figures to text. Bluecloth, gilt. A very good copy in dust wrapper.A collection of essays edited by Alec Detsicas. [ref: 11117 ] £25

DETSICAS, ALEC. COLLECTANEA HISTORICA. Essays in memory of Stuart Rigold, M.A., F.S.A., F.R.Hist. S., F.R.N.S., F.R.S.A. Edited by Alan Detsicas.Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19814to. 8.75 x 10.5 inches. xxx + [ii] + 315 pp. +[1]. Half-title. Illustrated by 64 black and white plates and 65 text figures. Bound in blue cloth, cloth, gilt. A very good copy in pictorial dust wrapper.Includes a list of the published works of Stuart Eborall Rigold, former Principal Inspector of Ancient Monuments and Public Buildings at the Department of the Environment. About twenty of the thirty three essays relate to Kentish buildings. [ref: 21165 ] £25

356. DETSICAS, ALEC. STUDIES IN MODERN KENTISH HISTORY. [Edited by NIGEL YATES] Presented to Felix Hull and Elizabeth Melling.

Kent Ar chæological Society. 19834to. 230 pp. including 20 b/w plates. Blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in dust wrapper.[ref: 13324 ] £25

DETSICAS, ALEC and YATES, NIGEL. STUDIES IN MODERN KENTISH HISTORY. Presented to Felix

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Hull and Elizabeth Melling on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Kent Archives Office. Edited by Alec Detsicas and Nigel Yates. Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19834to. 8.5 x 11 inches. xv + [i] + 230 pp. Half-title. Illustrated by 20 black and white plates and 7 figures (maps) in text. Bound in blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in coloured pictorial dust wrapper.Includes appreciations and bibliographies of Felix Hull, former county archivist, and of Elizabeth Melling. [ref: 21164 ] £25

PRESENTATION COPY357. DETSICAS, ALEC and YATES, NIGEL. STUDIES IN MODERN

KENTISH HISTORY. Presented to Felix Hull and Elizabeth Melling on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Kent Archives Office. Edited by Alec Detsicas and Nigel Yates.

Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19834to. 8.25 x 10.5 inches. xv + [i] + 230 pp. Half-title. Illustrated by 20 black and white plates and 7 figures (maps) in text.

Presentation binding of half blue morocco over blue cloth, gilt with label on first free endpaper, to Elizabeth Melling, 22 July 1983.Includes appreciations and bibliographies of Felix Hull, former county archivist, and of Elizabeth Melling. [ref: 21166 ] £45

358. DITCHFIELD, P .H. and CLINCH, GEORGE. MEMORIALS OF OLD KENT. Edited by The Rev. P.H. Ditchfield, M.A., F.S.A. and George

Clinch, F.G.S. With many illustrations.

(Memorials of the Counties of England).London Bemrose and Sons Limited, 4 SnowHill, E.C. and Derby 1907First edition, Fat 8vo. 6 x 8.75 inches. xiii + [i] + 335 pp. + [1] + [4] pp. publisher’s advertisements. Half title. Illustrated by 73 illustrations, including 57 plates (the doublepage plans of Tong Church are extra to the index of illustrations), including

frontispiece, black and white photographs and 3 double page plan, and 18 drawings in text. Decorative initials. Bound in original white cloth, gilt, with county emblem in roundel on front board and bevelled edges. Pages with rough cut edges. A good copy.Includes articles on Canterbury, Kentish Insurrections, Dickens’ Kent, Romney Marsh and Smuggling, Churches, Castles and Medway Bridges. One of the many works edited by the Rev. Peter Hempson Ditchfield (1854-1930), historian and prolific author and Rector of Barkham, Berkshire from 1886. George Clinch (1860-1921) wrote a number of books on Kent and also English Hops (1919).

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Kent Bibliography Supplement. [ref: 17474 ] £35

359. DOMESDAY BOOK. KENT. OR THE GREAT SURVEY OF ENGLAND OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR A.D. 1066

Colonel Sir H. James, Ordnance Survey Office, Southampton. 1863Folio. 10 x 14 inches. [vi] + 28 pp. with lithographic title 2 pages of text and 28pages of litho facsimile pages and two woodcut illustrations. Contemporary green half-leather over cloth with gilt titles to spine and upper board. A very good copy of a scarce item.Colonel James, who claimed to have invented the process, introduced Photozincography for the reproduction of Ordnance Survey maps and utilised the process in the production of this accurate, life-size facsimile, issued in 33 volumes, covering one or two counties per volume. As such, this is a very early example of the process that James was to utilise widely. [ref: 18255 ] £150

360. DOMESDAY BOOK - KENT. EDITED BY PHILIP MORGAN. Chichester, Phillimore, 1983.8vo. Original cloth in dust wrapper.Translation of the 11th century survey. The hard back version, now out of print. ***We usually have softback editions in stock at £10*** [ref: 17198 ] £15

361. DOMESDAY BOOK - KENT. EDITED BY PHILIP MORGAN. Chichester, Phillimore. 1983Original printed wrappers. Very good copyTranslation of the 11th century survey. Reproduces Abraham Farley’s 1783 printed text with modern translation prepared by Veronica Sankaran opposite. Softback example. [ref: 18342 ] £10

362. DONOVAN, PAUL. SPORTING THE OAK. The Life and Times of Thomas Downes Wilmot Dearn.

Christine Swift. Egerton 20058vo. 249pp. with a large section of photographic illustrations. Original gilt boards dust wrapper. A very fine copy. Detailed study of Thomas Dearn Cranbrook’s author/artist/architect. [ref: 18045 ] £25

363. DOUCH, JOHN. SMUGGLING THE WICKED TRADE. Being a Factual Account of some Clandestine Activities practised over the Past Centuries in and around the Romney Marsh in Kent, with special reference to the Ransleys of Aldington, Mursham and Ruckinge.

Dover, Crabwell Publications, 1980

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First edition 8vo. 8.5 x 6 inches, 118 pp. with illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper.A very good copy of the first of John Douch's smuggling books, now difficult to find. [ref: 21710 ] £30

364. DOUCH, JOHN. SMUGGLING. FLOGGING JOEY'S WARRIORS HOW THE ROYAL NAVY FOUGHT THE KENT AND SUSSEX SMUGGLERS.

Dover, Crabwell Publications, 1985.165 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper.The book documents the efforts of the Customs and the Navy to defeat the 'gentlemen'. All of Mr. Douch’s books are long out of print and have become something of classics in Smuggling literature. [ref: 17675 ] £30

365. DOUCH, JOHN. SMUGGLING. 'ROUGH, RUDE MEN' A HISTORY OF OLD TIME KENTISH SMUGGLING.

Dover, Crabwell Publications, 1985.First Edition 8vo. 150 pp. with illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper.Further research into smuggling episodes along the Kentish coastby the established smuggling historian.

[ref: 21711 ] £20

366. DOVER. DOVER AND THE EUROPEAN WAR, 1914-18. Reprinted from the Dover Express and East Kent News, dec. 1918 to Feb. 1919.

Dover. Dover Express Printing Office. 19194to. 9.5 x 7 inches. 48 pp. with double-page map showing the bombs and shells that landed on Dover. Original green, printedcard wrappers faded around extremities but a very good copy ofa scarce item.We have only handled three copies of this very ephemeral but

extremely interesting item in the past 20 years. [ref: 21313 ] £75

367. DOVER. THE GARDEN BEHIND THE GATEWAY. DOVER RURAL DISTRICT. With District Map and 11 illustrations. No. 86 ‘Rural England’ Series Fourth Edition.

Century Publications, 79 Great Titchfield Street, London n.d. but 195212mo. 44 pp. with illustrations and advertisements throughout. Original printed card wrappers. A very good example.[ref: 16641 ] £20

368. DOVER. GODWYNEHURST LADIES’ SCHOOL DOVER. Seven photographs of the School, two external and five internal.

No date but c.1900Seven photographs, 4.25 x 6 inches, mounted on paper. In very good condition.

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Pike’s Directory for 1910 lists Godwynehurst Ladies’ School as run by Mrs. J.S. Wise from Layburne Road, Dover. The photos show:-1. External view of the building; 2. View from neighbouring property lookingdown on the field adjoining the school; 3. View of the Dining Room; 4. Junior Class Room; 5. The Senior Class Room; 6. Drawing Room; 7. A bedroom. [ref: 14907 ] £50

369. DOVER - ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for defraying the Expenses of constructing Fortifications for the Protection of the Royal Arsenals and Dockyards and the Ports of Dover and Portland...

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1860-69Folio. 10 pp., 11 pp., 11 pp., 11 pp., 11 pp., 4 pp., 11pp., and 5 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.Eight Acts, published in 1860, 1862, 1863, 1864, two in 1867 and one in 1869, the later acts providing further sums for the works being carried on at Doverand Portland, and the last act providing the final sum. [ref: 14055 ] £30

370. DOVER - ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for making Compensation to the Proprietors of certain Lands, Hereditaments, etc....purchased..... for better securing His Majesty’s Docks, Ships, and Stores at Portsmouth ....and for extending the lines and works at Dover

Charles Eyre and William Strahan 1809Folio. 7 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.[ref: 14054 ] £10

371. DOVER - ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for more effectually maintaining and improving the Harbour of Dover.

George Eyre and Andrew Strahan 1828Folio. 35pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve. This is one of the more important Dover Harbour Acts providing the template for the 19th century rules and regulations. [ref: 7387 ] £35

372. DOVER - ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for providing a further sum towards defraying the Expenses of constructing Fortifications for the Protection of the Royal Arsenals and Dockyards and the Ports of Dover and Portland.....

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1862Folio. 11 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.The Dover works were to be carried out on Castle Hill Fort, Dover Castle andthe Western Heights. [ref: 14046 ] £15

373. DOVER - ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for providing a further sum towards defraying the Expenses of constructing Fortifications for the Protection of the Royal Arsenals and Dockyards and the Ports of Dover and Portland.....

George Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1863

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Folio. 11 pp. Disbound, preserved in a plastic sleeve.The Kent works involved Gravesend, Medway and Sheerness, Chatham, and Dover. The Dover works were to be carried out on Castle Hill Fort, Dover Castle and the Western Heights. [ref: 14047 ] £15

374. DOVER - ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W. HERBERT. DOVER - A TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT - SHEET 20 - DOVER - LYDDEN - RINGWOULD.

London, 1769Hand-coloured copper-engraved map, 19 x 28 inches, mounted in conservation materials. A fine example.The Dover map of the rare 25-sheet atlas of Kent. On a scale of 2 inches to the mile, the coastline extends from East Wear Bay at Folkestone in the south, to St. Margaret's Bay in the north, whilst the country behind is shown from Alkham out to Waldershare and Coldred. [ref: 16540 ] £300

375. DOVER - ATHERTON, G.M. SOLDIERS OF THE CASTLE DOVER CASTLE GARRISONED.

Triangle/Mrs. G.M. Atherton, Canterbury. 2003Folio. 11 x 8 inches. 99 pp. with numerous illustrations, many in colour. Original pictorial card wrappers.A very comprehensive and detailed account of the garrisons at Dover Castle from 1166 until 1958 when the last garrison, the 1st Battalion Queen’s Own Cameron Highlanders, removed to Connaught Barracks. A small picket wasin place until 1961, and in 1963 the castle was turned over to the civilian authorities. The value of the book may be judged by the opinion of Professor Richard Holmes, the military historian, who in his foreword says “ This is a little gem of a book...” [ref: 16899 ] £15

376. DOVER - BATCHELLER, W. THE NEW DOVER GUIDE: INCLUDING A CONCISE SKETCH OF THE ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTORY OF THE TOWN AND CASTLE, WITH SUCH OTHER GENERAL INFORMATION AS MAY BE USEFUL TO VISITORS; AND A SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE NEIGHBOURING VILLAGES. THE FIFTH EDITION, EMBELLISHED WITH TWENTY-FOUR ILLUSTRATIONS, FOUR PLANS OF THE CASTLE, AND ONE OF THE MAISON DIEU.

Dover, W. Batcheller, 1842[2], 144, [1], 144*, [14] pp. with 4 wood-engraved plans and wood engravings in the text. Original printed grey card wrappers with engraved illustration to front. A little

worn at extremities, spine cracked and chipped at head and tail. Small tape mark to front. A very good copy nonetheless.Good example of this well-known mid-19th century guide to the port. Goulden p.46 No15. Goulden p.46 No15.

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[ref: 20133 ] £175

377. DOVER - BATCHELLER, W. THE NEW DOVER GUIDE; INCLUDING A CONCISE SKETCH OF THE ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTORY OF THE TOWN AND CASTLE, WITH SUCH OTHER GENERAL INFORMATION AS MAY BE USEFUL TO VISITORS AND A SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE NEIGHBOURING VILLAGES. THE SIXTH EDITION, MUCH ENLARGED. EMBELLISHED WITH TWENTY-SIX ILLUSTRATIONS, AND PLANS OF THE CASTLE, THE ANCIENT TOWN WALL, ST. MARY'S CHURCH, AND THE MAISONDIEU.

Dover, Printed and Published by W. Batcheller, King’s Arms Library. 1845viii + 206 + [24] pp. with 6 plates and 26 wood engravings in the text. Original red cloth, gilt, with gilt

vignette to upper board. Rebacked with original gilt titles laid on. A very good example.A much expanded version of the guide first published in 1828; comparing thetwo shows that much has changed in the growing harbour and watering place - most of all, the South-Eastern Railway, the wonder of the age, had arrived. A full description of this is included and from the text and adverts an interesting picture emerges of nineteenth century life in Dover. Goulden p.47 No. 20. [ref: 19116 ] £175

378. DOVER - BATCHELLER, W. THE NEW DOVER GUIDE; INCLUDING A CONCISE SKETCH OF THE ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTORY OF THE TOWN AND CASTLE, WITH SUCH OTHER GENERAL INFORMATION AS MAY BE USEFUL TO VISITORS AND A SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE NEIGHBOURING VILLAGES. THE SEVENTH EDITION, MUCH ENLARGED. EMBELLISHED WITH THIRTY ILLUSTRATIONS, AND PLANS OF THE CASTLE, THE ANCIENT TOWN WALL, ST. MARY'S CHURCH, AND THE MAISON DIEU, THE PRIORY CHURCH, AND THE HARBOUR OF REFUGE.

Dover, W. Batcheller, 1853223 pp. + (10) adverts + 16 pp. Appendix for the year. With a folding engraved map and engraved views throughout. Bound in the original purple/blue cloth, gilt,with gilt vignette of Dover Castle to upper board.A nice copy of the standard Batcheller's guide but more interesting than most in that it contains the rare foldingengraved map of Dover by John Adams (Land Surveyorof New Folkestone Road, Dover), and even more interesting the 16-page appendix at the end of the

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guide. This section is in fact a Directory of Appointments for the Year, for example, Magistrates, Aldermen, Councillors, Police Officers, Customs and Excise Officers etc. It goes on to list Pilots, Packet Services and finally the Tide Tables for the Year. Scarce. [ref: 19975 ] £175

379. DOVER - BAVINGTON JONES, J. ANNALS OF DOVER. INCLUDING HISTORIES OF THE CASTLE, PORT, PASSAGE,

RELIGION, THE CORPORATION, MAYORS & THEIR TIMES, CORPORATION OFFICIALS, REPRESENTATION IN PARLIAMENT, AND SOCIAL HISTORY.

Dover, at the Express Works. 1916First Edition. 8vo. [12] + 432 pp. + [16] pp. Original cloth, gilt. Spine faded but a very good copy.Indispensible history of Dover. This first edition is now hard to find. [ref: 16376 ] £85

380.DOVER - BAVINGTON JONES, J. ANNALS OF DOVER. INCLUDING HISTORIES OF THE CASTLE, PORT, PASSAGE, RELIGION, THE CORPORATION, MAYORS AND THEIR TIMES, CORPORATION OFFICIALS, REPRESENTATION IN PARLIAMENT, AND SOCIAL HISTORY.

Dover, at the Express works. 1938 Second Edition. 480 pp. Original cloth, gilt. A clean ex-library copy with the usual stamps, offered at a reduced price.Indispensable history of Dover. This 2nd edition has been updated (as far as the end of 1937), the text andthe index revised.

[ref: 7575 ] £60

DOVER - BAVINGTON JONES, J. ANNALS OF DOVER. INCLUDINGHISTORIES OF THE CASTLE, PORT, PASSAGE, RELIGION, THE

CORPORATION, MAYORS & THEIR TIMES, CORPORATION OFFICIALS,REPRESENTATION IN PARLIAMENT, AND SOCIAL HISTORY.

Dover, at the "Express" works. 1938Second Edition. 8vo. 480 pp. Original cloth, gilt. A near mint copy.

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Indispensible history of Dover. This 2nd edition has been brought up-to-date (so far as the end of 1937), the text and the index revised. [ref: 17241 ] £85

381. DOVER - BAVINGTON JONES, J. THE CINQUE PORTS. THEIR HISTORY AND PRESENT CONDITION.

Dover Express. 1937Second Edition. 8vo., 8 x 6 inches, [viii] +162 pp. + (6) pp. index. Originalcloth, gilt. Spine slightly faded but a very good copy.The book is in two parts - the customs and privileges of the Cinque Ports, and then a description of each port. This work is based on Jeake’s Chartersof the Cinque Ports 1728, and Mantel’sHistory of Coronations and Courts of Brotherhood 1771, and Knocker’s

Grand Court of Shepway 1862. Jones distils these rather dry texts into a veryreadable account which contains much interesting information on the activities of each port under the Cinque Ports Charter and a concise account of their subsequent history. The first edition of 1903 was limited to 50 copies, and this edited and updated edition was not a large printing and it too has become scarce. [ref: 19384 ] £75

THE ENGLISH CHANNEL STEAM SHIP COMPANY LTD.382. DOVER - DICEY, CAPTAIN W.T.Y. DOVER TO CALAIS,

NEWHAVEN TO DIEPPE, WITHOUT SEA SICKNESS. A LETTER SHOWING ITS ACCOMPLISHMENT IMMEDIATE, ECONOMICAL and SUCCESSFUL.

Whitehead, Morris and Lowe, Steam Printers, London. 1874Third illustrated edition. Pamphlet. 5 x 7 inches approx. 16 pp. with wood-engraved vignette to title page, 3 other wood-engraved illustrations and a plan. Original printed pictorial paper wrappers.Original printed pictorial paper wrappers.

[ref: 18698 ] £120

383. DOVER - GILBERTSON, E. ST. RADIGUND’S ABBEY. Near Dover.3 Sept. 1846Pencil drawing, 10 x 7 inches, laid on to contrasting card with frame line and title neatly executed by hand. Titled and dated in pencil. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing, overall size 17 x 15 inches.

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A very accomplished drawing depicting the west side of the Norman chapel, which had latterly been converted into a dwelling, and showing the interesting chequer pattern wrought in the stonework. This drawing was among a small number from an album of drawings of places scattered throughout England. They had all been carefully mounted on card and exquisitely hand-titled. None of the drawings was signed but the album was identified as the work of E. Gilbertson. [ref: 17767 ] £100

384. DOVER - GREEN, IVAN. DOVER A PICTORIAL HISTORY. Phillimore, 19874to. 163 pp. photo illustrated, pages un-numbered. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.A well-illustrated account, now out of print. [ref: 17848 ] £12

385. DOVER - HARLEY, ROBERT J. DOVER’S TRAMWAYS. Middleton Press. 1993Unpaginated. Two maps and 120 photographic illustrations with letterpress descriptions. Original illustrated laminated boards.*Signed by the author on title page Excellent photographic record of the heyday of Dover’s tramways.***An unsigned copy is available at £12*** [ref: 17967 ] £14

MINIATURE EDITION386. DOVER - HARPER, CHARLES G. THE DOVER ROAD [ANNALS

OF AN ANCIENT TURNPIKE.]Anthony Treherne and Co., Ltd. London. 1907435 pp. with illustrations by the author and a folding strip map. Original printed paper wrappers. Cracked at front hinge and with a small tear to rear wrapper but a very good example.This example is No. 3 in a series of six of Harper’s ‘Road’ books published in miniature form. The work is the usual charming and informative Harper style mix of history, legend, and topographical detail. Scarce thus.

[ref: 19597 ] £75

387. DOVER - HARPER, CHARLES G. THE DOVER ROAD. ANNALS OF AN ANCIENT TURNPIKE. ILLUSTRATED BY THE AUTHOR, AND FROM OLD PRINTS AND PORTRAITS.

Chapman and Hall. 1922Second and revised edition. [xii] + 257 + [2] pp. with illustration throughout. Original decorated red cloth, slightly faded as usual but a very good example.The smaller format second issue. This was only the third 'Road Book' to be issued, which makes the first edition very hard to find. Harper was only just winning his readership at the time and the print run was probably quite small. The work is the usual charming and informative Harper style, a mix of history, legend, and topographical detail.

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[ref: 18875 ] £35

388. DOVER - HOLLINGSBEE, BOB. DOVER IN OLD PICTURE POSTCARDS.

European Library, Zaltbommel. 1989[5] pp.* + 75 b/w illustrations. Signed by the author on title page. Original pictorial blue cloth. A fine copy.* Covering the first half of the twentieth century and depicting a lively and prosperous Dover, untroubled by war damage and re-development. [ref: 18033 ] £20

389. DOVER - HOWARD, LUKE. LOVE AND TRUTH IN PLAINNESS MANIFESTED: BEING A COLLECTION OF THE SEVERAL WRITINGS FAITHFUL TESTIMONIES, AND CHRISTIAN EPISTLES, OF THAT ANCIENT SUFFERING SERVANT AND MINISTER OF CHRIST BY LUKE HOWARD OF DOVER., DECEASED. WITH AN ACCOUNT OF HIS CONVINCEMENT, LABOURS AND SUFFERINGS FOR THE TRUTH.

T. Sowle, in White-Harte-Court in Gracicius-Street, London 1704First Edition, 12mo, [14] + 316 pp. + [2] + [12]. Boundin recent half-calf, gilt. The text has been well used, resulting in several finger marks and some small holes in text and tears to fore edge here and there. Complete and without loss of text. A rare little volume of writings on, and by, Luke Howard, (1621-1699). Howard, a Quaker activist and writer, was born at Dover on 18 October 1621, the son of Robert Howard (c.1580-1625), a shoemaker. Following his father’s trade , Luke was apprenticed atthe age of fourteen to a shoemaker, and for a time wasa strict conformist to the Church of England. His

apprenticeship completed, Howard went to London and joined John Goodwin's Independent congregation at Coleman Street.At the outbreak of the civil war Howard had hoped to join the parliamentarian army but failed to get enrolled. Hetook service with the garrison in Dover Castle, butthere refused to sing psalms in 'rhyme and meter'. Inhis journal Howard relates that, after becomingsuccessively a Brownist, presbyterian, andIndependent, he joined the Baptists, and journeyed toLondon to be 'dipped' by William Kiffin. In turn heshifted from the Particular Baptism of Kiffin toGeneral Baptism, rejecting the 'dark stuff' ofCalvinism. He then became disillusioned with theBaptists, coming to see the very act of baptism as amerely worldly form. In 1655 Howard again went to London and wasconverted to Quakerism by William Caton and JohnStubbs. Through Howard's work Quaker numbers

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increased at Dover, and the movement attracted many Baptists, the cause of much controversy between the two groups. Howard was largely responsible for the conversion to Quakerism of the Leveller John Lilburne, who was imprisoned in Dover Castle, where he visited him many times. Lilburne became fully convinced in 1656 and described Howard as his 'indeared, spiritual and faithful friend' At the Restoration Howard was imprisoned in Dover Castle for three months. In June 1661 he was committed to Westgate prison in Canterbury for five days, and in the July following was sent to Dover Castle for about sixteen months 'because we could not forbear meetings' On 30 January 1684 he was taken, along with seven others, from ameeting and imprisoned in the same dungeon for fifty-one weeks.Howard was held in high esteem by leading London Quakers, for a testimony from the second day morning meeting, signed by William Penn, George Whitehead, and others, described him as 'of an exemplary Christian conversation, and of a good report among his friends and neighbours, and beloved of them for his just and upright dealing.'Howard wrote a number of tracts, many of which are found in Love and Truth in Plainness Manifested. Some of these are replies to Baptists, such as A Looking Glass for the Baptists (1673) and The Seat of the Scorner Thrown Down (1673); in the latter Howard explains why he left the Baptists, and more generally discusses ideas such as the Quaker notion of the 'inner light' and their views on baptism. Luke Howard died on 7 October 1699 and was buried on 13 October 1699, presumably at Dover. In these writings he paintsa vivid picture of religious intolerance and, naming names, accounts for political corruption and persecution of Dissenters in the 17th century port. ESTC located 13 copies, of which 5 in UK. [ref: 19664 ] £450

390. DOVER - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF DOVER. INCORPORATING PIKE’S DOVER AND DISTRICT BLUE BOOK

Kelly's Directories. 1967viii + 8 + 380 pp. with original printed advertising bookmark (E.R. Longley Ltd.) Original printed wrappers. A very good copy, lacking street plan.Very useful works of reference, becoming scarcer. [ref: 20769 ] £25

391. DOVER - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF DOVER. AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 1953

Kelly's Directories. 1953440 pp. Original printed wrappers. Worn at extremities, lacking map.[ref: 14785 ] £30

392. DOVER - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF DOVER. AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 1956

Kelly's Directories. 1956440 pp. Original printed wrappers. Worn at extremities, lacking map.[ref: 14786 ] £30

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393. DOVER - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF DOVER. AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 1959

Kelly's Directories. 1959436 pp. Original printed wrappers with folding map. A fine copy with slight fading to spine and only very light shelfwear.[ref: 19545 ] £45

394. DOVER - KNOCKER, EDWARD. AN ACCOUNT OF THE GRAND COURT OF SHEPWAY, HOLDEN ON THE BREDENSTONE HILL, AT DOVER, FOR THE INSTALLATION OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE HENRY JOHN TEMPLE, VISCOUNT PALMERSTON, AS CONSTABLE

OF H.M. CASTLE OF DOVER, AND WARDEN AND KEEPER OF H.M. CINQUE PORTS 28th. AUGUST 1861.

John Russell Smith. 18624to. 164 pp. with 3 engraved plates. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Spine a little faded, with repair to backstrip. Some foxing but a good copy of this nicely printed book.This presentation copy is inscribed both by the original owner, to whom it was apparently presented by the author, and by Major Teichman Derville, town councillor and later author of ‘The Level and Liberty of Romney Marsh’, who presented it to W. Lamacraft,

Town Clerk of New Romney. Contains much useful information.***We have other unsigned copies in stock at £25*** [ref: 14450 ] £50

395. DOVER - KNOCKER, EDWARD. ON THE ANTIQUITIES OF DOVER. A LECTURE DELIVERED BEFORE THE MEMBERS OF THE DOVER MUSEUM AND PHILOSOPHICAL INSTITUTION on November24th, 1857.

Printed by W. Batcheller, Dover. 18578vo. [i] + 44 pp. + 5 figures on two double-page lithographic plates. Original printed paper wrappers. Neatly re-spined. Some foxing to text and slight wear to extremities, otherwise a very good copy.A neat local printing of one of Mr. Knocker’s early history lectures. The profits from this publication were to fund the restoration of the Maison Dieu.[ref: 16857 ] £45

396. DOVER - LANGABEER, RAY. SUNNY CORNER, ENGLAND. Printed by Adams and Sons, Dover. 1982viii + 247 pp. Original printed card wrappers. A very good copy.“Sunny Corner” was the name of the house in which the author grew up. Dueto be swept away by the new road from Folkestone to Dover, it is commemorated by the tales of its construction by the author’s grandfather and the events which unfolded through the years of its existence.

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[ref: 18117 ] £15

397. DOVER - MITCHELL, VIC and KEITH SMITH. DOVER TO RAMSGATE INCLUDING THE MARGATE SANDS BRANCH

Middleton Press 1990Small 4to. 9.5 x17 in. 96pp. Illustrated throughout with black and white photographs and diagrams. Laminated pictorial boards, spine faded.[ref: 19378 ] £25

398. DOVER - PIKE'S DOVER AND DISTRICT LOCAL DIRECTORY 1932-33.

Garnett, Mepham and Fisher, Ltd. Brighton. 1932-33.378 pp. Lacking map. Bound in the original blue cloth, blocked and decorated in silver. A very good copy with the usual minor faults.Scarce [ref: 20027 ] £110

399. DOVER - PIKE’S DOVER AND DISTRICT LOCAL DIRECTORY 1938-39.

Garnett, Mepham and Fisher, Ltd. Brighton. 1938-39Small 8vo. 388 pp. With the map. Original decorated cloth, a near fine copy.In fine condition. Scarce. ***We have another copy lacking the map at £85*** [ref: 17903 ] £100

400.DOVER - ROY, JOHN and TONY THOMPSON. PICTURE PALACES REMEMBERED. An affectionate look at the Cinema Theatres of Dover, Deal and Folkestone.

Glenton Publications, Dover. 1987116 pp. profusely illustrated.. Pictorial card wrappers. A near mint copy.[ref: 18401 ] £20

401. DOVER - SCOTT, RIVERS. THE GATEWAY OF ENGLAND. A shortsurvey of the activities of the Port of Dover, past and present, and of the Dover Harbour Board, the modern Port Authority, which in 1956 celebrated its 350th anniversary.

Dover Harbour Board, n.d. but 1965Second Edition revised. 4to., 7.5 x 10 inches, 48 pp., text with 46 pp., of photoillustrations. Original colour illustrated card wrappers.Interesting look at the history of the Board and its state in the mid 1960’s with some fine photographs of the docks and ships. [ref: 18152 ] £12

402. DOVER - STEER, FRANCIS. (Editor). JOHN PHILIPOT'S ROLL OF THE CONSTABLES OF DOVER CASTLE AND LORD WARDENS OF THE CINQUE PORTS, 1627. With a foreword by Sir Winston Churchill.

G. Bell and Sons. 1956

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4to. 31 pp. with 7 colour plates. Original cloth in dustwrapper.[ref: 10334 ] £10

403. DOVER - VINE, JESSIE ELIZABETH. DOVER REMEMBERED. RECOLLECTIONS OF A CHILDHOOD IN OLD DOVER.

Meresborough Books. 1984120 pp. with numerous b/w photographs and illustrations by Thomas George Vine. Original pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy. [ref: 16936 ] £10

404. DOVER - WARD, LOCK AND CO. GUIDE TO DOVER, ST. MARGARET'S BAY, WALMER, DEAL, CANTERBURY, MAP OF SOUTH-EAST KENT AND PLANS OF DOVER, DEAL, CALAIS, BOULOGNE, ETC

Ward, Lock and Co. n. d. but c 1922-23Fifth Edition.Revised xvi + 62 + 64 + 56 + 80 pp. adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth. A very good copy.Interesting hotel adverts, etc. [ref: 18740 ] £25

405. DOVER - WELBY, DOUGLAS. DOVER 1810 - 1910. Crabwell Publications/Buckland Press, Dover. 1978Oblong, 11.5 x 8.5 inches. [32] pp. comprising 50 illustrations in sepia on heavy cream paper, including two attractive drawings by Howard Penton. Signed by the author. Original coloured pictorial card wrappers. A little sunned but a very good example.A map indicates the location of each of the places illustrated and captions provide useful information. Well-produced item for the local historian. [ref: 16949 ] £10

406. DOVER CASTLE - DARELL, REV. WILLIAM. THE HISTORY OF DOVER CASTLE, ILLUSTRATED WITH 10 VIEWS AND A PLAN OF

THE CASTLE.Printed for S. Hooper. 1786Small folio. vi + 68 pp. with 10 copper engraved plates anda folding plan. cA very nice copy of this printing of Darell's work, here translated from the Latin manuscript in the College of Arms. Darell was chaplain to Queen Elizabeth I. This copy is from Castle Freke Library with their attractive Bookplate. We have a further copy of this title in stock at the same price.

[ref: 17376 ] £175

407. DOVER CASTLE - DARELL, REV. WILLIAM. THE HISTORY OF DOVER CASTLE, ILLUSTRATED WITH 10 VIEWS AND A PLAN OF THE CASTLE.

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Printed for Hooper and Wigstead, No.212 High Holborn, opposite Southampton Street, Bloomsbury-Square 1797Tall folio, viii +71 pp.+ [1] advert with 10 copper engraved plates and a folding plan. This copy measures overall 13 x 9.5 inches. Bound in half-calf over marbled boards with embossed and gilt decoration to spine and contrasting title label, gilt. The edition of 1797 was reset but retained the original engraved illustrationsA very nice copy of this printing of the work of WilliamDarell, Chaplain to Queen Elizabeth I, translated from the Latin manuscript in the College of Arms.

[ref: 19514 ] £195

408.DOVER CASTLE, PUCKLE, REV. J. THE CHURCH AND FORTRESS OF DOVER CASTLE. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM THE AUTHOR'S DRAWINGS.

Oxford and London : John Henry and JamesParker. 1864[10] + 132 pp. + 8 pp. publisher’s catalogue. Illustrated with 2 folding plans and 9 lithographic plates, 2 of which are printed in colour. Bound in the original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.This work is of importance as the best recordof the Saxon church before it was ‘restored’ by Puckle.

[ref: 19659 ] £35

409. DOVER GUIDE. DOVER HARBOUR BOARD. GUIDE FOR 1932.Dover Harbour Board, 1932Oblong 4to., 64 pp. with plan and photo illustrations throughout. One or two of the photo plates of ships have had the sea watercoloured in by a child but quite neatly, and this remains a good copy. Original decorated boards, gilt.An interesting look at the history of the Board and its state in the 1930s, withsome fine photographs of the docks and ships. [ref: 19712 ] £35

410. DOVER GUIDE. DOVER THE GATEWAY OF ENGLAND. OFFICIALGUIDE AND SOUVENIR PUBLISHED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE DOVER ENTERTAINMENTS COMMITTEE.

The Dover Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd., 144, Snargate Street, Dover. Nodate but [1932]5.5 x 8.5 inches. 110 pp.with coloured frontis illustration by Leonard Richmond, and double-page map. Illustrated throughout in b/w. Original printed card wrappers with diagonally cropped front wrapper. Staples rusted and therefore stitched. Some creasing to first few fore edges due to the novel design, otherwise very good. A flyer for the 1932 Band Season and Forthcoming Events is loosely inserted

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An unusual item with its croppped wrapper, the diagonal following the title at a 45 degree angle. A footnote ascribes copyright for the text to S.S. Dyson in 1932 and two fixtures for County Cricket are also dated 1932, thereby fixing publication date. [ref: 19805 ] £20

411. DOVER GUIDE. DOVER “THE GATEWAY OF ENGLAND”. A GUIDE BOOK AND ITINERARY OF DOVER BRACING AND EXHILARATING.

G.W. Grigg & Son, St. George’s Press, Dover. [1925]128 pp. + small folding map with numerous b/w photo illustrations. Original full-colour pictorial paper wrapper. A little foxed and edgeworn and missing top right corner. Staples rusted but not affecting text. A good copy of a scarce guide.[ref: 17401 ] £35

412. DOVER GUIDE, EVANS, SEBASTIAN and F. BENNETT-GOLDNEY. (Edited by). HANDBOOK TO DOVER.

Printed at the “Standard” Office, Dover for the British Association for the Advancement of Science. 1899121 pp. + folding plan of Dover Harbour with several figuresto the text and a folding map. Lacking separate geological map. Original red cloth, gilt. A near fine copy of a well-produced publication.An interesting work, the handbook comprises a number of chapters, written by experts in their subjects, and pertaining to Dover. These include the Geology of the District, the Early History, The Castle, The Harbour and

port of Dover as a resort, the Natural History of the District among others. [ref: 17441 ] £25DOVER GUIDE, HEYWOOD, JOHN. JOHN HEYWOOD’S ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO DOVER WITH EXCURSIONS. PRICE ONE PENNY.John Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester. n.d. c18938vo. 7.5 x 5 inches [2] + 24 pp. + [2] + double page plan of Dover with adverts on verso. Illustrated from photographs. Original printed paper wrappers, somewhat fragile with a corner missing from the front cover not affecting the printed matter, otherwise a very good example.These ephemeral, paper-bound, ‘Penny’ guides are very hard to find and must have had a very high mortality rate. [ref: 21733 ] £100

413. DOVER GUIDE, HEYWOOD, JOHN. JOHN HEYWOOD’S ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO DOVER WITH EXCURSIONS. PRICE ONE PENNY.

John Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester. n.d. c.18968vo. [6] + 32 pp. + [6] + double page plan of Dover with adverts on verso. Illustrated from photographs. Original printed paper wrappers, somewhat fragile with a corner

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missing from the rear cover not affecting the printed matter, otherwise a very good example.These ephemeral, paper-bound, ‘Penny’ guides are very hard to find and must have had a very high mortality rate. [ref: 20381 ] £110

414. DOVER HARBOUR. IN PARLIAMENT SESSION 1932-33 DOVER HARBOUR PLANS AND SECTIONS. NOVEMBER 1932. ENGINEERS: SIR ALEXANDER GIBB AND PARTNERS, QUEEN ANNE’S LODGE, WESTMINSTER, SW1. SOLICITORS MOWLL AND MOWLL, DOVER. PARLIAMENTARY AGENTS: WYATT and Co., VICTORIA STREET, WESTMINSTER. SW1.

Together with,IN PARLIAMENT SESSION 1932-33. DOVER HARBOUR BOOK OF REFERENCE TO PLANS.Cook, Hammond & Kell, 47-49 Tothill St., Westminster. 1932Large Folio plans. Original printed wrappers, title page and 4 pages of plans and sections printed on one side only. Book of reference. Folio. Original wrappers, title page and 12 pp. Bound as issued, at present rolled. Wrappers slightly dusty, but in very good condition.These plans are for providing a railway tunnel from Buckland to near the Eastern Breakwater, a link which was never completed. From the collection of Alec Hasenson. Scarce. [ref: 12416 ] £75

415. DOVER HARBOUR BOARD. BROCHURE FOR 1932. Dover Dover Harbour Board, 1932.

Oblong 4to. 10 X 8 inches, 64 pp. with plan and photo illustration throughout. One or two of the photo plates of ships have had the sea water-coloured in by a child but quite neatly, and this remains a good copy. Original decorated boards, gilt.Interesting look at the history of the Board and its state in the 1930s with some fine photographs of

the docks and ships, including the Aerial Ropeway which ran from Tilmanstone Colliery to Bunkers in the harbour, and the early Townsend Motor Car Ferry. [ref: 21732 ] £35

416. DOVER VIEWS. 32 VIEWS OF DOVER AND DISTRICT. Callcut and Beavis, 77 and 78 Great Eastern Street, London. No date but c.1910Oblong view-book with 24 photo plates. Original gilt stamped red cloth. A little rubbed at extremities but a very good copy.The views are as follows - Shakespeare's Cliff; The Harbour, Dover; The Parade, Dover; The Lord Warden Hotel & Castle Street, Dover; The Strand, Deal; The Pier, Deal; Deal and

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Walmer Castles; The Promenade, Deal; Queen Elizabeth’s Pocket Pistol & The Sands and Parade, Dover; Dover Castle; Admiralty Pier, Dover; General View & Waterloo Crescent, Dover; The Pier, Folkestone; The Lift & Metropole Hotel, Folkestone; Folkestone Parish Church (2); Folkestone from the Pier; The Harbour, The Band Stand, Leas Shelter, Lower Sandgate Road,Folkestone; S.S. Mary Beatrice leaving Folkestone Harbour; Sandgate (2); Hythe (2); The Warren, Folkestone. [ref: 18147 ] £35

417. DOVER VIEWS. THE ALBUM OF DOVER VIEWS. Charles Reynolds and Co., 26 & 27 Milk Street 1893

8vo. Concertina type view-book of glazed lithos, containing 17 different images and two fine panoramas, one of Dover from thesea, and a smaller one of Marine Parade. Printed in Germany. Original decorated red boards blocked in gilt. A very good copy.This type of view book originates in Germany and is an example of the curious

mixture of photograph and drawing which was prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This example probably dates from about 1893 as the Promenade Pier, which was completed in that year, is shown as constructed, although it is quite common for these albums to have ‘proposed’ developments shown as completed. [ref: 17237 ] £125

418. DOVER VIEWS. EARLY PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW BOOK By FRANCIS FRITH AND OTHERS.

No place or date, but c.1870

Oblong 8vo. View book containing 12 real photographic plates (albumen types) pasted onto thick card and professionally and neatly titled by hand. Original green cloth, with gilt title on the upper board, within a blind stamped

frame. A fine example with the photos free from fading, slight loss of surface from one image on to the facing image, but a very good example.A most interesting collection of views which are mostly unsigned. Some are

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probably the work of Adams, the pioneering Dover photographer and some are marked ‘Frith’s series’. With the advent of photography the local publishers were quick to supply albums and binders where the customer could cho ose from the images in stock and compile their own collections as souvenirs. This is an early example. The Views are:-1. Dover (view of the sea front looking east, with numerous boats drawn up above high water mark). 2. Dover (looking east from Admiralty Pier to the Harbour entrance). 3. The Esplanade ( looking west). 4. The Esplanade (looking east) 5. The Harbour (Wellington Dock with four paddle steamers and sailing ships). 6. Dover (The Crimea memorial etc). 7. Castle Street (with horse-drawn carts etc). 8. South Foreland (east cliffs). 9. Shakespeare Cliff (with old wooden railway viaduct) 10. Lord Warden Hotel ( from Admiralty Pier) 11. Dover Castle. !2. The Pharos. [ref: 13291 ] £250

419. DOVER VIEWS. THE ROYAL ALBUM OF DOVER AND DISTRICT VIEWS. A.H. POINTER (Publisher.)

A.H. Pointer, Royal Bazaar. No date but c.1880Coloured folding concertina-type glazed lithos, printed in Germany with a photo-litho of Pointer standing outside his shop. Original red cloth, gilt.Better than average view book of this type, not often found coloured . [ref: 17236 ] £45

420. DOVER VIEWS THIRTY TWO VIEWS OF DOVER AND DEAL. Published by Newman and Co London n.d. c.1870Oblong 8vo. 32 steel-engraved vignette views (7 x 5 inches). Bound in the original brown cloth, gilt, without text as issued. A very good copy.

The steel engravings are as follows (larger full page views are marked thus*):- Marine Parade, Dover; The Promenade Gardens, Dover; The Barracks, Dover; Governor’s Apartments or the Entrance to Dover Castle; Admiralty Pier, Dover; The Espl anade, Dover; Granville Docks and Convalescent Home, Dover; Dover and AdmiraltyPier; Dover Crescent and Castle; Dover Sailors’ Home and Russian

Mortar; Dover Parade and Heights; Dover Castle; St. Radigund’s Abbey Dover; St. James’ Church, Dover; Officers’ Apartments, New Barracks, Dover; Dover from the Harbour; *Dover Castle; *Shakespeare’s Cliff and Tunnel Dover; *Queen Elizabeth’s Pocket Pistol; *Dover; *Dover Harbour;

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*South East View of Deal Castle; *Walmer Castle; *Walmer Church; Deal Pier looking towards the Esplanade; The Hospital Barracks, Deal; Prince ofWales Terrace, Victoria Town, Deal; The South Barracks, Deal; Walmer Castle, Kent; Walmer Castle, near Deal; North Barracks, Deal; Deal Pier from the Esplanade. [ref: 15817 ] £265

421. DREWETT, PETER., DAVID RUDLING, AND MARK GARDINER, . THE SOUTH EAST TO AD 1000. A REGIONAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND

Longman, 1988xvi + 384 pp. illustrated throughout. Pictorial card covers.An impressive survey of our region from 300,000 BC to Anglo-Saxon times. Together with Peter Brandon’s volume South-east from AD 1000 the two works form a complete overview of our region’s History and Archaeology. Very well researched. [ref: 18044 ] £10

422. DU BOULAY, F.R.H. . THE LORDSHIP OF CANTERBURY. An essay on medieval society. F. R. H. Du Boulay Professor of Medieval History in the University of London.

London Nelson. 1966First Edition. 8vo. xiv + 418 pp. Half title. Illustrated with black and white photographic frontispiece, three folding maps and map and 7 tables in text. Bound in original green cloth, gilt, in pictorial, price clipped dust wrapper. Erased inscription on first free endpaper, a few chips and stains to wrapper but otherwise a good copy. In medieval England the archbishop of Canterbury was not only the most important spiritual peer, but also the lord of a huge estate scattered over south-east England. In this study Du Boulay traces the building up of this estate before the Norman Conquest and analyses its development during the five centuries between the Conquest and Cranmer’s surrender of church lands to Henry VIII. Includes appendices, Knights’ fees held of the Archbishop of Canterbury and Lists of some office-holders in the Archbishop’s temporal administration to c. 1540. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21775 ] £65

423. DUCKWORTH, Christian Leslie Dyce and Graham Easton LANGMUIR. RAILWAY AND OTHER STEAMERS.

Prescot T. Stephenson & Sons Ltd. 1968Second Edition, 8vo. 6 x 8.75 inches. xii + 432 pp. Illustrated with 34 pp. of 102 photographic plates. Bound in the original blue cloth, gilt, with the scarce original pictorial dust-wrapper. A very good copy.A comprehensive survey of all steamships that operated in the British and Irish railway fleets, arranged by region, including Lakeland shipping, and those operated by continental copies. It includes detailed fleet lists at the end.First published in 1948, this second edition records the end of the steam

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turbine era and the beginning of the motor vessel and is still the best work onthe railway steamers. [ref: 21339 ] £45

424. DULWICH - BLANCH, WILLIAM HARNETT. DULWICH COLLEGE AND EDWARD ALLEYN: A SHORT HISTORY OF THE FOUNDATION OF GOD’S GIFT COLLEGE AT DULWICH TOGETHER WITH A MEMOIR OF THE FOUNDER BY SIR WILLIAM HARNETT BLANCH

E.W.Allen. 1877First edition. 4to. viii + 136 illustrated with an engraved frontispiece and another view of the oldbuilding and two portraits. Bound in original

green cloth, heavily blocked in gilt with a central medallion-like portrait of Alleyn. A very attractive Victorian cloth binding, only very slightly worn at extremities, a very good copy.[ref: 17587 ] £50

425. DULWICH - HALL, EDWIN T. DULWICH HISTORY AND ROMANCE 967-1922. The Manor, College, Schools, Village and Picture Gallery, Edward Alleyn and the Elizabethan and Jacobean Theatres. By Edwin T. Hall an Estates and College Governor of Dulwich College and Chairman of the Picture Gallery Committee. Second and Enlarged Edition 1922.

Bickers and Sons, Ltd., Publishers, [London]. 1922Small 8vo. 5.5 x 7.75 inches. xi + 64 pp. Illustrated by [40] plates, including frontispiece. Half-title. Bound in original maroon cloth, gilt. with deckled pages. Some browning, blank label pasted on verso of first free endpaper; otherwise good condition. A well illustrated account of Dulwich, largely concerned with the history of the College and its art gallery. The links with the former priory of Bermondsey and Southwark Cathedral are also emphasised. The College was established by Edward Alleyn (1566-1626), the actor, theatre owner andcontemporary of Shakespeare and received its foundation deed in 1619. The book includes a list of seventeen theatres in the London area, constructed, 1576-1632. Edwin Thomas Hall (1851-1923) was a governor of the College. [ref: 20264 ] £25

426. DURHAM, DICK. THE LAST SAILORMAN. Terence Dalton, Lavenham. 1989160 pp. with b/w photo illustration throughout. Original blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.[ref: 20798 ] £25

FOLKESTONE PUBS427. EASDOWN, MARTIN and ROONEY, EAMONN. MORE TALES

FROM THE TAPROOM A HISTORY OF THE PUBLIC HOUSES &

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BREWERIES OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, CHERITION, SEABROOK, SHORNCLIFFE, MOREHALL AND NEWINGTON.

Published by the authors. 2004232 pp., copiously illustrated. Original pictorial soft cover. New.‘Tales From the Taproom’, the earlier work on Folkestone’s public houses by these well-known local authors, was very popular and quickly sold out. This later offering proved equally as popular as in addition to Folkestone, it encompassed Cheriton, Sandgate and Seabrook. Published in limited numbers, and now out of print. [ref: 17849 ] £13

428. EASDOWN, MARTIN AND SAGE, LINDA. HYTHE A HISTORY. Phillimore. 20044to. xi + 132 pp. illustrated throughout. Signed by both authors. Original cloth in price-clipped dust wrapper, otherwise as new.Well-compiled and illustrated history of Hythe. [ref: 20727 ] £20

429. EAST KENT SEWERS. PETITIONS TO THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS FOR EAST KENT.

1832Folio manuscript, 10 x 16 inches, comprising three sheets of watermarked laid paper (1831), folded in half across the width and then folded again, written in ink in a neat hand, comprising official copies of five petitions to the Commissioners of Sewers, with various dates between October 1830 and June1832, repesenting the dates of the sittings of Commissioners. The petitions were recorded consecutively on the three sheets with a solid line drawn between each. The three sheets show signs of old folds with some minor splits and pinholes at the top left corner. There is some water staining that predates the writing of the document, as the ink is unaffected, otherwise clean with the exception of one quarter of the blank verso of page 5 that forms the external surface when folded, this being grubby and dusty from handling and storage.The five petitions involve, respectively, [1] Charles Culmer, landowner in the valleys of Preston and Deerson, supported by Carr Culmer, John Addley, Charles Delmar, John Presser, George Culmer, Thos. A Champion, William Robinson, Edward Slater Sen., George Knight, Sam. Elgar Toomer, and James Dowker, requesting appointment as Expenditor for the said valleys, in succession to George Culmer. [2] George Culmer, petitioning for dischargefrom his responsibilities as Expenditor of the previously mentioned valleys. [3] Edward Gibbons, expenditor of the valley of Minster, supported by George Harman, John Paramour and Mr Pett, petitioning the rebuilding of a freshwater sluice. [4] Edward Curling, Expenditor of the valley of Seasalter, supported by Edward Stone, Mr. Tapsell, Leonard Apsley, Austin Neame and Giles Hilton, petitioning for casting and cleansing of the dike between Neame’s Horse Bridge and Graveney Stream. [5] John Bell, landowner in the valley of Chartham, on behalf of himself, Edward Darell and other landowners, petitioning for the Main River [Stour], from Horton Bridge below Chartham, and for ‘a considerable distance’ to be cast and cleansed to relieve flooding in the adjacent fields. Also to reroute the river

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through a cut of about 550 yards to improve the flow and reduce the cleansing necessary. An interesting document, giving much information about the landowners and their involvement in maintaining the sewers and waterways [ref: 20751 ] £60

430. EDDISON, JILL. ROMNEY MARSH SURVIVAL ON A FRONTIER. With a foreword by Barry Cunliffe.

Tempus Publishing Ltd., Stroud, Glos. 20004to. 160 pp. Illustrated throughout. Softback, illustrated wrappers.This erudite work, the result of over 20 years research into all things Marshian, is finally in print. The Romney Marsh Research Group was founded in 1983 by Professor Barry Cunliffe and Jill Eddison to bring together the work of archaeologists, historians and geographers. The detailed and scholarly work of these specialised fields is presented by Jill Eddison for the general reader and expert alike and has entirely succeeded in a well-produced book of enduring interest. *Please note this is a new publication and we have a small stock, but we can order further copies on request. [ref: 8149 ] £17

431. EDMUNDS, F.H. BRITISH REGIONAL GEOLOGY: THE WEALDENDISTRICT.

H.M.S.O., London. 1935Large 8vo. vii + 85 pp. with folding geological map + 12 otherb/w plates and 21 figures to the text. Original printed card wrappers. A good copy. Issued by the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, this is a comprehensive look at the geological history and economy of the Weald. [ref: 17214 ] £15

432. ELHAM - AUCTION PARTICULARS. OXROAD FARM, ELHAM. PARTICULARS, PLAN AND CONDITIONS OF SALE OF THE RESIDENTIAL & AGRICULTURAL ESTATE KNOWN AS “OXROAD FARM,” ELHAM, COMPRISING A SUBSTANTIALLY BUILT SUPERIOR FARM HOUSE, STABLING FOR 2, COW AND CATTLE LODGES, LARGE BARN AND OTHER BUILDINGS, AND PRODUCTIVE MEADOW AND ARABLE LAND, IN ALL ABOUT 51 Acres, 3 Roods. 1 Perch. Between Canterbury and Folkestone. About 1.5 miles from Elham Station, 8 miles from Folkestone and 9 miles from Canterbury. Healthy and bracing situation 450 feet above sea level. At the Royal Fountain Hotel, Canterbury. Saturday, 30th August, 1924 at 3 p.m.

Geering & Colyer, Ashford 19244to. 5 pp. with a coloured lithographic map. In original printed card wrappers. Wrappers a little rubbed with traces of old folds otherwise, a fine example.

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An attractive coloured map of the property accompanies the particulars. Thedesirable nature of all the property in the Elham Valley has pushed prices upfor this type of material which adds to the history of the property. [ref: 17160 ] £45

433. ELHAM - HART, BRIAN. ELHAM VALLEY REFLECTIONS. A PERSONAL CELEBRATION.

Millgate Publishing, 19894to. 92 pp. Illustrated with fine photographs throughout. Original pictorial wrappers.Historical photographic tour through the Elham Valley. Long out of print and becoming very hard to find. [ref: 20379 ] £35

434. ELHAM, KENT. 1681 - 1909 A COLLECTION OF ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS: LEASES, INDENTURES, CONVEYANCES, WILLS, ETC.

1681 - 1909Various sizes, mostly on vellum, some on paper. Sixteen items, some with more than one document attached. All hand-written in various hands with seals and signatures of the people concerned. Generally a little dusty and discoloured but all legible and mostly in very good condition.An interesting group of documents relating to the Rolfe family of Elham and lands owned or leased by them and called Harland at Ottinge.The names on the documents are, in chronological order, Henry Sander of Elham, Richard Rolfe (father and son), Robert Foster of Acrise, Thomas Gibbon, James and Isaac Rolfe, (Sir) Samuel Egerton Brydges, George Culling, and diverse other Rolfes. [ref: 14730 ] £300

435. ELKS, BRIAN. GIVE ME THE CHILD. AN EARLY STORY OF THE KENT COALFIELD.

Published by the author 2002272 pp. with b/w illustration. Original laminated pictorial boards. A fine copy aside from some highlighting to the text. Signed by the author.[ref: 18396 ] £15

436. ELLIS AYTOUN. ‘VITESSE’. The Story of ‘Continental Express’Barrup, Mathieson and Co. 19494to. 46 pp. with photographic illustrations throughout Original cloth, letteredin greenA nice copy of this fascinating company history. From the library of author David Collyer. [ref: 18061 ] £40

437. ELLIS P. BERRESFORD. CAESAR’S INVASION OF BRITAIN Book Club Associates. 1978Folio. 144 pp. profusely illustrated in black and white. Original brown cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper.

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How the Romans came, saw, but didn’t conquer. An insight into the Britons, their culture, and their preparedness for the Roman invasion of 55 B.C. [ref: 19515 ] £12

438. ELLISTON-ERWOOD, FRANK CHARLES. THE MAKING OF THE NEW ROAD AT LEE. 1824-1828. By F. C. Elliston-Erwood, F. S. A.

The Blackheath Press, Ltd., London, S.E.3 19528vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. 12 pp. illustrated by two plans. Stapled pamphlet in paper wrappers. Good condition. The road network of the New Cross Turnpike Trust (established 1718 to run from Southwark to Lewisham) wAS extended to Lee Green in 1764 and on through Eltham to Footscray in 1780. In 1824 the section of turnpike throughLee ‘was dangerous, narrow and crooked’ and the Trust resolved to build a bypass around the old section. This monograph describes the properties along the route and the legal disputes involved in land acquisition before the new road was completed at a cost of over £3000. Erwood’s research is based on the Trust’s minute books housed in the Kent Archives. [ref: 20893 ] £

439. ELLISTON-ERWOOD, FRANK CHARLES. WOOLWICH AND DISTRICT ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY. OCCASIONAL PAPERS (NO. 2) 1934. Volume XXV. Edited by F. C. Elliston-Erwood, F.S.A.

Printed and published for the Society by K. I. Printing Works, Wellington Street, Woolwich. 19358vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. 28 pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs, including portrait of Erwood and facsimile. Sewn in green paper wrappers, which are starting to become detached. Some inside staining around staples (which have been removed). This miscellany includes two papers by Erwood, on the Ropers of Well Hall, Eltham, with reprints of eight eighteenth century letters and his Notes on Local Artists, divided into four groups and including Paul Sandby, Drawing Master at the Royal Military Academy, 1768-97. [ref: 20892 ] £

440. ELTHAM - BUCKLER, JOHN CHESSELL. AN HISTORICAL ANDDESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE ROYAL PALACE AT ELTHAM.

J. B. Nichols and Son, London, First Edition 8vo. [vi] +108 pp. Illustrated with an engraved frontis and wood engravings in the text. Original quarter-cloth over marbled boards with contrasting title label. One leaf torn, with no loss, and repaired with conservation tape, otherwise a very good, clean copy.

A good account of this historic building. [ref: 18974 ] £125

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441. ELTON, CHARLES I. THE TENURES OF KENT. By Charles I. Elton,Late Fellow of Queen’s College, Oxford; and of Lincoln’s Inn, Barrister-at--Law.

London James Parker and Co., 1867Large 8vo. 6.75 x 10 inches. xx + 424 pp. +[8] pp. Publisher's Catalogue. Bound in brown original cloth, gilt, with deckled side edges; a little worn at extremities but otherwise a good copy.Scarce substantial review of the history of the Tenures of Kent, to show how much less land in the county is of the nature of Gavelkind. Highly detailed survey of the ownership of Kentish landin medieval times. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 19984 ] £100

442. ELVIN, CHARLES, R. S. RECORDS OF WALMER TOGETHER WITH ‘THE THREE CASTLES OF THE DOWNS.’ By The Rev. Charles R.S. Elvin, M.A., Assistant Curate of Walmer. Illustrated with thirteen photo-engravings and two maps.

London Henry Gray, Genealogical and Topographical Bookseller and Publisher, 47, Leicester Square, London, W.C. 1890.Large 4to. 9 x 11 inches. xxii + [ii] + 440 pp. Half title. Illustrated with 2 maps, 12 photo-engravings, including frontispiece, title page vignette view andplan in text. Decorated with head and tailpiece vignettes. Original green cloth,gilt, with framed view, gilt on front board. Top edges gilt. Extremities slightly worn but a fine clean interior. Ex-library copy, with label and discreet stamps, etc.

Scarce and important history of Walmer coveringalmost every aspect - from the early history of the town and its people to royal visitors, the Barracks, natural phenomena (earthquake, waterspouts, great gales and

the 1878 whirlwind), and personal history. It includes a detailed account of the three castles of Walmer, Deal and Sandown. Kent Bibliography.

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[ref: 21287 ] £150

HYTHE SOURCES443. ERWOOD, F.C. ELLISTON. LECTURE NOTES ON HYTHE.

[No date but c.1959-63]Manuscript ruled exercise book, with press cuttings and insertions. 4to. 7 x 9 inches. 66 leaves, of which 36 are blank (one page removed and one inserted with the genealogy of Brockhill family); [60] pp. text in blue ink and pencil, with passages in black ink and red ball point. Book has been used at both ends by inverting it. Bound in stiff boards, marbled red and black. All edges

marbled. Press cutting of 1959 on Cinque Ports mayors pasted on front pastedown and printed notice of history lectures on Hythe, 1959-60, on rear pastedown. Insertions: [12] pp. manuscript, mostly on Tournay family; single sheet of pencil notes on Tournays; press cutting on link with Eye, Suffolk and typescript letter of 1963 from General Secretary of Kent Archaeological Society, Lt.-Col. Meates to Elliston Erwood, regarding his election as Chairman of Council.These notes were probably assembled for the 1959-60 lectures by Frank Charles Elliston Erwood (1883-1968). From his home area of Shooter’s Hill, his interests extended outward to South East London in general and eventually included all the turnpike roads of Kent, on which he became an authority. After the second world war he served as honorary curator and archivist of Hythe Corporation, the content of this notebook relating to that period. More details of his life and career may be found in Archaeologia Cantiana, Vol. LXXIV, 1969. Erwood’s notes contain Extracts from the Hythe Session and Assembly Books, a list of licensed houses, 1695-1711 and covers topics such as the Tournay family (who furnished many mayors and town clerks in the eighteenth century and beyond), the town’s water supply, the town’s link with Yarmouth, the Dover Road, Royalists and Parliamentarians (in the 1640s) and the anti-invasion construction work of 1806-08. [ref: 21064 ] £80

444. ESAU, MIKE and GERALD SIVIOUR. KENT COAST HEYDAY. Ian Allan, Shepperton. 1993Large folio.112 pp. with numerous photographic illustrations. Original sky blue cloth, gilt. A fine copyThis copy bears the bookplate of Kent author David Collyer. [ref: 18684 ] £15

445. ESTATE MAP. PARTS OF LITTLEBOURNE, ICKHAM, GROVE FERRY (WICKHAMBREUX) RICHBOROUGH (ASH), KINGSTON. PLAN NO. 2. IN LIQUIDATION ORIENTAL BANK CORPORATION. DENNE DENNE ESQ. PLAN TO ACCOMPANY

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DUNLOP AND CO’S REPORT. Note. The settled estate colored green The freehold estate colored pink.

Dunlop, Naylor and Lightfoot Surveyors 3, OLd Palace Yard Westminster, S.W. 1885Folding linen map. 67.5 x 37 inches. Hand drawn and coloured. Some wear toextremities and staining, but otherwise fine condition.A beautifully drawn and coloured estate map relating to a number of agricultural properties, largely in the Stour valley and levels, east of Canterbury, extending to the estuary at Richborough. They include Littlebourne Village ( the parishes of Littlebourne and Ickham); Grove FerryMeadows (parish of Wickhambreux), Land at Ickham; Richborough Castle Farm (parish of Ash); Meadow in Ash parish and Marley Wood, Kingston (asmall parish in Barham Downs, several miles away to the south east). Topographical features shown, include Ickham village centre, Grove Ferry Station of the South Eastern Railway, Richborough Castle and amphitheatreand the River Stour at Grove Ferry and Richborough. The names of the tenants of the properties, e.g.. Mr. George Solley, are also indicated. The estate was the former property of the Oriental Banking Company. This was founded in Bombay in 1842, although its HQ was moved to London in 1845. It became one of the leading eastern exchange banks in India and China, but fell into difficulties because of a downward swing of world markets affectingcommodity prices and trade. In 1884 it went into liquidation, which is why these property assets were sold the following year, by which time it had beenreconstituted as the New Oriental Banking Company (final closure was in 1892). As, apart from its London HQ, all its business and branches were overseas, it is not known how it came to own agricultural land and woods in East Kent. The Westminster firm of Land Agents and Surveyors who handled this sale was a partnership between Alexander Milne Dunlop, Arthur Millington Naylor and Francis Lowry Lightfoot, Naylor retiring from the partnership in 1889. This hand-drawn estate map was the originalwhich would then have been lithographed and printed in the descriptive particulars for an auction sale. [ref: 20947 ] £250

446. EVERITT, ALAN. THE COMMUNITY OF KENT AND THE GREAT REBELLION 1640 - 60.

Leicester University Press, 1966356 pp. Original green cloth, gilt. Important text on the effect of the Rebellion on Kentish families and houses. Scarce. [ref: 18886 ] £45

447. EVERITT, ALAN. THE COMMUNITY OF KENT AND THE GREAT REBELLION 1640 - 60.

Leicester University Press, 1973356 pp. Original green soft wrappers. A very good copy with Kent historian Elizabeth Melling’s ownership signature.Paperback version of the important text on the effect of the Rebellion on Kentish families and houses. Scarce. [ref: 21139 ] £15

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448. EVERITT, ALAN. CONTINUITY AND COLONIZATION. The evolution of Kentish settlement. Part of Leicester Studies in English Local History, Communities, Contexts and Cultures.

Leicester University Press 1986xxi + 426 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original green cloth, gilt. A fine copy in unclipped dust wrapper.Study of the evolution of Kentish settlement from the end of the Romano-British period and the coming of the ‘English’ down to the fourteenth century. [ref: 18539 ] £80

449. FAIRFAX-BLAKEBOROUGH, John, ed. THE HUNTING AND SPORTING REMINISCENCES OF H. W. SELBY LOWNDES, M.F.H. Author of ‘Sporting Days and Shooting Stories,’ ‘Country Life and Sport,’ ‘Northern Sports and Sportsmen,’ etc.

London Philip Allan and Co. Ltd. Quality Court, Chancery Lane. 19268vo. 6 x 9 inches. xiii + [i] + 244 pp. Half title. Illustrated with 12 photographic plates, including portrait frontispiece. Decorated with publisher’s device on title page. Bound in original rd cloth, gilt, with running fox on front boards. Extremities worn, small tear on edge of front board and slight staining to boards. Some foxing but otherwise good condition. Undated appreciation of Selby Lowndes (from the Kentish Express) tipped into first free endpaper.A biography of Henry William Selby Lowndes and an account of the East Kent Hunt, of which he was Master of Foxhounds from 1900. Lowndes (b.1876) was bred in an atmosphere of sport, blooded to hounds at the age of four and a half on the Whaddon Chase in Bucks and hunted with his own pack at the age of thirteen. After a spell abroad, in the Argentine, he served as Master of the Wells Harriers and M.F.H. of the Bilsdale in Cleveland. Deciding ‘to take a more fashionable country with an increased number of days’ hunting,’ he left for the East Kent Hunt, based at Elham. The book summarises the Hunt’s history, including its famous Master, Frederick Brockman of Beachborough (1832-70) and of ‘Old Norris,’ the Earth-stopper.Lowndes was famous for his colourful language, described as ‘a big bloke what swore ‘orrible.’ The second part of the book relates the hunting seasons, 1900-20 and includes chapters on the East Kent Farmers and hunting parsons. At this period the Hunt was very popular with officers of the regiments based at Shorncliffe Camp and sometimes met there as well as on the Warren and even the Leas. At the end is a list of the Hunt’s horses and of terrier work, including ‘May Day rattings’ and badger diggings, all’ conducted in a thoroughly sporting manner.’ The author, John Fairfax-Blakeborough (1883-1976), was a freelance writer, originally from Cleveland, who published over a hundred titles on country sports, horse racing and Yorkshire folklore. [ref: 21587 ] £60

450. FARNHAM, TONY. A CONVERSATION WITH DICK THE DAGGER. The Life and Times of Centenarian Bargemaster Captain Henry Miller BEM

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The Society for Sailing Barge Research. 2001Folio. 8 x 12 inches. 78 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations. Signed by the author. Bound in the original pictorial laminated card wrappers. Aside from some slight yellowing of the outer margins, a fine copy.[ref: 20830 ] £15

451.FAVERSHAM GUIDEBOOK, 1936FAVERSHAM - CULMER, GEORGE G. A GUIDE TO THE ANCIENT BOROUGH OF FAVERSHAM.

Printed and Published by Wyard’s Printing Works Ltd, Faversham: [1936]Small 8vo. 72 pp. illustrated with sepia photographs. Contains numerous advertisements. Bound in card wrappers with title page, including borough seal reproduced on front. Fine, clean copy.The guide contains three tours of Faversham and its immediate vicinity, followed by notes on the surroundingvillages. It includes a short list of references and is copiously illustrated with photographs and interesting period advertisements, which are listed at the front. A charming and attractive mid-thirties guidebook. Kent Bibliography

[ref: 19414 ] £45

COCK’S, NEAME’S, HOBBS’ COPY452. FAVERSHAM - DONNE, C. E. AN ESSAY ON THE TRAGEDY OF

‘ARDEN OF FEVERSHAM’ BEING THE SUBSTANCE OF A PAPER READ AT THE MEETING OF THE KENTARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY HELD AT FAVERSHAM IN JULY, 1872, WITH NOTES.

Russell Smith & C o., London and Higham, Faversham. 18738vo. iv + 19 pp. Bound in red cloth, gilt, preserving the original green printed card wrappers. A near mint example.With the bookplates of William Cock, Sir Thomas Neame and James Hobbs. A rare contribution to the Arden literature.

[ref: 16188 ] £150

453. FAVERSHAM - JACOB, EDWARD. THE HISTORY OF FAVERSHAM. With an Introduction by John Whyman, B.Sc. (Econ.) (Lecturer in Economic and Social History, University of Kent at Canterbury) and a Biographical Note on Jacob by Arthur Percival (The Faversham Society).

Sheerness Arthur J. Cassell, for The Faversham Society. 19748vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. 69 + iv-xiii + [iv] + 222 pp. + [13] +[1]. Half title. Illustrated by 23 plates, including 2 portrait frontispieces, facsimiles of original title page and dedication, plan of Faversham, 17 other plates and one engraving in text. Bound in original red cloth, gilt in pictorial dust wrapper. Spine sunned but otherwise in fine condition

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Good facsimile reprint of the 1774 edition, with new introductory material, now long out of print itself.We also have a second similar copy. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 16546 ] £25

HISTORY OF FAVERSHAM, 1774454. FAVERSHAM - JACOB, EDWARD. THE HISTORY OF THE

TOWN AND PORT OF FAVERSHAM, IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. By Edward Jacob, Esq. F.S.A. Illustrated with copper plates.

London: Printed for the author by J.March; and sold by B.White, in Fleet-Street; L.Hawes, and Co. in Pater-Noster-Row; S.Patterson, in Essex-Street; and S.Doorne, in Faversham. 1774First edition. 8vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches [4] + vii-xii + [4] + 222pp. [A-A8], B-P7. Illustrated with 15 engraved copperplates, including twofolding plates (one being a plan of the town), as called for; it alsoincludes five additional plates, four of them folding, at end.Engraving of arms on dedication page and engraving of the medalof King James II and his Queen on p205 (described as Plate 16).Bound in original calf, spine rebacked with red morocco label, gilt.Edges of boards slightly worn. Manuscript inscription of Willm.Jefferys Junr. Town Clerk 1818, on front paste-down and another ofthe same upside-down on rear paste-down. Bound in original calf,spine rebacked with red morocco label, gilt. Edges of boards wornand slightly worn. Manuscript inscription of Willm. Jefferys Junr. Town Clerk

1818, on front paste-down and another of the same upside down on rear paste-down. Thiscopy has the printed book label of ‘Martha Short, Sevenoaks, Kent 1774’ Edward Jacob (1710?-1788), antiquary and naturalist, was born in Canterbury but moved to Faversham ‘and happily

fixed his abode in this pleasant town about 1735,’ where he practised as a surgeon like his father and grandfather before him. The family had a long tradition of holding civic office in Canterbury, Sandwich and Dover and Jacob served four times as Mayor of Faversham. ‘Having an early propensity to the study of antiquities,’ he carried out extensive research on the history of his adopted town resulting in the publication of this volume: ‘In reducing his chaos into form, the author hath aimed at being concise and intelligible, without omitting any thing of consequence.’ In 1770 he wrote thepreface to a reprint of the first edition of the 1592 Elizabethan domestic tragedy ‘Arden of Faversham’ and also published on the flora of the area andthe fossils of the Isle of Sheppey in ‘Planta Favershamienses’ in 1777. In addition to its coverage of the usual civic and ecclesiastical subjects, Jacob’s History includes chapters on the oyster-fishery, the gunpowder works and the cultivation of the dye crop madder. There are eleven appendices, including ‘An account of Mr. Arden’s Murder’ and ‘The Account of King James the Second’s being brought to Faversham’. A fine copy of this

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early history of Faversham, copiously illustrated with engravings, including a handsome plan of the town. ESTC T138691 Smith Kent Bibliography DNB [ref: 19496 ] £450

455. FAVERSHAM - KIP, JOHANNES. BOUGHTON COURT. THE SEAT OF SIR BARNHAM RIDER Kt.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 16 x 13 inches,, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade, this illustration varies in that it is engraved by John Harris. [ref: 20225 ] £150

456. FEAKES, LESLEY. WOODSTOCK AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL MYSTERY.

Geerings, Ashford. 2001128 pp., with numerous cloured photographs and illustrations. Original pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.Interesting and detailed account of the archaeological investigation of the Highsted/Woodstock prehistoric site near Sittingbourne. [ref: 16937 ] £10

SURVEY OF ROCHESTER DIOCESE457. FIELDING, CECIL HENRY. THE RECORDS OF ROCHESTER. By

Revd. C.H. Fielding, M.A., Exhibitioner of Tonbridge School, and LincolnCollege, Oxford. Author of ‘Memories of Malling’ ‘A Handbook of Higham,’ ‘Symbolisms,’ etc.

Snowden Brothers, West Kent Printing Works, Dartford. 19108vo. 5.25 x 7.5 inches. frontis. + 610 pp. Illustrated with three photographic plates, one serving as frontispiece. Inset: List of Subscribers. Original lavender cloth, gilt, over bevelled boards with blind stamping to front. Spine sunned, and extremities worn. Occasional ink and pencil notes, and 1910 ink inscription on first free endpaper. Otherwise clean inside and a good copy.This work is a comprehensive list of all the clergy that served the diocese from the 13th century to the date of publication, preceded by a list of bishops from 604. It is divided into two parts, the first arranged by parish (with a brief description of the church, its bells, plate, brasses etc.), and in the secondpart these lists are alphabetically arranged under one alphabet and cross-referenced. Cecil Henry Fielding (1846-1918), clergyman and naturalist, was educated at Tonbridge School and Lincoln College, Oxford, being ordained in 1870. He served as curate at West Peckham, Ide Hill, Teynham and from 1875 to 1885 at Higham. Appointed Chaplain of Malling Poor Law Union in 1889, he was still in office at the time of publication, residing in West Malling. He also served as president of the Rochester Naturalists’ Club (later Rochester and District Natural History Society) and as joint editor of The Rochester Naturalist. His other publications were Symbolism (1877), A Hand-book of Higham (1882), Memoirs of Malling and its Valley. With a Flora and Fauna of Kent (1893) and A Malling Almanack, 1898. With a

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Short History of the Abbey of the Blessed Mary, West Malling. A scarce publication. [ref: 20111 ] £45

458. FILMER, RICHARD. ASHFORD IN OLD PICTURE POSTCARDS European Library - Zaltbommel Netherlands. 1992Second Edition. Oblong 8vo. iv + 76 pp. illustrated throughout. Original illustrated laminated hardback covers.Part of the popular European Library of old picture postcards series. A very good copy [ref: 15872 ] £12

459. FILMER, RICHARD. KENT TOWN CRAFTS. [In old photographs]Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198248 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18643 ] £10

460. FILMER, RICHARD. KENTISH RURAL CRAFTS AND INDUSTRIES. [In old photographs]

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198148 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18642 ] £10

461. FILMER, RICHARD. OLD ASHFORD. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 1983Folio. 48 pp. with b/w photo illustration throughout. Original glossy pictorial card wrappers. Slight creasing otherwise a very good copy, signed by the author.A fascinating collection of photographs and postcards with much informative text giving a varied and interesting view of Ashford during the early part of the 20th century. [ref: 16048 ] £12

A COLLECTION OF TRACTS, 1684462. FILMER, SIR ROBERT THE FREE-HOLDERS GRAND INQUEST,

TOUCHING OUR SOVEREIGN LORD THE KING AND HIS PARLIAMENT. TO WHICH ARE ADDED OBSERVATIONS UPON FORMS OF GOVERNMENT. TOGETHER WITH DIRECTIONS FOR OBEDIENCE TO GOVERNORS IN DANGEROUS AND DOUBTFUL TIMES. THE FOURTH IMPRESSION.

A Collection of Tracts Written by Sir Robert Filmer, Knight.I. The Free-Holders Grand Inquest...II. Reflections concerning the Original of Government, upon 1.Aristotle’s Politiques. 2. Mr Hobs’s Leviathan. 3. Mr Milton against Salmasius. 4. H. Grotius De Jure Belli. 5. Mr Hunton’s Treatise of Monarchy, or the Anarchy of a Limited or Mixed Monarchy. See note 1 below.

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III. A Succinct Examination of the Fundamentals of Monarchy, both in this and other Kingdoms, as well about the Right of Power in Kings, as of the Original and Natural Liberty of the People. A Question never yet Disputed, though most necessary in these Times. See note 2 below.IV. The Power of Kings: And in Particular, of the King of England.V. An Advertisement to the Jury-Men of England, touching Witches. Together with a Difference between an English and Hebrew Witch.VI. Patriarcha: Or the Natural Power of Kings. See note 3 below.Printed for Rich. Royston, Bookseller to His most Sacred Majesty, at the Angel in Amen-corner, London. 1684Fourth Impression. 8vo. 4.75 x 7.25 inches. Frontis. + [xiv] + 88 + [12] + 89-164 + [6] + 165-236 + [[6] + 237-292 + [2] + 292-309 + [3] + 313-346. A-2A8, 2B-2B4. Illustrated by portrait frontispiece of Charles II. Observations upon Aristotle’s Politiques, Observations concerning the Original of Government and The Power of Kings, each have a separate half-title but the register is continuous throughout. Bound in contemporary speckled full calf, very skilfully rebacked, title lettered in gilt and a single gilt rule on the boards. A fine crisp clean copy.1. Reflections concerning the Original of Government is the title used in the collected works; in 1652 these two tracts were published as Observations upon Aristotle’s Politiques and Observations concerning the Originall of Government. 2. This does not exist as a separate tract as it is merely the alternative title of the preceeding tract, The Anarchy of a Limited of Mixed Monarchy as first printed in 1648 (see ESTC R202080). 3. Although provision has been made for Patriarcha at the end of the contents list, it has not been included in The Free-Holders Grand Inquest, a title which in addition to belonging to the first tract, had become to be used for Filmer’s collected works. Patriarcha, being his most substantial work was obviously thought to be too long to include in a collection of shorter tracts. Certainly Peter Laslett, in his Concise bibliography of the works of Sir Robert Filmer, confirms that the 1684 collected edition of The Free-holders Grand Inquest omits Patriarcha (a chapter in Patriarcha and other Political Works of Sir Robert Filmer, ed. Peter Laslett, Blackwell, 1949). Copies recorded by COPAC also show that the 1684 edition was normally printed with 346 pagesas here, although a few have a separately paginated Patriarcha bound in with them. Sir Robert Filmer (1566-1653) was a Kentish landowner but his support for the royalist cause in the Civil War, led to the sequestration of his manors of Little Charlton and East Suttton and his imprisonment in Leeds Castle, 1643-45. the writing of Tract 5 was inspired by the witchcraft trials at the Kent Summer assizes of 1652. Filmer was a strident defender of the divine right of kings, founding his theory upon the idea that the rule over a family by the father is the true original model for all government. He articulated his views in a number of works including ‘Anarchy of a Limited and Mixed Monarchy’ (1648, an attack on Philip Hunton’s treatise on monarchy, which held that the king’s prerogative is not superior to the authority of parliament); in ‘The Power of Kings;’ in the ‘King of England’ (1648 but not published until 1680); in his Observations concerning the Original of Government upon Mr Hobbes’ Leviathan’; and most completely in Patriarcha (1680). In ‘The Free-Holders Grand Inquest,’ Filmer asserted that the Lords only give counsel to the king, the Commons only perform and

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consent to the ordinances of parliament, and the king alone is the maker of laws, which proceed purely from his will. ESTC R17304 [ref: 18985 ] £650

SIGNED COPY463. FINCH, ROGER. A CROSS IN THE TOPSAIL. AN ACCOUNT OF

THE SHIPPING INTEREST OF R. and R. PAUL LTD., IPSWICHIpswich: The Boydell Press 19794to.122 pp. with b/w illustration throughout. Signed by the author. Original terracotta cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like unclipped dust wrapper.Very good account of Paul’s spritsail barges. Scarce. [ref: 20804 ] £45

464. FINCH, W. COLES. IN KENTISH PILGRIM LAND. Its Ancient Roads and Shrines. Written and illustrated by William Coles Finch Author of Water, its Origin and Use; Water in Nature; The Lure of the Countryside.

London The C. W. Daniel Company Graham House, Tudor Square, E.C.4. 1925First edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches.[2] + 326 pp. + [2] pp. publisher’s catalogue. Half title. Illustrated with 69 pages of black and white plates, including frontispiece and by drawings, maps and plans in text. Decorated by title page vignette. Bound in original red cloth, decorated gilt. A very good copy. Bookplate of Alfred Bootes on front pastedown and of R. E. Marshall on first free endpaper.Well-written and illustrated account of the ancient pilgrims roads, which also includes chapters on the Medway and prehistoric Kent. William Coles Finch (1864-1944) was a waterworks engineer of Chatham, who published a number of books on water, mills and on the history and topography of Kent. We have another copy, of the second impression, 1927, Kent Bibliography [ref: 17957 ] £35

465. FINCH, W. COLES. IN KENTISH PILGRIM LAND. ITS ANCIENT ROADS AND SHRINES.

London, C. W. Daniel Company, Graham House, Tudor Street, EC4. 1927Second impression of the First Edition, 8vo, 9 x 5.5 inches. 326 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original decorated cloth gilt, in the scarce dustwrapper, which is chipped but largely complete, and has preserved the book very well, a very good copy. Well written and illustrated account of the ancient pilgrims roads. [ref: 21305 ] £45

466. FINCH, W. COLES. THE LURE OF THE COUNTRYSIDE. A NATURE LOVER’S POT-POURRI

C. Daniel Co. 1927

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First Edition, 325 pp. with frontispiece by Donald Maxwell and photo illustrations throughout. A fine copy. Original decorated cloth, gilt with the scarce original dust wrapper decorated by Donald Maxwell .Well-written account of rural English natural history in the form of a calender using Kentish examples and with some detail on mills and milling. [ref: 17553 ] £60

467. FINCH, W. COLES. THE MEDWAY RIVER AND VALLEY. The Storyof the Medway Aspects of Life on the Medway Journeyings on the Medway. Written and illustrated by William Coles Finch M.Inst. C.E. Author of In Kentish Pilgrim Land; The Lure of the Countryside; Life in Rural England; Water: Its Origin and Use; Water in Nature; etc.

London The C. W. Daniel Company Forty-six Bernard Street, W.C.1. 1929First Edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. 239 pp. + [1] + [6] pp. publisher’s advertisements at end. Illustrated with 78 pages of plates and line drawings and plans in text. Decorated by publisher’s device in red on title page. Bound in original red cloth, gilt. A very good bright copy.One of Coles Finch's best books, here without a wrapper but clean and bright. It remains one of the best books on the history and topography of the Medway new or old (including an account of the Dutch in the Medway, 1667.William Coles Finch (1864-1944) was a waterworks engineer of Chatham, who published a number of books on water, mills and on the history and topography of Kent. We have a second copy, with autograph letter from the author, his obituary and other articles from local papers and ink notes, pasted on to front and rear pastedowns, endpapers, etc., at £40. Kent Bibliography [ref: 17270 ] £35

SIGNED COPY OF THE FIRST EDITION468. FINCH, W. COLES. WATERMILLS AND WINDMILLS. A

HISTORICAL SURVEY OF THEIR RISE, DECLINE AND FALL AS PORTRAYED BY THOSE OF KENT.

The C.W. Daniel Company, 1933.First edition. 336 pp. with numerous illustrations throughout Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.Scarce first edition of the classic book on the subject, the illustrations in particular are far better quality in this edition than the 1970’s reprint. A copy of the reprint is in stock at £35. [ref: 18758 ] £125

469. FINCH, W. COLES. WATERMILLS AND WINDMILLS. A Historical Survey of their Rise, Decline and Fall as Portrayed by those of Kent.

Sheerness Arthur Cassell. 19764to. 7.25 x 10 inches 336 pp. Illustrated with numerous sepia plates, includingfrontispiece and plates. Bound in original black cloth, gilt in pictorial dust wrapper.The only reprint of the 1933 classic, which has itself become harder to find now. [ref: 16666 ] £35

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470. FINCH, WILLIAM COLES. LIFE IN RURAL ENGLAND. Occupations and Pastimes in Field and Village, Farm and Home, Water Mill and Wind Mill. Written and illustrated by William Coles Finch Author of the Lure of the Countryside; In Kentish Pilgrim Land; Water: Its Origin and Use; Water in Nature, etc.

London The C. W. Daniel Company Forty-six Bernard Street, W.C.1. n.d. but 1928 or 29First edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. 248 pp. + [4] pp. publisher’s advertisements at end. Half title. Illustrated by 69 pages of black and white plates, including frontispiece, and line drawings in text. Decorated by publisher’s device in red on title page. Bound in original red pictorial cloth, gilt. A very fine clean copy.Well written account of English rural life and industries, mainly using Kentish examples and with a particular emphasis. on mills and milling. William Coles Finch (1864-1944) was a water engineer of Chatham, who published a number of books on water, mills and on the history and topography of Kent. [ref: 21671 ] £30

471. FINCH, WILLIAM COLES. THE LURE OF THE COUNTRYSIDE. A Nature Lover’s Pot-pourri. Written and illustrated by William Coles Finch Author of In Kentish Pilgrim Land; Water, its Origin and Use Water in Nature, etc. Frontispiece by Donald Maxwell.

London The C. W. Daniel Company Graham House, Tudor Street, E.C.4. 1927First Edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. 325 pp. + [1] + [2] pp. publisher’s advertisement. Half title. Decorated by publisher’s device in red on title page. Illustrated by coloured frontispiece and 88 pages of black and white plates. Bound in original red decorated cloth, gilt. Spine sunned but otherwise a good copy. Bookplate of R. E. Marshall.Well-written account of rural English natural history in the form of a calendar using Kentish examples and with some detail on mills and milling. William Coles Finch (1864-1944) was a waterworks engineer of Chatham, who published a number of books on water, mills and on the history and topography of Kent. [ref: 18522 ] £35

472. FINCH, WILLIAM COLES. WATER, ITS ORIGIN AND USE. Alston Rivers, Ltd. 1908483 pp. with numerous photo. illus. Orig cloth gilt.Slight water marking on the upper and lower boards, otherwise a very good copy.Not strictly a Kent title although the chapter on chalk has drawn on the author's Kent experience and the index is peppered with Kentish references. A scarce book. [ref: 20739 ] £35

473. FIRTH A short survey of the activities of the Port of Dover, past and present, and of the Dover Harbour Board, the modern Port Authority, which in 1956 celebrated its 350th anniversary.

143

Dover Harbour Board, n.d. but 19574to. 48 pp. text with 46 pp. of photo illustrations. Original illustrated card wrappers.Interesting look at the history of the Board and its state in the late 50’s with some fine photographs of the docks and ships.***A 1965 edition is also available at the same price*** [ref: 18413 ] £12

474. FIRTH, J.B. DOVER AND THE GREAT WAR. Alfred Leney, Dover. (1920)131 pp., with map and photo illustration. Original boards as issued. A clean copy.The only work to record, in any detail, Dover's part in the Great War.

[ref: 21317 ] £35

475. FOLKESTONE. 30 VIEWS OF FOLKESTONE. This edition depicts: 1 The Lees Steps and Beach, Folkestone, Kent; 2 West Cliff, from the Pier, Folkestone; 3 Folkestone, from the Dover Road; 4 Folkestone,from the Sea; 5 Pier and Railway Station, Folkestone; 6 Folkestone Church, Kent; 7 Royal Terrace, Folkestone; 8 The Lees, West Cliff, Folkestone; 9 West Cliff Terrace, Folkestone, Kent; 10 West Cliff, Folkestone, Kent; 11 Clifton

Gardens, Folkestone; 12 Sandgate Road West, Folkestone; 13 Sandgate Road East, Folkestone; 14 Wesleyan Chapel. Folkestone; 15 St Michael's Church, Folkestone; 16 Albion Villas, Folkestone, Kent; 17 Folkestone, from Sandgate plain; 18 Pavilion Hotel, Folkestone; 19 Folkestone, from East Cliff; 20 The Viaduct, Folkestone; 21 Folkestone, Marine Parade; 22 Dover, from the Castle Steps; 23 Dover, from Admiralty Pier; 24 Sandgate, Kent, from the Hythe Road; 25 Devonshire Terrace, Sandgate, Kent; 26 Gloucester Terrace, Sandgate, Kent; 27 Radnor Terrace, Sandgate, Kent; 28 Wellington Terrace, Sandgate, Kent; 29 Sandgate from the Cliff Walk; 30 Sandgate and Camp.

Folkestone [London] J Riley, The Library, High Street [Rock and Co.]. [after 1870]Oblong 8vo. 7 x 5 inches. Vignette view bookwithout text as issued. Illustrated by 30 steelengraved plates. Bound in original maroon blindstamped and gilt cloth. Extremities worn. Slightfoxing affecting plates, otherwise a fine cleanexample. The plates are all dated to the recording of theimage as opposed to its publication, the earliestbeing 1851 and the latest 1870. Presumably, theimages would be reused until the view changed and needed updating, when

144

the old plate would be dropped and a new one drawn. Rock and Co. were commercial view book producers who employed teams of artists to record images of all the popular resorts. The firm would then send travelling salesmen to local booksellers and printers who could choose from sample books which of the views they would use for their personalised publications. Competition seems to have been quite strong in this field as there were at least three similar producers of view books (e.g. Newman, Harwood and Kronheim). Some plates may bear the same titles, but are not identical, because they were drawn by different artists for different companies. This makes identification of different editions quite complex. [ref: 21105 ] £350

476. FOLKESTONE. BEACH FROM THE PIER. A view of the beach looking East, showing the bathing machines and, beyond, the harbour.

No place or date but c. 1890Coloured lithographic view, 6.5 x 5 inches, 10.5 x 9.25 inches overall. Mounted in conservation materials, ready for framing. One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 19694 ] £20

477. FOLKESTONE. FOLKESTONE - THE LEAS, FOLKESTONE. A view of the Leas by Clifton Gardens looking East.

No place or date but c.1890Coloured lithographic view, 6.5 x 5 inches, 10.5 x 9.25 inches overall. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 19614 ] £20

478. FOLKESTONE. FOLKESTONE HARBOUR AND FISHING BOATS. Aview across the outer harbour towards the Stade, showing the end of the East Mole, fishing boats and a steam packet, with St. Peter’s Church and St. Andrew’s Convalescent home above.

No place or date but c.1890Coloured lithographic view, 5 x 3 inches. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 16577 ] £15

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479. FOLKESTONE. THE GEM OF THE KENTISH COAST. 32ND NEW EDITION. THE OFFICIAL HANDBOOK OF THE ADVERTISING AND INFORMATION BUREAU OF THE FOLKESTONE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.

F.J. Parsons, Folkestone. [1932]8vo, 144 pp. with photo illustrations throughout. Original pictorial card wrappers. Attractive 1930's Folkestone guide with detailed hotel advertisements, many illustrated with photos and illustrations of other establishments such as the Central Super Cinema in George Lane and The Playhouse in Guildhall Street.[ref: 19451 ] £35

480.FOLKESTONE. MARINE GARDENS, FOLKESTONE. A view of the gardens with the Bandstand and Marine Crescent in the background and the Leas visible beyond.

No place or date but c.1890Coloured lithographic view, 5 x 3 inches. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 16574 ] £15

481. FOLKESTONE. SHORNCLIFFE CAMP. A view of the Parade Ground with two horse-drawn gun limbers galloping across the foreground and soldiers and a row of tents beyond. An unusual view with lots of interesting detail.

No place or date but c.1890Coloured lithographic view, 6.5 x 5 inches, 10.5 x 9.25 inches overall. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing.One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 18080 ] £20

482. FOLKESTONE. SOME ASPECTS OF THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE FOLKESTONE DISTRICT.

Ashford, Invicta Press. 1968102 pp., with illustrations throughout. Original cloth, gilt, in dustwrapper.Published to mark the Centenary of the Folkestone Natural History Society. [ref: 10798 ] £15

483. FOLKESTONE. ST. MARY’S CHURCH, FOLKESTONE. A view of the church from the North-West corner with Priory Gardens beyond.

No place or date but c.1890

146

Coloured lithographic view, 5 x 3 inches. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 16579 ] £15

484. FOLKESTONE. VIEW FROM THE WEST CLIFF, FOLKESTONE. A view of the East end of the Leas showing Albion Villas, Priory Gardens, the descent to Marine Crescent and the Harbour.

No place or date but c.1890Coloured lithographic view, 6.5 x 5 inches, 10.5 x 9.25 inches overall. Mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. One of a series of charming views of Folkestone, this is an example of the curious mixture of photographic/hand-drawn lithographic views which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photography finally won the day. This is made particularly attractive by the use of colour and, as such, is scarce. [ref: 16607 ] £20

485. FOLKESTONE. A WINDY DAY ON THE LEES, FOLKESTONE. OCT. 1880.

Marrin’s Bookshop. 2007Giclee reproduction 10.5 x 14.5 inches printed on Somerset Velvet acid-free paper Published in 2007 in a limited edition of 50 copies. Produced for us using state of the art reproduction technology on very high quality paper and guaranteed colourfast .A charming Victorian caricature depicting a group of promenaders with their bath chairs, children and dogs all caught up in the blustery breeze as they make their way down the ‘Lees’, gripping their umbrellas and hats. Therusty browns, muted purples and mossy greens all contribute to the feel of the Autumn day. Young soldiers glance amorously at the serving maids, ladies and gentlemen’s eyes meet, and faces look away like the ships that are passing each other in the distance. [ref: 18347 ] £35

486. FOLKESTONE - ANONYMOUS WATERCOLOUR. FOLKESTONE FROM THE LEAS. A fine original watercolour drawing ofFolkestone in the early nineteenth century, before the harbour improvements and the arrival of the railway. There are no less than threeCustoms cutters depicted, emphasising the switch of resources to the Preventive Men as a result of the cessation of hostilities. Folkestone had at this time a major Customs presence due to the port’s well-known connection with the ‘Free Trade’.

*Provenance: We have a record of this work having passed through our handsabout 30 years ago. It was purchased in the Acrise Place sale and sold to Dr C.H. Bishop, the late Folkestone historian, whose collection was dispersed after his death some years ago.

147

Original watercolour no signature or date but c. 1820Watercolour on paper 19 x 14 inches, recently mounted in conservation materials and framed in a classic gilt moulding. A very well-observed watercolour, confidently painted by an unidentified artist. Slightly faded but in fine condition. Looking east from a point just west of the top of the present day Road of Remembrance, with open fields where Albion Villas now stand. In the foreground, sheep are grazing and a couple are walking arm in arm along the cliff path, with the unrestored Parish Church in the middle distance and the Georgian and medieval buildings of Church Street behind. Perched on top of the cliff is a small walled look-out post which was presumably the south-western end of the Battery, with a building not far away which may well be the Battery Blockhouse itself. Behind these in the distance we see the two Martello towers on the East Cliff and beyond these, the cliffs to Shakespeare’s Cliff outside Dover. From a broken fence in the foreground we see a rough path leading down the cliff , and we also look down on the Harbour and Lower Road. Two customs cutters are drawn up the beach and a gang of men are in the act of pulling one of the craft over on its side to be worked on. Behind this we see three sides of the early harbour, and Copt Point beyond. Shipping is enteringthe harbour mouth and several fishing smacks dot the sea. Another fast-looking customs cutter is standing off the beach, on which there are two bathing machines and a lugger being launched. [ref: 19709 ] £950

487. FOLKESTONE - BISHOP, C.H. CHARLES DICKENS IN FOLKESTONE An Account of the Novelist’s visits to Folkestone and his Writings about the Town by C.H. Bishop, M.A., Ph.D.

No place or date but Folkestone [1970][20] pp. with illustrations. Stapled and bound in original pictorial card wrappers. Bookplate inside front coverNow scarce monograph. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19213 ] £12

488. FOLKESTONE - BISHOP, C.H. OLD FOLKESTONE PUBS. OLD INNS, TAVERNS AND HOTELS OF THE ANCIENT BOROUGH OF FOLKESTONE.

K.C.C., 1979.8vo., 107 pp. with photo illustrations. Orig. pictorial wrappers.Now scarce monograph. [ref: 18744 ] £12

489. FOLKESTONE - BISHOP, C.H. SOME FOLKESTONE WORTHIESTEN OUTSTANDING PERSONS WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO LIFE AND DEVELOPMENT OF OLD FOLKESTONE.

No place or date but Folkestone. 197948 pp. with photo illustration. Original card wrappers.Now scarce monograph. [ref: 18452 ] £12

148

490. FOLKESTONE - BROWN, REV. J.H. A HISTORY OF HARVEY GRAMMAR SCHOOL.

Folkestone, F. J. Parsons, 1962240 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth, gilt. Fine copy.A very good copy of the definitive history of the 'Harvey'. Not having a long print run, this has become quite hard to find. [ref: 17754 ] £30

491. FOLKESTONE - COOKE, E.W. A VIEW OF FOLKESTONE HARBOUR.

Signed E.W. Cooke and dated 1830Original pencil and wash drawing on paper, heightened with white, 10 x 5 inches approx., mounted in conservation materials, framed in light oak and glazed, overall size 17 x 12 inches approx. Depicting the foreshore at the end ofThe Stade with fishermen tending their nets, with boats and ships in the harbour and the general bustle of activity around the fishermen’s quarter. The Parish Church overlooks the scene in the background. Titled Folkestone, and signed and dated in pencil. A delightful, busy and accomplished drawing, which undoubtedly formed thebasis of Cooke’s famous engraved view of ‘Folkestone Harbour, Low Water’, published the following year in ‘Sixty Five Views of Shipping and Craft’. [ref: 20236 ] £1400

492. FOLKESTONE - ELGAR, W.H. THE ANCIENT BUILDINGS OF THE FOLKESTONE DISTRICT.

F.J. Parsons, Folkestone. 1921.Small 4to. 6 x 9.5 inches. xi + [1] +108 pp. + [1] pp. advertisement, with plans and illustrations by the author. Original yellow boards. A mint copyThe first (and only) of an intended series on the buildings of the neighbourhood. Twenty-six most interesting buildings are covered:- Folkestone Parish Church, Priory,and Mansion House, Martello Towers, Sandgate Castle, Cheriton Church, Enbrook Manor, Newington Church, Hawkinge Church, Swingfield Church, Capel Church, Alkham Church, St Radegund’s Abbey, Paddlesworth Church, Lyminge Church, Barfreston Church and

Sculpture, Hythe Church and Crypt, St. Bartholomew's Hospital Hythe, Saltwood Church and Castle, Postling Church, West Hythe Church, and Lympne Church and Castle. ***Another very good copy available at £30*** Kent Bibliography [ref: 17750 ] £35

493. FOLKESTONE - ENGLISH, JOHN. ENGLISH'S REMINISCENCES OF OLD FOLKESTONE SMUGGLERS AND SMUGGLING DAYS BY AN OLD FOLKESTONER.

Folkestone, John English, n.d. but circa 1882

149

12mo. [8] + 72 pp. Originally pubilished in wrappers, this copy has been neatly bound in full green buckram, with a title label.The rare first issue of English’s locally published account of the notorious local smugglers. He had originally published these in his newspaper the Folkestone Express and so popular did they became he printed them separately as above. He was to reprint them several more times with illustrations and other additions. [ref: 20137 ] £145

494. FOLKESTONE - ‘FELIX’ [W .G. GLANFIELD]. RAMBLES AROUND FOLKESTONE. With other special articles and notes by ‘Felix.’Reprinted by kind permission of the Proprietors from ‘The Folkestone Herald’ (1891-1913).

Folkestone William George Glanfield, 6 Russell Road. n.d. but, c 19144to. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. [iv] + 237 pp. + [3], including [1] pp. advertisement. Half-title. Illustrated by [25] photographic plates. Bound in original printed boards with cloth spine.A series of delightful articles relating to Folkestone events, people and social history, published in The Herald newspaper between 1891 and 1913 and herecollected together in book form with the addition of some fine photographic illustrations. One of the most informative and charming books on Folkestone, painting a vivid picture of the town before the First World War. Signed dedication copy. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 19536 ] £100

495. FOLKESTONE - ‘FELIX’ [W .G. GLANFIELD]. RAMBLES AROUND FOLKESTONE. With other special articles and notes by ‘Felix.’Reprinted by kind permission of the Proprietors from ‘The Folkestone Herald’ (1891-1913).

Folkestone William George Glanfield, 6 Russell Road. n.d. but c.19144to. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. [iv] + 237 pp. + [3], including [1] pp. advertisement. Half-title. Illustrated by 25 photographic plates. Bound in original printed boards with cloth spine. Extremities worn and some foxing, but otherwise a good copy. A series of delightful articles relating to Folkestone events, people and social history, published in The Herald newspaper between 1891 and 1913 and herecollected together in book form with the addition of some fine photographic illustrations. One of the most informative and charming books on Folkestone, painting a vivid picture of the town before the First World War.

Kent Bibliography. [ref: 21080 ] £70

496. FOLKESTONE - ‘FELIX’ [W.G. GLANFIELD] RAMBLES AROUND FOLKESTONE, AND OTHER SPECIAL ARTICLES.

Folkestone, Glanfield, n.d. but, c 1914

150

237 pp. with photo illustrations. This copy has additional cuttings from the local paper inserted. Bound in half morocco over marbled boards, with a considerable addition of cuttings from the local paper pasted in or inserted and a folding coloured street plan of the town of c. 1920. A attractive special bound copy of this interesting work.A series of delightful articles relating to Folkestone events, people and social history, published in the Herald newspaper between 1891 and 1913 and here collected together in book form with the addition of some fine photographic illustrations. One of the most informative and charming books on Folkestone, painting a vivid picture of the town before the First World War.The original cardboard type of binding has a tendency to fall apart, and is often found held together with sellotape or worse. This copy has been handsomely rebound in half morocco and lettered in gilt which together withthe additional material make this a particularly attractive item. [ref: 19077 ] £165

497. FOLKESTONE - HARE. (Engraved by) FOLKSTONE, KENT. [THE PARISH CHURCH].

c.1850Coloured wood-engraving, 9 x 5.5 inches, mounted and framed in conservation materials. Overall size 14 x 11 inches. Unusual view of the parish church of St. Mary & Eanswythe from the north side, showing the building before the beginnings of the series of restoration and enlargements which were begun some time after 1851. [ref: 19711 ] £75

498. FOLKESTONE - JONES, COUNCILLOR JOHN. FOLKESTONE AND THE WAR.

Printed and published by J. Jones, Folkestone. No date but c.19198vo. viii + 79 pp. with photo frontis. Original printed paper wrappers, a little chipped and worn. Some top edges ink-stained but text unaffected. Very scarce.An interesting and entertaining account of the war years in Folkestone from an insider’s viewpoint. Where else would we learn of ‘The terrible Mrs. Grundy ... and other forbidding personages of the Social Purity League’? We have not seen a copy in many years. [ref: 19652 ] £65

499. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD, 1954.

Kelly's Directories. 1954428 pp. Lacking map as is usual. Original printed cloth. A little faded, but a good copy.[ref: 17719 ] £35

500.FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD, 1956.

Kelly's. 1956

151

428 pp., + adverts., lacking map. Original printed cloth. Spine faded and titles rubbed, otherwise a good copy.[ref: 17714 ] £30

501. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD, 1958.

Kelly's Directories. 1958388 pp., + adverts with map. Original printed cloth. A very good copy.[ref: 17717 ] £40

502. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD, 1958.

Kelly's Directories. 1958.388 pp. with adverts. Lacking map. Original printed red cloth.[ref: 18681 ] £35

503. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD. 1966.

Kelly's Directories. 1960394 pp. lacking folding map. Original printed cloth. Spine a little faded but a good copy.[ref: 20778 ] £30

504. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD. 1966.

Kelly's Directories. 1966388 pp., with folding map. Original printed cloth. A near mint copy with repaired map.Very scarce in this condition. [ref: 17578 ] £35

505. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD. 1966.

Kelly's Directories. 1966388 pp. lacking folding map. Original printed cloth. A little faded but a good copy.[ref: 17723 ] £25

506. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD. 1966.

Kelly's Directories. 19668vo. 388 pp. without the folding map. Original printed cloth.which is a little worn at the head of the spine.All the Kelly’s are becoming difficult to find in any condition. [ref: 18737 ] £30

507. FOLKESTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD.1962.

152

Kelly's Directories. 1962410 pp. with folding map. Original printed cloth. Slight bumps to lower edges,otherwise a very clean, crisp copy.[ref: 17722 ] £35

508. FOLKESTONE - KIP, JOHANNES. BEACHBOROUGH. THE SEAT OF WILLIAM BROCKMAN ESQ.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 16 x 13 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade, and engraved by Kip. [ref: 20230 ] £150

509. FOLKESTONE - MACKIE, S.J. A DESCRIPTIVE AND HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF FOLKESTONE AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD, WITH GLEANINGS FROM THE MUNICIPAL RECORDS, REPRINTED FROM THE FOLKESTONE EXPRESS.

Folkestone, J. English. 18838vo. vi + 352 pp. with portrait frontis of William Harvey, and numerous wood engravings throughout. Professionally re-sewn and recased preserving the original decorated cloth, gilt. A little rubbed and spine a little faded, but a verygood copy.The enlarged second edition of the standard 19th century Folkestone history and guide. ‘The Gleanings from the Municipal Records’ which appear in this edition contain much of interest - The Early Charters, The Harbour, The Fishermen, Old Streets, Inns, Forms of Punishment, etc. This edition of Mackie is the most comprehensive antiquarian history of the town, but suffers from a serious production fault which affects all copies - the book wasbound using metal staples instead of being sewn in the traditional way. These staples rust over time and the sections fall apart. We have had this fault professionally rectified; the book has been re-sewn and re-inserted into its original case. [ref: 15524 ] £100

510. FOLKESTONE - ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPS OF KENT - 25 inch maps. Sheet 75. 6. FOLKESTONE NORTH EAST.

O/S. First edition. 1873Hand-coloured lithographed map 25 x 38 inches. A very good copy. beautyThe north of town from the bottom of Black Bull Road, the top end of Dover Road and the East Station, the whole of Canterbury Road. Apart from these and the original Park Farm, Walton Farm and Limekiln Farm the now intensely developed part of Folkestone is fields. [ref: 7608 ] £75

511. FOLKESTONE - TAYLOR, ALAN F. FOLKESTONE IMAGES OF ENGLAND

Tempus, Stroud. 1998 but reprinted 2000

153

128 pp. with photo illustration throughout Original pictorial card wrappers. Avery good copy.Now out of print. [ref: 19655 ] £14

512. FOLKESTONE - TAYLOR, ALAN F.and EAMONN D. ROONEY. Collected by FOLKESTONE IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS. A SECOND SELECTION.

Alan Sutton, Stroud. 1992 reprinted 20018vo. 160 pp. Original glossy paper wrappers. A very good copy.Signed by Alan Taylor. Now out of print. [ref: 19938 ] £15

513. FOLKESTONE - WARD LOCK AND CO. GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, DOVER, DEAL AND SOUTH-EAST KENT.

Ward, Lock & Co. n.d. but c.19548 + 176 pp. + 2 folding maps + 8 plans (5 folding) + 33 b/w illustrations. Original red pictorial cloth. Front cover creased but a very good copy.One of the last examples of this series. [ref: 18188 ] £20

514. FOLKESTONE - WARD LOCK AND CO. GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, DOVER, DEAL AND SOUTH-EAST KENT.

Ward, Lock and Co. n.d. but c.19548 + 176 pp. + 2 folding maps + 8 plans (5 folding) + b/w illustrations. Original red pictorial cloth. A near mint copy.One of the last examples of this series. [ref: 20632 ] £20

515. FOLKESTONE - WARD, LOCK AND CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, CANTERBURY DYMCHURCH.

Ward, Lock & Co. 1918Fiifth Edition. xx + 80 pp. (Folkestone) + 80 pp. (Hythe) + 32pp. (Deal) + adverts + 63 pp. + [19] with 6 folding maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth.Universally popular guides now becoming more difficult to find, particularlythe pre-world war two issues. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. Includes Canterbury, Dover, Romney Marsh, Calais, Bologne [ref: 19419 ] £30

516. FOLKESTONE - WARD, LOCK and CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, LITTLESTONE ON SEA, ETC.

Ward, Lock and Co., 1913-14

154

Seventh edition - Revised. 16 + xxi + 72 pp. + 44 pp. + 80 pp.adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth. Two maps neatly repaired otherwise very good.Popular guides, especially the pre-first war editions, now becoming more difficult to find. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 20630 ] £25

517. FOLKESTONE - WARD, LOCK and CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, LITTLESTONE ON SEA, ETC.

Ward, Lock and Co., 1925 - 26Seventh Edition - Revised. [18] + viii +12 + ix-xxii + 72 pp. + 44 + 80 pp. adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth. A very good example.Popular guides, produced from the turn of the 19th century up until the 1950s. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 20463 ] £25

518. FOLKESTONE - WARD, LOCK and CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE,, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, LITTLESTONE ON SEA, ETC.

Ward, Lock and Co., 1925 - 26Seventh edition - Revised, viii +12 = ix-xxiv + 72 pp. + 44 pp. + [4] + 80 pp. adverts. with 8 folding maps and plans and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth.The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 20629 ] £20

519. FOLKESTONE - WHITNEY, CHARLES. FOLKESTONE - A PICTORIAL HISTORY. Photographs from the collections of Eamonn Rooney, Alan Taylor and Roy Wilson.

Phillimore. 19864to. [126] pp. With photo illus throughout. Bound in cloth, gilt in D/W. A mint example.Well compiled photographic history now out of print. [ref: 19787 ] £15

520. FOLKESTONE - WINBOLT, S.E. ROMAN FOLKESTONE. Methuen. 1925

First edition. 199 pp. with plans and photo illustration. Original red cloth. Spine faded but a very good copy.The standard book on the Folkestone villa. [ref: 17399 ] £25

FOLKESTONE - WOODWARD, MATTHEW. THE PAST AND PRESENT OF THE PARISH

CHURCH OF FOLKESTONE. Together with, An account of the Reliquary of St. Eanswythe Discovered in 1885.

155

Skeffington & Son, 1892First Edition. 138 pp. + (6) adverts with 12 photo plates showing the church before and after restoration. Original cloth, gilt. Spine slightly faded otherwise fine copy.Contains the only detailed description of this historic building before the ‘restoration’ of the 1860s. [ref: 15104 ] £45

521. FOLKESTONE - WOODWARD, MATTHEW. THE PAST AND PRESENT OF THE PARISH CHURCH OF FOLKESTONE. Together with

An account of the Reliquary of St. Eanswythe discovered in 1885.

Skeffington & Son. 1892First Edition. 138 pp. + (6) adverts. with 12 illustrations including photographic plates showing the church before and after restoration. Original cloth, slightly scuffed.Contains the only detailed description of this historic building before the 'restoration' of the 1860s.

[ref: 17529 ] £40

522. FOLKESTONE HANDBOOK. FOLKESTONE VIEWS AND REVIEWS.

W.T. Pike and Co., Publishers, Grand Parade, Brighton. Republished by Marrin’s Bookshop, Folkestone. 2010Facsimile reprint, Folio, 8.5 x 11.5 inches, [i] + 90 pp. illustrated throughout. Extra pages include wrapper advertisements as extra leaf and 2 pages of lists showing occupants of business premises in 1895 and 2010. Pictorial glossy card wrappers. Brand new.A facsimile of a very scarce Folkestone item not found in the British Library catalogue or the Kent Bibliography. Comprising a general description of Folkestone and Hythe and listing their main attractions. This is followed by a comprehensive trade guide to the principal hotels and businesses in Folkestone with many premises being illustrated in photographs or engravings, both internal and external views. Altogether a remarkable insight into late-Victorian Folkestone. Republished by Marrin’s Bookshop. [ref: 20238 ] £14.99

523. FOLKESTONE PANORAMA. FOLKESTONE FROM THE SEA. No place or date but c.1890Folding photo/litho panorama, 33 x 3½ inches. Overall size, 36 x 10 inches. Framed and glazed in conservation materials. Traces of old folds, otherwise invery good condition.Very interesting panorama of Folkestone from the sea, showing the Lift and Pier (opened in 1884) and Switchback Railway (1888), on the left. Priory Gardens is roughly central and the old Harbour House overlooks the harbour with the old wooden harbour arm and landing stage. St. Andrew’s

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Convalescent Home has been erected (1885) on the East Cliff. Produced as a folding concertina type view book, probably printed in Germany. [ref: 20565 ] £165

524. FOLKESTONE VIEWS 32 PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEWS OF FOLKESTONE AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Callcut and Beavis, 77 Great Eastern Street, London. n.d. but c. 1910Oblong 8vo. 9.5 x 7 inches. [2] pp. illustrated by 24 monochrome photographic plates. Bound in the original publishers decorated stiff red card, and blocked in gilt. Hinges and joints loose, extremities worn.

The views are: The Harbour, Folkestone; The Band Stand, Folkestone; Shades and Lees, Folkestone; Lower Sandgate Road, Folkestone; The Pier, Folkestone; The Lift and Metropole Hotel, Folkestone; St. Mary’s Church, Folkestone (Two views, exterior and interior); Folkestone from the Pier; S.S. ‘Mary Beatrice’, Folkestone; Sandgate, General View and the Parade; Hythe,General View and Crypt of Church; The Warren, Folkestone; Shakespeare’s Cliff, Dover; The Harbour, Dover; The Parade, Dover; Dover Castle; Town Hall, Dover; Admiralty Pier, Dover; General View and Waterloo Crescent, Dover; Lord Warden Hotel and Castle Street, Dover; Queen Elizabeth’s Pocket Pistol and Sands and Parade, Dover; The Pier, Deal; Deal Castle and Walmer Castle; Canterbury Cathedral. [ref: 20273 ] £40

525. FOLKESTONE VIEWS. THE ALBUM OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE AND HYTHE VIEWS

London: Charles, Reynolds & Co., Ltd, 72 & 73 Fore Street and 18 & 20 Fore Street Avenue, London, EC n.d. but after 18908vo. 6.5 x 8.75 inches. Concertina type view-book of glazed lithos, containing 21 different images and two fine panoramas, one of Folkestone from the sea and one of Sandgate. Publisher’s advertisement list on rear endpaper. Bound in original dark blue decorated boards, blocked in gilt. Slight wear on edge of boards and some small dark stains on front board, otherwise a very good copy.This type of view-book originates in Germany and was printed there. It is a late example of the curious mixture of photograph and engraving which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895, when photography finally won the day. This example must date from after 1890 as the second set of cliff lift carriages is shown. [ref: 19407 ] £150

526. FOLKESTONE VIEWS. SOUVENIR ALBUM OF VIEWS. FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

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Folkestone, Herald Printing Works. c.1900Oblong 4to. approximately 11.5 x 9 inches. Title and introduction and 44 photo plates and a long (14 x 36 inches) panorama of Folkestone from the Sea. Original grained, gilt-stamped red cloth with photo insets. Rather worn and time-stained but still imposing.An elaborate production in which an advertisement for

the West Cliff Hotel states that ‘Since October 1900, the hotel has been entirely remodelled ...’ and one of the views shows the 'Duchess of York' leaving her berth at Folkestone for France. The 'Duchess' was delivered in 1895 and lasted until 1904. This means that this view book can only have been produced during this 3-4 year period. Scarce. [ref: 18198 ] £150

527. FOLKESTONE WATERCOLOUR. FOLKESTONE HARBOUR FROM THE DURLOCKS.

No artist or date but c.1850Large original watercolour, 17 x 12 inches approx., mounted in conservation materials, framed in light oak and glazed. Overall size 26 x 22 inches approx. A very attractive view from the high ground above the fishermen’s quarter with two seated figures looking across the inner harbour to the Pavilion Hotel and Harbour House, with the Parish Church and the Bayle in the background. [ref: 20233 ] £750

528. FOOTE, WILLIAM. THE GENERAL OR PRINCIPAL HIGHWAY ACT (5 & 6 WILL. 4, c.50) AND THE ACT FOR THE BETTER MANAGEMENT OF HIGHWAYS (25 & 26 Vict. c. 61), AND OTHER STATUTES AFFECTING THE LAW IN CONNECTION WITH THE HIGHWAYS IN ENGLAND AND NORTH WALES; With practical and explanatory notes, forms, references to statutes and cases, and a copious index to each of the Highway Acts. By William Foote, Attorney-at- Law. Third edition.

London: John Crockford, 10, Wellington Street, Strand, W.C. 186212mo. 4.5 x 7.5 inches. lxxxviii + 302 + [2] + 14 pp. advertisements, the New Laws of the Session of 1862, tipped in at end and advertisements on front and rear paste-downs. a-a12, b-b8, c-d12, B-L12, M-M6, N-N12, O-O8, P-P8. Bound in original buff cloth, rebacked spine, blind stamped boards, edges rubbed. First free front endpaper and title page slightly detached at lower edges. 1867 ink inscription on first free endpaper. Clean interior.The larger part of the book, whose first edition was published in 1852, is concerned with the Highway Act of 1836 and it is followed by a section on the Highway Act of 1862. Both parts have separate indexes. [ref: 19724 ] £120

529. FOSTER, REGINALD. DOVER FRONT. Secker & Warburg. 19418vo. 158 pp. with 8 photographic illustrations. Original stone cloth. A very good copy.

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Published during the war by a journalist who had experienced a year of life in what was, at the time, the front line. Becoming quite scarce. [ref: 21327 ] £15

530. FREESTON, EWART and BERNARD KENT. MODELLING THAMES SAILING BARGES.

Model Shipwright, Greenwich. 197696 pp. illustrated throughout. Original rust cloth, gilt. A fine copy in a like dust wrapper.[ref: 20803 ] £14

531. FULLARTON, A. KENT. Engraved Map of KentPublished by A. Fullarton, Glasgow n.d. but 1843Engraved map of the county, 9.5 x 7.5 inches, with a vignette of Canterbury in one corner and a list of the Hundreds. Trace of old fold. Good impression with good margins. A fine example.Attractive and detailed map of the county. [ref: 18142 ] £50

532. FULLARTON, A. KENT. Engraved Map of KentPublished by A. Fullarton, Glasgow n.d. but c.1845Hand-coloured engraved map of the county, 9.5 x 7.5 inches, with a vignette ofCanterbury in one corner and a list of the Hundreds. Mounted in acid-free conservation board. Good impression with good margins, attractively coloured. A fine example.Attractive and detailed map of the county showing the South Eastern Railway completed to Dover, something achieved in 1844. [ref: 16966 ] £60

533. FURLEY, ROBERT. THE ANNALS OF KENNINGTON, IN KENT. A LECTURE DELIVERED BY ROBERT FURLEY, OF ASHFORD, F.S.A., AT THE KENNINGTON NATIONAL SCHOOL, ON MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1877.

Headley Brothers, Ashford. 1972Slim 8vo. Reprint of the scarce 1877 edition. 37 pp. Original printed card wrappers, with minimal rubbing to extremities, a little dusty and time-stained but a good copy.Reprint of the scarce Kennington item, which is one of the few works on the subject and very informative. [ref: 18258 ] £20

534. FUSSELL, L. A JOURNEY ROUND THE COAST OF KENT; CONTAINING REMARKS ON THE PRINCIPAL OBJECTS WORTHY OFNOTICE THROUGHOUT THE WHOLE OF THAT INTERESTING BORDER, AND THE CONTIGUOUS DISTRICT; INCLUDING PENSHURST, AND TUNBRIDGE-WELLS; WITH RYE, WINCHELSEA, HASTINGS AND BATTLE IN SUSSEX: BEING ORIGINAL NOTES MADE DURING A SUMMER EXCURSION.

Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 47 Paternoster-Row. 1818.

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8vo. Hand-coloured folding engraved map, iv + 304 pp. Recently bound in quarter-morocco gilt, over blue paper boards. A very good copy.The conversational text sheds much light on the condition of Kent in the early19th. century. The description of remote parts such as Romney Marsh, Dymchurch Wall, The Redoubt, Lydd, and Dungeness Light are most interesting. [ref: 20361 ] £175

535. GALLEY, MARTIN R. THE LAST DAYS OF STEAM IN KENT. Alan Sutton, Stroud. 19914to. 136 pp. with photographic illustration throughout. Original black cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. A near fine copy[ref: 17091 ] £12

536. GALLOIS, R.W. BRITISH REGIONAL GEOLOGY: THE WEALDEN DISTRICT.

Issued by the Natural Environment Research Council Institute of Geological Sciences, this is a comprehensive look at the geologicalhistory and economy of the Weald. [ref: 17215 ] £15

537. GARDINER, DOROTHY. HISTORIC HAVEN OF SANDWICH Pilgrim Press Ltd: Derby, 1954First Edition 8vo. viii + 368 pp. with photo illustrations. Bound in blue cloth, gilt, in the very scarce original dust wrapper. Both book and wrapper are in very good condition.A thorough modern history of the town and port of Sandwich. Quite hard to find in good condition. [ref: 20848 ] £45

538. GARDINER, DOROTHY. Editor. THE OXINDEN LETTERS 1607 -1642. Being the Correspondence of Henry Oxinden of Barham and his Circle. Edited with Notes and an Introduction by Dorothy Gardiner.

Constable and Co Ltd., London. 1933 8vo. 5.75 x 9 inches. xxxvi + 328 pp. + [18]. Illustrated with portrait frontis. and 12 plates (including facsimiles) and a folding genealogical table and map at end. With half-title, bibliography and index. Bound in original maroon cloth, gilt, boards stained, spine a little faded and extremities bumped and worn. Deckle edges with top edge maroon. Some lower edge staining near beginning, otherwise clean inside.This elusive volume gives a fascinating insight into daily life in the country houses of East Kent during the early seventeenth century and the prelude to the Civil War. It prints 240 letters from the Oxinden family of Great Maydekin House, Barham, largely selected from Additional MSS, 27,999 and28,000 in the British Museum (now in the British Library). Sir Henry

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Oxinden (1609-70) was born in Canterbury and educated at Wye and Corpus Christi College, Oxford, being admitted to Gray’s Inn, 1632. He served on the parliamentary side during the siege of Arundel, 1643 but took no further part in the events of the 1640s. He published four volumes of verseand other works which attacked Puritan ministers and moved to support for Charles I and later the Restoration. He was ordained in 1661 but never took up residence in the Buckinghamshire living of Radnage, to which he had been presented. Over 200 titles from Oxinden’s library survived to found Elham parish library and are now housed in Canterbury Cathedral Library. The editor of the letters, Dorothy Gardiner, nee Kempe (1873-1957) was educated in London and at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. She later worked atthe LMH settlement in Lambeth, where she married the rector, and in 1917, moved with him to Canterbury, on his appointment as residential canon of the Cathedral. Her other published works included English Girlhood at School (1929), The Story of Lambeth Palace (1930) and Companion into Kent(1934). A further volume of the letters, The Oxinden and Peyton letters, 1642-1670 appeared in 1937. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20212 ] £65

539. GARRAD, G.H. A SURVEY OF THE AGRICULTURE OF KENT. By G. H. Garrad O.B.E., N.D.A., C.D.A. (Hons.), Wye College.

(County Agricultural Surveys No.1.London Royal Agricultural Society of England, 16 Bedford Square, London, W.C. 1. 19544to. 7.5 x 9.75 inches. iv + 232 pp. Half title. Illustrated with 8 p. of black and white photographic plates, including frontispiece, 3 map plates, and additional photograph, map and distribution maps and graphs in text. Bound in original maroon cloth, gilt, with RASE badge on front board, in dust wrapper. In good condition. Ink inscription, 1960 and address label, 1964 on first free endpaper.Systematic account of the farming regions, crops and livestock and the organisation of agriculture in mid-twentieth century Kent. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21363 ] £20

540. GARRETT, K. S. EVERARD OF GREENHITHE. World Ship Society, Kendal. 1991Folio. 238 pp. profusely illustrated in black and white. Original red cloth, gilt, with house flag in gilt to upper board. A near fine copy in a very good dust wrapper.A history of the company from its foundation in 1922, listing and illustrating52 sailing vessels, 240 steam and motor vessels, with sections about the managed ships and Tugs and Service Craft. Scarce. [ref: 20816 ] £65

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541. GATTIE, G. BYNG. MEMORIALS OF THE GOODWIN SANDS, ANDTHEIR SURROUNDINGS, LEGENDARY AND HISTORICAL. By George Byng Gattie, Late H.M.’s Civil Service. With maps, charts, and illustrations. The ‘Kelkel’ Edition.

London J.J. Keliher and Co., Ltd., 99, Victoria St., and 33, King William St., E.C. 1904Second edition. 8vo. 5.25 x 7.5 inches. xvi + [ii] + 297 pp. + 2]. Half title. Illustrated by 18 plates, including frontispiece and 6 maps and charts. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. Deckled edges. Extremities slightly worn and scratch mark on front board; otherwise a bright clean copy.Second edition of this scarce work on the Sands, which is also very nicely produced and illustrated; although the binding is without the gilt decoration of the first edition of 1890, the text seems to be identical. It contains a good

historical account of the Sands, the Downs and the wrecks but there is a strong emphasis on the various means of improving the safety of the Sands, including lifeboats, lightships and a variety of beacons and buoys, with full details of their designs. The frontispiece illustrates Captain Bullock’s first safety beacon, erected in 1840. The last chapter considers schemes for reclaiming part of the Sands and building breakwaters and embankments. The book concludes with an appendix in twenty sections, further elucidating parts of the main text. Kent Bibliography [ref: 17949 ] £45

542. GIBSON. J. AN ACCURATE MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT FROM THE BEST AUTHORITIES.

Engraved for the Complete Magazine for J. Payne at the Feathers in Pater-noster Row, N.D. 1765Copper engraved map 8 x 7 inches. Signs of old folds, a very good example.Attractive mid-eighteenth century map. [ref: 18143 ] £75

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543. GILBERT, CLIVE. Editor. OUR COMMON SHORE - NOTRE RIVAGE COMMUN. The Coasts and Seas of Nord-Pas de Calais and Kent.

Kent County Council and Conseil Regional Nord-Pas de Calais. 1997Folio. 96 pp., profusely illustrated in colour. Bi-lingual text. Original pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.A look at the coast and its inhabitants on each side of the Channel. [ref: 16884 ] £10

544. GILMORE, REV. JOHN. STORM WARRIORS OR LIFE-BOAT WORK ON THE GOODWIN SANDS. By the Rev. John Gilmore, M.A.,

Rector of Holy Trinity, Ramsgate; Author of ‘The Ramsgate Life-Boat,’ in Macmillan’s Magazine.

London Macmillan and Co., Limited. 18988vo. 5 x 7.5 inches. xvi + 358 pp. + [2] pp. advertisements. Illustrated with engraved frontispiece. Bound in original pictorial cloth, gilt. Extremities a little worn and some foxing, but otherwise good condition. School Prize label of 1901, on front pastedown.Very good copy of this scarce work on the Goodwins, principally concerned with the rescues of the Ramsgate lifeboat. The fifth reprint of a work first published in 1873

(dated 1874). Kent Bibliography [ref: 21296 ] £65

545. [GLEIG, GEORGE ROBERT]. THE SUBALTERN. Second Edition.Edinburgh. William Blackwood and T. Cadell, London. 1826

12mo. 4.5 x 7 inches. vi + 373 pp. + [1] + 4 pp. advertisements. Half title. Bound in original quarter blue cloth over plain card boards, with paper label on spine. Extremities worn and some foxing, but otherwise a good copy.The narrative of a junior officer in the final stages of the peninsular campaign, 1813-14, from the siege of San Sebastian, and over the French border and eventually to thesiege of Bayonne. Although published anonymously, it is known to be the work of George Robert Gleig (1796-1888), born at Stirling and educated at Glasgow and Oxford. Leaving the parade ground at Hythe, his regiment set sail from Dover, but soon found themselves unable to round the headland of Dungeness, because of adverse seas, and were

forced to shelter for over a week (’the very name of Dungeness is

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abomination in mine ears’), relieved only by landing on ‘the shingly beach’ and receiving a day’s hospitality from two Lydd families. After France he later saw action in North America, but at the end of the wars was pressed byhis father, the Bishop of Brechin, to enter the church. After further study at Oxford Gleig was ordained in 1820, being appointed curate of Westwell, to which, by 1822 was added Ash and the living of Ivychurch. While in Kent, hebecame editor and part owner of the Kentish Gazette, opposing political reform to please his reluctant patron, the Duke of Wellington. He was also active as a Kent justice during the 1830-31 Captain Swing riots, which had originated in the county. After writing on church affairs, he achieved literary success with The Subaltern, originally published in Blackwood’s Magazine and in book form in 1825 (it subsequently appeared in various editions up to 1872). Gleig continued to pursue a prolific literary career, while combining his military and ecclesiastical experience in his appointment as chaplain-general of the forces (1844-75), also becoming, in 1846, inspector-general of military schools. [ref: 21346 ] £175

546. [GLEIG, G.R.] THE CHRONICLES OF WALTHAM. A. and W. Galignani and Co., Paris : 18358vo. First Continental Edition, issued in the same year as the first English edition. Bound in original printed paper wrappers as issued. A little worn at extremities and the spine has been replaced, but a rare survivor in original condition.George Robert Gleig (1796-1888). On leaving Oxford in 1811, Gleig joined the army, and was involved in the later stages of the Napoleonic wars. He was ordained in 1820 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, and became Curate of Westwell. Ash and Ivychurch were added later to his jurisdiction. His novel is of great social interest, reflecting the lifeof the country people in the parish of Waltham and

East Kent in general. The backdrop of England at the end of the long years of war bringing change to these quiet communities; falling corn prices, smallholdings becoming unprofitable, leading to evictions of families who for generations had held the same farms. The knowledgeable reader will see through the thinly disguised portraits of well-known landowners, and families who are still to be found in the locality today. RARE. [ref: 19447 ] £150

547. GLENDINNING, VICTORIA. VITA THE LIFE OF V. SACKVILLE-WEST

Wiedenfeld and Nicolson, London. 1983First Edition. 8vo. xviii + 430 pp. illustrated with photographs. Original cloth.A very good copy in a very good dust wrapper.Glendinning’s sparkling biography, which is much admired, here in the first edition. [ref: 16969 ] £25

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548. GLOVER, JUDITH. THE PLACE NAMES OF KENT. Batsford. 19768vo. 215 pp. Original cloth, gilt, in dustwrapper.The first issue of the standard modern work on Kent’s place names. [ref: 10558 ] £25

549. GLYNNE, SIR STEPHEN. NOTES ON THE CHURCHES OF KENT. By the late Sir Stephen R. Gyynne, Bart. With illustrations.

London John Murray, Albemarle Streeet. 1877First Edition. 8vo. 6 x 9 inches. xiv + [ii] + 351 pp., + [1] + 32 pp. publisher’s catalogue. Illustrated by wood engravings in text. Bound in original green cloth, gilt. Preliminaries and title page slightly foxed, and a blind stamp on thetitle states ‘Presented by Mr Murray’. A very good copy.Thorough book covering 312 churches, mostly surveyed before the 'restorations' of the Victorians, and recording many original features since destroyed. It also, however, the dilapidation into which some had fallen before such restoration, as in the case of Sl Mary and St Eanswwthe, Folkestone: ‘The exterior has suffered much mutilation, and has a ragged appearance; the walls are chiefly of flint. Most of the windows of the nave are modern, of the vilest description. The west end of the church is wretched patchwork, the nave having been cut short on that side, probably by the damage done by a storm, and the west wall rebuilt in most niggardly Incongruous style.’We have another similar copy, with ink initials of 1878 on verso of first free endpaper. Kent Bibliography [ref: 17683 ] £85

550. GOMME, G.L.(Editor). THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE LIBRARY: TOPOGRAPHICAL HISTORY OF KENT AND LANCASHIRE, BEING A CLASSIFED COLLECTION OF THE CHIEF CONTENTS OF THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE FROM 1731-1868.

Elliot Stock. 1895xii + 328 pp. Original buckram, gilt.Contains many fascinating and unusual articles, fully indexed by name and subjects, mostly devoted to Kent, of the 328 pp. only about 50 are concerned with Lancs. [ref: 18538 ] £40

ILLUSTRATED MANUSCRIPT DIARY 551. GOODNESTONE - BENGE, FREDERICK. WILLIAM.

ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT DIARIES OF HOLIDAYS IN KENT AND LIFE IN GOODNESTONE Together with a mint copy of David Oliver’s book ‘The Diaries of Frederick

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William Benge. Broadstairs, 1837, Goodnestone, 1847’ which is No.3 of a limited First Edition of 500 copies, with signed dedication from Oliver toWilliam Lapthorne, the Broadstairs historian and previous owner of the diary.

1837, 18474to. 7.5 x 8.75 inches. [138] pages of manuscript, comprising [109] pp. at front; [29] pp. inverted manuscript at rear with [7] blank pages in centre. Illustrated with pen and wash sketches on ten pages of the 1837 text. Bound in red half-morocco, marbled boards. A trifle rubbed at extremities Occasional slight foxing but otherwise clean.

The two diaries have been identified as the work of Frederick William Benge (1787-1849), who was living in Pimlico at the time of the holiday but moved to Rowling House, Goodnestone,Kent in 1839. First part untitled; after introductory comment, entries from 12 September to 10 October 1837, followed by conclusion. Second part titled, Continuation of the Journal from 1847, Commencing 2 November ending 14 November 1847. The diaries were transcribed and privately published by David R.Oliver (Broadstairs, 1994), illustrated throughout, with much additional matter, contemporary engravings, photographs, etc. Oliver’s

book contains four appendices, including background information on the family, persons mentioned in the diary, relevant extracts from Kentish Gazette, etc.Despite having been previously researched, there remains much more to be explored. A unique item [ref: 19628 ] £1750

552. GOODNESTON - KIP, JOHANNES. GOODNESTON. THE SEAT OF THE HON’BLE Sr BROOK BRIDGES Bart.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 16 x 13 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. [ref: 20227 ] £150

553. GOODSALL, R. H. A THIRD KENTISH PATCHWORK. Stedehill Publications, Harrietsham 19708vo. [10] + 159 pp. with photographic illustrations. Original gilt cloth in dust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste-down.The third of the author’s miscellanies. [ref: 19029 ] £12

554. GOODSALL, R.H. THE ARUN AND WESTERN ROTHER. Constable. 1962.

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First edition 196 pp. with photographic illustrations Original cloth in dust wrapper.Goodsall’s popular and well-informed work. [ref: 18043 ] £25

555. GOODSALL, R.H. THE EASTERN ROTHER. Constable. 1981164 pp. with maps and illustrated. Original illustrated laminated paper wrappersThe paperback issue. Includes Romney Marsh and the Royal Military Canal. [ref: 14948 ] £8

556. GOODSALL, R.H. FOURTH KENTISH PATCHWORK. Harrietsham, Stedehill Publications. 1975121 pp. with photo illustrated. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A fine copy.[ref: 17067 ] £10

557. GOODSALL, R.H. THE KENTISH STOUR. Rochester Press 19818vo., 229 pp. with map and photo illustrations. Pictorial card covers . A very good copy.Good copies of Mr Goodsall’s books are becoming more difficult to find. [ref: 18065 ] £12

558. GOODSALL, R.H. THE MEDWAY AND ITS TRIBUTARIES. E. P. Publishing 1978Reprint. 229 pp. with map and photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper.Typical Goodsall, always interesting. The later reprint which is identical with the first edition in all respects apart from wrapper design. [ref: 17207 ] £15

559. GOODSALL, R.H. A SECOND KENTISH PATCHWORK. Harrietsham, Stedehill. 1968152 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper, a very good copy.The second of Mr Goodsall’s miscellanies. [ref: 16649 ] £12

560. GOODSALL, R.H. STEDE HILL. THE ANNALS OF A KENTISH HOME.

Headley Brothers. 1949xii + 210 pp. with photo illustration and folding pedigrees. Original wrappers.Untrimmed so edges a little untidy but a very good copy.Focusing on one house and the fortunes of its inhabitants, the book provides a history of the county in miniature. Hollingbourne/Harrietsham area. This may have been a proof copy as it more normally comes bound in cloth. [ref: 17496 ] £25

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561. GOODSALL, R.H. STEDE HILL The Annals of a Kentish Home. By Robert H. Goodsall, F.R.I.B.A., A.R.P.S. With a Foreword by The Right Honourable Lord Cornwallis, K.B.E., M.C., Lord Lieutenant of Kent.

London Headley Brothers 109 Kingsway, W.C.2 19498vo. 6 x 8.75 inches. xii + 212 pp. Half title. Illustrated by 35 pages of plates, including coloured frontispiece, three foldingpedigrees, folding map and endpaper maps and ground plan in text. Bound in original blue cloth gilt in coloured pictorial dust wrapper, chipped at top of spine. A very good copy.Focusing on one house and the fortunes of its inhabitants, it provides a history of the county in miniature. Hollingbourn/Harrietsham area. We have a similar copy, with price clipped dust wrapper. [ref: 18537 ] £35

562. GOUGH, JOHN B. ORATIONS. Copyright Edition, Revised by himself.

London: Morgan and Scott. No date but c.19008vo. 5 x 7.5 inches, Frontis portrait of the author + approximate 150 pp. comprising 11 orations of 12-14 pages each, separately and eccentrically paginated. Bound in the original stamped and decorated brown pictorial cloth, gilt, with a vignette of Gough’s birthplace in Sandgate to upper board.Born in Sandgate, Kent, John B. Gough (1817-1886) emigrated to the United States with his mother and sister when he was twelve. His mother died of a stroke and Gough, despondent, began to drink. After marrying in 1838. he and his wife had a daughter who unfortunately died within days of her birth,quickly followed by her mother At the age of 25 Gough, unemployed, homeless, and a confirmed drunkard attended a temperance meeting in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he took the pledge. He began to tell his story to eager audiences and soon embarked on a career of lecturing againstthe evils of drink. During his career, Gough delivered some 9,600 lectures in America, Canada, England, Scotland, and Ireland.When he died in 1886, the New York Times wrote that he ‘was probably better known in this country and in Great Britain than any other public speaker.’ [ref: 20384 ] £45

563. GOULDEN, R.G. KENT TOWN GUIDES 1763-1900. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF LOCALLY-PUBLISHED KENT TOWN GUIDES, TOGETHER WITH ACCOUNTS OF THE PRINTING, PUBLISHING, AND PRODUCTION OF TOWN GUIDES IN CERTAIN TOWNS IN KENT.

The British Library. 19958vo. 134 pp., with 6 illustrations. New.Excellent addition to the bibliography of the county. Most of the guide books to Kent were published after 1837 when Smith's Bibliotheca Cantiana was published. Mr Goulden, whose interest was stimulated by his family connection with guide book production in Canterbury and elsewhere, works for the British Library and is thus perfectly placed to compile such a complexwork. The book is concerned with local publications only, and with the aid of an introductory essay to the publishing history of each town, he unravels the

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story in an extremely lucid way. * Mr Goulden informs me that the book is still in print at the original price, but remember we have to order this from the B.L. which can take a week or so. [ref: 7381 ] £30

564. GRASBY, E. D. Y. THE PROVINCE OF KENT 1770-1970. Published with the authority of the Right Worshipful the Provincial Grand Master for the Province of Kent. Printed in England by J. A. Jennings, Ltd., Canterbury. 19704to. 8 x 10 inches. [viii] + 102 pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs and by blue provincial badge on title page. Prefaces by Lord Cornwallis, Provincial Grand Master and the author, signed E. Dudley Grasby, Hawkhurst, 1970. Bound in original navy, gilt. Fine condition. Published to celebrate the Bicentary of the formation of the Provincial GrandLodge and the installation of the first Provincial Grand Master in about 1770. [ref: 20559 ] £20

565. GRASEMANN, C. and G.W.P. McLACHLAN. ENGLISH CHANNEL PACKET BOATS.

Syren & Shipping, 1939First Edition, 205 pp. illustrated throughout. Original cloth in the very scarce dust wrapper. A very good copy.Detailed work with a chronological table of vessels engaged in regular cross-channel service from 1790 to 1939. [ref: 18508 ] £65

566. GRASEMANN, C. and McLACHLAN, G. W.. P. ENGLISH CHANNEL PACKET BOATS.

London Syren & Shipping Limited,. 1939First Edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xviii + 205 pp. + [1]. Advertisement pages at front and rear. Illustrated throughout with black and white photographs. Rebound in black cloth, gilt. Occasional foxing and staining. Notes in blue ink, p. 181 (list) and in red ink, p.203 (advertisement) otherwise a good copy.A pioneering work on cross-channel packet boats sailing out of all ports from Dover and Folkestone to Southampton and Weymouth. Although updated by numerous later scholarly publications, based on more detailed research, this is still a useful book, especially for its chronological list of vessels engaged on regular cross-channel service from 1790 to 1939. [ref: 21338 ] £50

567. GRAVESEND - CRUDEN, ROBERT PEIRCE. THE HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF GRAVESEND IN THE COUNTY OF KENT AND THEPORT OF LONDON.

London: William Pickering 177 Piccadilly; James Johnson 46 Harmer Street Gravesend. 1843

169

Large 8vo. 569 pp. with 38 engravings, several folding. Original cloth, gilt, skilfully rebacked. Some slight foxing to the folding plates as is usual, but a very good copy.A very important Kentish town history, and a maritime history together with the story of the adjacent dockyards. Scarce. [ref: 16902 ] £250

568. GRAVESEND - HARKER, SYDNEY. THE BOOK OF GRAVESHAM.

Barracuda Books, Buckingham. 19794to. 140 pp. illustrated throughout. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper. A well-illustrated account. As with all the Barracuda Books imprints, these were issued in limited numbers and have become quite scarce. [ref: 16767 ] £20

GRAVESEND IN 1860S

569. GRAVESEND - MILLER, WILLIAM. JOTTINGS OF KENT. Being a Series of Historical, Ecclesiastical, Topographical, and Statistical Sketches by William Miller, of H.M. India Office. Second Edition.

Thomas Hall, 4a, Windmill Street, Gravesend. Whitaker & Co., Ave Maria Lane, Ludgate Hill, London. 1864Second edition. 8vo. 4.25 x 6.5 inches. viii + 198 pp. + [3] advertisements. Bound in original red leather, with blind-stamped borders enclosing decoration and gilt-blocked decorated title on extra gilt front boards, with gilt decorated spine title and gilt edges.The contents of this pocket version, first published in 1864, had appeared in the Gravesend Free Press (established 1855) owned by Thomas Hall. A third edition was issued in 1871. It has not been possible to identify the author but we presume he was a local man. Certainly the coverage of Gravesend itself, ‘our favourite summer resort,’ is much more extensive than any other entry. The surrounding settlements are dealt with in greater detail but there are chapters on many other towns and settlements apart from the Weald and the coast south of Dover. There is an introductory section on the history and resources of the county and a survey of the Kings and Earls and Dukes of Kent. An attractive and useful account of north and east Kent in the 1860s. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20258 ] £150

570. GRAVETT, KENNETH. TIMBER AND BRICK BUILDING IN KENT.A selection from the J. Fremlyn Streatfeild Collection.

170

Phillimore, for the K.A.S. 19714to. xiii + 32 pp. + 122 plates. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.In the late nineteenth century Streatf eild proposed to reissue Hasted’s history of Kent, to this end he commissioned a wealth of Architectural drawings of fineexamples of Kentish buildings. These are here printed for the first time with a introduction by an acknowledged expert in the field. A later reprint is in stock at the same price.

[ref: 16373 ] £35

571. GRAY, ADRIAN. THE LONDON, CHATHAM & DOVER RAILWAY. The only modern history of this line, now quite scarce [ref: 17960 ] £30

572. GRAYLING, FRANCIS. COUNTY CHURCHES - KENT. George Allen and Co., 1913.2 vols. 173 + 183 pp. with photo illustrated. throughout. Original blind stamped cloth, gilt, a good set. The bindings are not uniform.Invaluable pocket sized guide to the churches of Kent. [ref: 17958 ] £25

573.GREEN, TIMOTHY. THE SMUGGLERS. AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE WORLD OF THE CONTEMPORARY SMUGGLER.Michael Joseph. 1969278 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper a very good copy.[ref: 8851 ] £10

DOVER PILOT’S NOTEBOOK574. GREENHAM, G. C. NOTEBOOK OF G. C. GREENHAM, TRINITY

HOUSE PILOT. Navigating Officer’s Note Book.c.1950Manuscript entries in bound pocket book. Oblong 8vo. 6.5 x 4.25 inches. 80 leaves, including 2 half leaves, of which 28 are blank. Text continues on both endpapers. Illustrated by charts and diagrams, including coloured drawings of buoys, etc. Bound in

buff cloth on prepared stationery, S. 548A, 4/44, N. M. Ltd. Extremities worn.Owner’s name on front board and inscribed on front paste-down, G. C. Greenham. Trinity House Pilot 5 Maison Dieu Rd. Dover.The following are loosely inserted: Cinque Ports Pilots - Alterations in the South Channel during 1950, folded card; William Watkins, Ltd., Steam Tug Owners, Tide Tables for end of 1950, folded card;Typed carbon copy of Changes Effected in the SouthChannels to the Thames during 1951; Blank form:London Pilotage District; Special Services and

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Detention: Form B; Single sheet, printed black, red and blue: Trinity Pilot Service. The working notes of a Trinity House pilot, living in Dover, covering the Thames Estuary and Eastern Channel from Gravesend to Dungeness, and also the estuary of the Medway. Includes depth of water plans; notes on Folkestone and Dover harbours; descriptions, with drawings, of lights and buoys; notes on sand banks, shallows and anchorages; a list of over fifty names of pilots, and a list of 71 vessels piloted by Greenham, between June and October 1949. [ref: 21060 ] £20

575. GREENWAY, AMBROSE. A CENTURY OF CROSS-CHANNEL PASSENGER FERRIES.

Ian Allan Ltd. 1981124 pp. profusely illustrated. Original blue cloth, gilt in an unclipped dust wrapper. A very good copy.[ref: 17843 ] £18

576. GREENWICH - HAMILTON, OLIVE and NIGEL. ROYAL GREENWICH A GUIDE AND HISTORY TO LONDON’S MOST HISTORIC BOROUGH containing photographs by Stanley Devon and historical illustrations drawn from archives, galleries and collections throughout Britain

The Greenwich Bookshop. 19694to. xii + 267 pp. with illustration throughout. Original decorated boards.[ref: 16848 ] £20

GUIDE TO GREENWICH AND BLACKHEATH577. GREENWICH - RICHARDSON, HENRY S. GREENWICH, ITS

HISTORY, ANTIQUITIES, IMPROVEMENTS, AND PUBLIC BUILDINGS. Illustrated with Engravingson Wood by G. Baxter, from Drawings byW.B. Mackie.

Simpkin and Marshall, Stationers Court; andH. Richardson, Greenwich. London, 1834First Edition 8vo., 130 + [1] pp. Illustrated with a frontispiece and 2 full page wood-engraved plates. Bound in modern red buckram, spine lettered gilt, one or two sections of the book are foxed, due to paper inconsistency, but a very good example with

about half of the book uncut and unopened. Scarce.A great deal of information has been packed into this scarce guide, detailing a description of the town, population, and ‘modern’ improvements to Greenwich, Blackheath and neighbourhood.

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[ref: 19629 ] £200

578. GREENWOOD, C. AN EPITOME OF COUNTY HISTORY, WHEREIN THE REMARKABLE OBJECTS, PERSONS, AND EVENTS, ARE BRIEFLY TREATED OF THE SEATS, RESIDENCES, ETC. OF THE NOBILITY, CLERGY, AND GENTRY, THEIR ARCHITECTURE, INTERIOR DECORATIONS, SURROUNDING SCENERY, ETC. DESCRIBED, FROM PERSONAL OBSERVATION, AND THE NAMES, TITLES, AND OTHER DISTINCTIONS, MILITARY, OR ECCLESIASTICAL, INSERTED. WITH NOTICES OF THE PRINCIPAL CHURCHES, AND THE MONUMENTS AND MEMORIALS OF DISTINGUISHED FAMILIES. EACH COUNTY ILLUSTRATED BY A MAP... VOL. I - COUNTY OF KENT. [All published].

London Published for the Proprietor, at the Office of the Author No. 5, Hart Street, Bloomsbury Square. 1838First edition. Small thick folio. 10.5 x 13 inches. xx + 470 pp. + [10]. Copy lacks plates and map. Recased in half calf, over marbled boards, spine with raised bands, decorated gilt, with contrasting black title label, gilt. Marbled endpapers. Top right hand corner of title page torn out without loss of text. Traces of foxing but otherwise a very clean copy.The best record of the families of Kent and their houses in the 19th century. Many of the houses have been destroyed and this record increases in importance as time passes. Although lacking all the plates and map, this is a very good copy of the text in a fine binding. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21724 ] £70

LARGE PAPER COPY.579. GROSE, FRANCIS. A PROVINCIAL GLOSSARY; WITH

COLLECTIONS OF LOCAL PROVERBS, AND POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS. A NEW EDITION, CORRECTED.

Printed for Edward Jeffery 1811Folio, iv + 124 pp. Large paper copy 14 x 12 inches. Recently bound in half calf, gilt, with marbled boards.A very nice copy of this printing of Grose’s collection of provincial dialect, which contains a lot of Kentish examples and is one of the first works on the subject. [ref: 19892 ] £200

HANDSOME MAPS OF EARLY BRITAIN.580. GUEST, EDWIN. ORIGINES CELTICAE (A FRAGMENT) AND

OTHER CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HISTORY OF BRITAIN. By Edwin Guest, LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S. Late Master of Gonville and Caius, Cambridge. 2 Vols.

Macmillan and Co., London. 1883Two volumes. 8vo. 6 x 9 inches. Vol.I. engraved portrait frontis + xviii + 409 pp. + [3] blank. Vol.II. vi + 538 pp. +[1] p. errata + [1]. Half-titles. Vol.I. illustrated by by portrait frontispiece and one coloured plate. Vol.II.

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illustrated by [8] folding engraved or lithographed maps, some coloured. Original green cloth, gilt. Extremities worn and hinges weak. Some foxing, lower edge chips, staining and occasional annotations. Vol.I. has bookplate of Thomas Hodgkin, Newcastle on Tyne. Vol. II has dark endpapers and undecorated and darker cloth which indicates that the two volumes were not originally paired; however, they form a perfectly acceptable set.Dr Guest’s ‘purpose would seem to have been to write the history of Britain ...until the completion of the conquest by the Angles and Saxons ... an attempt made to trace the earliest inhabitants ... in their progress from the original home of our race to their settlement in Britain ... the second volume comprises a fragmentary examination...of the historical, legendary, and fabulous traditions which are found withinBritain itself.’ Nevertheless it includessubstantial accounts of the the invasions ofJulius Caesar (which examines the historicaltopography of the Kent coastline) and AulusPlautius, of the Anglo Saxon conquests andsettlements in the Severn Valley and of theWelsh boundaries in the late sixth century.Edwin Guest (1800-80) was educated atBirmingham and at Gonville and CaiusCollege, Cambridge (of which he ultimately became Master). His earlier work had been on philology and he had published an important work on TheHistory of English Rhythms in 1838. He was elected an FRS in 1839 and turned his attention towards early history; ‘Indeed he almost created the academic study of Romano-British history, especially in its topographical aspect. He tramped many miles inspecting boundaries, dykes and coasts. He made a close study of Julius Caesar’s invasion of Britain, surveying both sides of the channel...’ (DNB). The fragments of the unfinished Origines and Guest’s other historical papers were collected together in these two volumes by his editors, William Stubbs (1825-1901) and Cecil Deedes (1843-1920). Vol. I bears the bookplate of the historian Thomas Hodgkin (1831-1931), who settled in Newcastle upon Tyne and was best known for his multi-volume study, Italy and her Invaders and for his contributions to the local history of Northumberland. An important early work on Roman Britain and the Anglo Saxon settlements, illustrated with some handsome maps. [ref: 20684 ] £100

581. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY. EXCURSIONS IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. COMPRISING BRIEF HISTORICAL AND TOPOGRAPHICAL DELINEATIONS; TOGETHER WITHDESCRIPTIONS OF THE RESIDENCES OF THE NOBILITY AND GENTRY, Remains of Antiquity and other Interesting Objects of Curiosity. Forming a Complete Guide for the Traveller and Tourist. Illustrated with Fifty Engravings, including a Map of the County.

Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, London; J.Grieg, Back Road, Islington; and P. Youngman, Witham and Maldon, Essex. 182212 mo. 4.25 x 6.5 inches. iv + 216 pp. B-T6. Illustrated with engraved frontis., 2 folding engraved maps, and 38 copper-

174

engraved plates by Grieg after drawings by Gastineau and others. Bound in calf, gilt, decorated spine with morocco labels and gilt borders to boards and marbled edges, now faded. Some wear to spine edges and to top joints. Bookplate on front paste-down and inkinscription on first free endpaper. Slightfoxing as is normal and a few stains onfirst few pages, but a good copy.A good copy of this view book of early19th century Kent. The title page callsfor 50 plates including the maps but,even including the engravedfrontispiece, no copy we have seen accounts for more than 48. For some reason two plates were never issued, as noted in Smith’s bibliography. This copy, perhaps assembled later, has no more than 41, including the maps and frontispiece. Smith p. 90. [ref: 19781 ] £150

582. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY. EXCURSIONS IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. COMPRISING BRIEF HISTORICAL AND TOPOGRAPHICAL DELINEATIONS; TOGETHER WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF THE RESIDENCES OF THE NOBILITY AND GENTRY, Remains of Antiquity

and other Interesting Objects of Curiosity. Forming a Complete Guide for the Traveller and Tourist. Illustratedwith Fifty Engravings, including a Map of the County.

Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, London; J.Grieg, Back Road, Islington; and P. Youngman, Witham and Maldon, Essex. 18228vo. 9 x 5.5 inches. iv +192 pp. with engraved frontis., 2 folding engraved maps, and 45 copper-engraved plates by Grieg after drawings by Gastineau and others. Bound in half-morocco over marbled boards, gilt titles to spine. Some wear

to outer hinges and head and tail of spine. Early ownership signature in ink to verso of title page. Slight foxing as is normal, and a few stains, but a good copy.,A good copy of this view book of early 19th centuryKent. The title page calls for 50 plates including themaps but, even including the engraved frontispiece,no copy we have seen accounts for more than 48,as here. The directions to the binder at the rearonly call for 44, which are all present For somereason two plates were never issued, as noted inSmith’s bibliography. Smith p. 90. [ref: 21628 ] £175

583. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY - BLACK'S. GUIDE TO KENT. TENTH EDITION

Edinburgh, A. and C. Black. 1886

175

10th Edition. 474 pp. + 116 pp. adverts and folding map (tear restored), engraved frontis of Hop Picking, and wood-engraved illustration throughout. Original decorated cloth, gilt.Rubbing to spine and corners but a good copy of the attractive standard Black's late 19th century guide to the county. [ref: 18092 ] £45

584. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY - BLACK'S. GUIDE TO KENT. TENTH EDITION

Edinburgh, A. and C. Black. 189011th Edition. 474 pp. + 128 pp. adverts, 7 town maps, engraved frontis of Rochester Castle, and wood-engraved illustration throughout. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Slight rubbing to spine and corners but a good copy.The attractive standard Black's late 19th century guide to the county. [ref: 20655 ] £45

585. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY - BLACK'S. GUIDE TO KENT. PART I. -WEST KENT. Embracing Tunbridge Wells, Maidstone, Rochester, etc.

PART II. - EAST KENT. Embracing Canterbury and the Watering-Places of East Kent.A. and C. Black. London. 1909xii + 116 pp. + vii + 132 pp. + 128 pp. adverts with folding maps and photo illustration. Original decorated green cloth.A good copy of the standard Black's early 20th century guide to the county. [ref: 18102 ] £40

586. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY - BLACK'S. GUIDE TO KENT. PART 1. WEST KENT - PART 2. EAST KENT.

Edinburgh, A. and C. Black. 1915vii + 116 + 132 pp. With folding maps and photo illustrations throughout. Original decorated cloth.A good copy of the standard Black's early 20th century guide to the county. [ref: 8107 ] £20

587. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY - [FISHER, THOMAS.] THE KENTISH TRAVELLER'S COMPANION IN A DESCRIPTIVE VIEW OF THE TOWNS, VILLAGES, REMARKABLE BUILDINGS AND ANTIQUITIES SITUATED ON OR NEAR THE ROAD TO MARGATE, DOVER AND CANTERBURY ILLUSTRATED WITH A CORRECTMAP OF THE ROAD ON A SCALE OF ONE INCH TO A MILE AND A TABLE OF DISTANCES IN KENT. THE THIRD EDITION WITH CONSIDERABLE ADDITIONS.

176

Simmons & Kirkby, Canterbury; and W. Gillman, Rochester. The Third Edition, 1790Third edition. 8vo. iv + 320 pp. + [8] with 3 folding copper-engraved strip maps and a folding distance chart. Bound in contemporary calf, finely rebacked in calf with raised bands and morocco label, gilt. An attractive copy.The third edition ‘with considerable additions’ states the title page and it seems so. The book is 80 pages longer than the second edition and an index has been added along with the distance table. Fisher’s name has been

removed from the imprint [and Gillman’s added] so he had either sold his business or died. The work

was first published in response to the growing numbers of tourists making their way to the Isle

of Thanet to indulge in the new fad, 'sea bathing'. Five editions were to be published by 1799. 'This very useful volume' - Smith Smith p.80/81. [ref: 18020 ] £250

588. GUIDE TO THE COUNTY - FREELING, ARTHUR. Edited by. PICTURESQUE EXCURSIONS; CONTAIN UPWARDS OF FOUR HUNDRED VIEWS AT AND NEAR PLACES OF POPULAR RESORT: WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF EACH LOCALITY.

Ackerman & Co., Strand, Tilt and Bogue, Fleet Street. n.d. c. 184012 mo. 332 pp illustrated with charming wood-engravings throughout. Bound in the original decorated publisher’s cloth, gilt. Skilfully recased, preserving the original binding.The work is divided into excursions, viz, 1. The Isle of Wight. 2. Southampton, Lymington, Winchester Etc., 3. Tunbridge-Wells. 4. Hastings & St Leonards. 5.

Brighton, Worthing, Lewis Etc. 6. Dover. 7. Down The Thames to Margate, Ramsgate, Broadstairs, Etc. 8. Up the Thames to Richmond, Hampton Court, Etc.The Margate section is another issue, in a slightly different format, of the Water Guides issued by Tilt and others, with the same charming illustrationsby Bonner, which succeed so well in giving a flavour and feeling of the times of this pre-railway era.

[ref: 19343 ] £175

589. FINE WHITSTABLE GUIDEGUIDE TO WHITSTABLE - COX, W.J. GUIDE TO WHITSTABLE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS.

177

W. J. Cox, High Street,Whitstable: Printed and Published, 1876Small 8vo. 61 pp. + [21] pp. adverts. Original illustrated pink card wrappers. This is a near mint example of a scarce guide.A well-compiled work containing a wealth of information. Goulden lists three of these guides of the same date and lists three variants of the illustration on the covers. This is different again as the view here is “Whitstable from Borstal Hill Mill”. Goulden p.129 No.2 [ref: 18237 ] £85

590. PROOF COPY OF FINE WHITSTABLE GUIDEGUIDE TO WHITSTABLE - COX, W.J. GUIDE TO WHITSTABLE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS.

Whitstable: Printed and Published by W. J. Cox, High Street, 1876Small 8vo. 61 pp. + [21] pp. adverts. Uncut. Without wrappers. A very good, bold impression, this is a mint example of a scarce guide. A well-compiled work containing a wealth of information. Goulden lists three of these guides of the same date and lists three variants of the illustration on the covers. We have

discovered a fourth but there is no telling which wrapper would have been applied in this instance. Goulden p.129 No.2 [ref: 19607 ] £85

591. GUIDE TO WHITSTABLE - COX, W.J. ILLUSTRATED POPULARGUIDE TO WHITSTABLE-ON-SEA AND THE SURROUNDING

NEIGHBOURHOOD. Whitstable: Printed and Published byW. J. Cox, High Street. No date but [1884]Small 8vo. 42 pp. + [11] pp. adverts.Original buff printed paper wrappers.Wrapper a little dusty but a very goodexample of a scarce guide.

A well-compiled work containing a wealth of information. Goulden p.129 No.4 [ref: 18245 ] £85

592. GUIDE TO WHITSTABLE - COX, W.J. W.J. COX’S NEW ALBUM OF WHITSTABLE-ON-SEA AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

178

W.J. Cox, Whitstable. No date but c.1900Small concertina-type view book, 4 x 5 inches approx., containing 18 two-colour lithographic views. Original blue printed card wrappers with decoration. Wrappers have several chips without loss to printed design and fold is reinforced otherwise very good.A scarce example of a rather ephemeral view-book. [ref: 18688 ] £60

593. GUIDE TO WHITSTABLE - COX, W.J. W.J.COX’S ILLUSTRATED POPULAR GUIDE TO WHITSTABLE-ON-SEA AND THE SURROUNDING NEIGHBOURHOOD

W.J.Cox, Whitstable, Publisher and Bookseller, n.d. but c. [1884]Small 8vo. [2] + 18 + [1] + 19-42 pp. + [11] advertisements Illustrated with eight plates. Buff printed paper wrappers with advertisement at rear.The last known version of Cox’s Whitstable guide. Goulden dates it to 1884 from a reference on page10. Goulden, Kent Town Guides [ref: 19074 ] £75

594. GUILMANT, AYLWIN. BYGONE TENTERDEN. Phillimore, Chichester. 19914to. Unpaginated but approximately 120 pp. profusely illustrated in b/w. Original blue cloth, gilt. Near fine in dust wrapper.[ref: 17202 ] £15

595. GULVIN, K.R. KENT HOME GUARD A HISTORY.North Kent Books, 198093 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original laminated hardcovers.Very good copy.* Signed by author on title page. Out of print, the story of Kent’s ‘Dad’s Army’. [ref: 17966 ] £20

596. GUY, JOHN. KENT CASTLES. Meresborough Books, 1980264 pp. with diagrams and illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial boards. A very good copy.Covers 60 castles and castle sites. [ref: 17195 ] £14

GUY, JOHN. WEST KENT FROM THE AIR. 597. Meresborough Books. 1987

48 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18646 ] £10

598. HALES, IRENE. MAIDSTONE IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS. Universal Books 19988vo. 159 pp. Illustrated throughout. Laminated card wrappers, near mint. This reprint now out of print itself.

179

The familiar format for postcard/photographic local history books, always interesting. First published by Alan Sutton in 1990, this reprint now out of print itself. [ref: 21152 ] £12

599. HALES, IRENE. OLD MAIDSTONE. VOLUME TWO. A selection of postcards from the early years of this century.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198148 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18636 ] £10

600.HALES, IRENE. OLD MAIDSTONE’S PUBLIC HOUSES. IN POSTCARDS AND PHOTOGRAPHS.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198248 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18639 ] £10

601. HALES, IRENE. VILLAGES AROUND OLD MAIDSTONE. A selection of postcards from the early years of this century.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198048 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18637 ] £10

602. HALL, HAMMOND. MR. PICKWICK’S KENT. A PHOTOGRAPHIC RECORD OF THE TOUR OF THE CORRESPONDING SOCIETY OF THE PICKWICK CLUB IN ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, MUGGLETON, DINGLEY DELL, COBHAM AND GRAVESEND.

W. and J. Mackay and Co., Rochester; Horace Marshall and Son, London. 189992 pp. + 18 pp. adverts with 30 b/w photo illustrations. Original pictorial soft red cloth wrappers. A little dusty buta very good copy.A fascinating tour of Kent places portrayed in Dickens’ books, each with the appropriate reference. [ref: 17290 ] £45

603. HALL, JAMES. SEA SURGEON. London William Kimber, 46 Wilton Place, S.W. 1. 1960.First edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. 205 pp. +[1] + 2 pp. advertisements. Half title. Illustrated with 8 p. of photographic plates. Bound in original blue grey cloth cloth, in price clipped pictorial dust wrapper.

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Scarce and fascinating account by ‘S.O.S. Sea Surgeon’ Hall, who worked forover twenty years as a wartime doctor with the Walmer Lifeboat, assisting sick and injured seamen in the Downs. A second edition was published in 1961. Kent bIBLIOGRAPHY [ref: 21295 ] £35

604. HALLING - GOWERS, EDWARD and DEREK CHURCH. ACROSS THE LOW MEADOW. Halling - a village on the Medway.

Christine Swift Bookshop. 43 Scott Street, Maidstone. 1979First Edition. 8vo. 134pp. with black and white photo illustration throughout. Original black cloth with gilt titles, manuscript map end papers. Very good book in like dust wrapper.A detailed history of the village of Halling in Kent, a village with a long history, as its oldest known inhabitant ,‘Halling Man’, whose remains were discovered in 1912, dates from 2000 BC. [ref: 19404 ] £35

605. HALPENNY, BRUCE BARRYMORE. ACTION STATIONS: 8. Military airfields of Greater London

Patrick Stephens Limited Wellingborough. 1984First edition. 8vo. 248 pp. with photographs and maps throughout. Original blue cloth in dustwrapper. A very good copy.With particular emphasis on the fighter airfields of the Second World War. This volume covers some 75 airfields and airports from Acton to White Waltham including Heathrow, Gatwick and Luton. [ref: 18621 ] £18

606. HARDING, PETER A. BRANCH LINES IN KENT. Peter Harding, Woking. 1996 8vo. 32 pp. illustrated with black and white photographs and maps. Original printed paper wrappers.Useful reference work, now out of print. [ref: 14896 ] £10

607. HARDING, PETER A. THE NEW ROMNEY BRANCH LINE. Peter Harding, Woking. 19838vo., 32 pp., Illustrated with black and white photographs and maps. Original printed paper wrappers.Useful reference work, now out of print. [ref: 15008 ] £10

608.HARDMAN, G.W. EAST KENT WALKS. SUGGESTIONS FOR WALKS OVER AN EXCEEDINGLY ATTRACTIVE AND UNSPOILT COUNTRY...

E.F. Howe, Deal. No date but c.1936Booklet. Enlarged edition. 40 pp. plus 2 folding maps. Original printed card wrappers. A little spotting to wrappers otherwise a near fine copy. Bookplate inside front cover.Some 28 walks outlined as well as a chapter on ‘The Secret Valley’.

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[ref: 19716 ] £8

609. HARPER, CHARLES. THE INGOLDSBY COUNTRY. LITERARY LANDMARKS OF THE ‘INGOLDSBY LEGENDS’.

A. and C. Black. 1904The First Edition, 274 pp., with 90 original illustrations by the author. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Some foxing as always.Well-compiled companion to the "Ingoldsby Legends" and the Elham Valley and many of the villages and smaller towns of East Kent. We also have copies of the second edition at £35. [ref: 17925 ] £45

610. HARPER, CHARLES. THE INGOLDSBY COUNTRY. A. and C. Black. 1906The Second edition. 276 pp. with 90 original illustrations by the author. Original green decorated cloth, gilt. A very bright fresh copy. Well-compiled companion to the Ingoldsby Legends. There are two issues of this edition, one in blue cloth with a portrait of the author on the upper board, the other in green cloth with the Barham coat of arms stamped in gilt on the upper board. [ref: 16738 ] £35

611. HARPER, CHARLES. THE INGOLDSBY COUNTRY. LITERARY LANDMARKS OF THE ‘INGOLDSBY LEGENDS’.

A. and C. Black. 1911Second edition, 276 pp., with 90 original illustrations by the author. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Some foxing as always.Well-compiled companion to the ‘Ingoldsby Legends’ exploring the Elham Valley and many of the villages and smaller towns of East Kent. [ref: 19555 ] £35

612. HARPER, CHARLES. G. THE KENTISH COAST. Chapman and Hall, Ltd., London. 1914

First Edition 4to. 6 x 9 inches. xi + [iii] + 373 pp. + [1]. Illustrated with 8 plates including frontispiece, and with numerous maps and drawings by the author, many full page. Bound in original blue cloth with impressed decoration on front board. Extremities worn and front hinges strained. Inscription on front free endpaper.

A thorough historical and topographical description of the Kent coast, including chapters covering Deal and the Goodwin Sands, the Channel Tunnel, Shakespeare Cliff Colliery and Romney Marsh. Charles George

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Harper (1863-1943) was a prolific author and illustrator of topographical books, including other county coast titles and a series on historic roads. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 21389 ] £85

FAVERSHAM RECORDS - LIMITED EDITION.613. HARRINGTON, DUNCAN and PATRICIA HYDE. THE EARLY

TOWN BOOKS OF FAVERSHAM c.1251-1581. TheFirst Town Book, compiled c.1382-c.1405, being a collection of documents dating from 1251 relating to the legal status of the Borough. The Second Town Book comprises the Town Accounts, Wardmote minutes and other records for the period 1436-1581. By Duncan Harrington and Patricia Hyde. Parts I and II.

[Lyminge]; privately published by History Research 20082 Vols. Folio. 8.5 x 12 inches. Vol.I. xcviii + 350 pp.; Vol.II. vi + 351-774 pp. Illustrated by two colour frontispieces and 27 figures, including maps (Vol. II fig.

25, misnumbered as 20) and endpaper maps of medieval Faversham. Half-titles. Bound in original maroon cloth, gilt, with pictorial dust wrappers depicting the earliest town seal. Limited edition of 250 numbered and signed copies, of which this is no. xli.‘The Town Books of Faversham c.1251-1581 are invaluable because they provide the basis for the history of the town in that period. This was complicated because there were so many disputes over jurisdiction, but this is why the townsmen treasured the Town Books over the centuries and turned to them again and again...The second town book records amongst many other things the activities of Thomas Arden, a mayor of Faversham...legendary as the gentleman murdered in 1551 by his wife, Alice and nine other conspirators...the events were immortalised in an anonymous play, Arden of Faversham, first published in 1592 and still in repertory.’ [ref: 20681 ] £100

614. HARRINGTON, DUNCAN. (Edited by). KENT HEARTH TAX. KENT HEARTH TAX ASSESSMENT LADY DAY 1664.

British Records Society, and K.A.S 2000cxii + 687 pp., with maps and coloured photo illustrations. Original burgundycloth, gilt. Near fine in very good dust wrapper.Valuable reference, this volume is provided with scholarly introductions, maps, tables and a comprehensive index to be of the greatest use to social and economic historians. [ref: 21199 ] £35

615. HARRIS, G.G. THE TRINITY HOUSE OF DEPTFORD 1514-1660

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The Athlone Press 19698vo., 310 pp. Original cloth, gilt in dust wrapper. A good copy.Fascinating study of early years of Trinity House. The principal lighthouse, seamark, and pilotage authority. [ref: 18178 ] £25

MAGNIFICENT 18TH CENTURY ILLUSTRATRATIONS616. HARRIS, JOHN. THE HISTORY OF KENT. IN FIVE PARTS.

CONTAINING, I. AN EXACT TOPOGRAPHY OR DESCRIPTION OF THE COUNTY. II. THE CIVIL HISTORY OF KENT. III. THE ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF KENT. IV. THE HISTORY OF THE ROYAL NAVY OF KENT. VOL. I. (ALL PUBLISHED)

London : Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, at the Three Crowns in St Pauls Church-Yard 1719Folio. Portrait facing Title, Dedication, Preface, Ode to Kent, list of subscribers + 592 pp. + xl index . Illustrated with a large folding engraved map of the county within heraldic border. Maps of Romney Marsh and the Isle of Thanet, and 39 views (35 double-page) of Kentish

houses including a fine panorama of Rochester and Chatham and the famous view of the Pantiles at Tunbridge Wells. Bound in full paneled calf, gilt expertly rebacked. A nice tall copy with the plates and maps in very good preservation, occasional light foxing to fore-edges affecting one or two plates and the text lightly browned as isnormal, a few paper faults and thebinding worn on extremites, but avery good copy.This copy has the heraldic bookplateof Robert Bristow of London. Thismagnificent illustrated history wasnever to be completed and Harris'swork was not published untilshortly after his death in 1719. It ismuch prized today for thesumptuous plates and maps whichprovide us with a picture of Kent at the beginning of the eighteenth century. The views of the great Kentish houses, by Kip and Badeslade, which utilize the birds-eye projection, show not only the house and gardens in detail but the countryside around and its cultivation. The great map of the county by Parker, within the coats of arms of the noblemen and gentry is, probably, themost splendid and decorative ever printed. The Map of Romney Marsh is also a rarity. This book is becoming very hard to find complete as the value of this type of illustration has caused numerous copies to be broken up. [ref: 18367 ] £5250

617. HARRIS, JOHN. THE HISTORY OF KENT. IN FIVE PARTS. CONTAINING, I. AN EXACT TOPOGRAPHY OR DESCRIPTION OF THE COUNTY. II. THE CIVIL HISTORY OF KENT. III. THE

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ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF KENT. IV. THE HISTORY OF THE ROYAL NAVY. V. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF KENT. VOL. I. [all published]. By John Harris, D. D. and F. R. S.

Printed: And Sold by D. Midwinter, at the Three Crowns in St Pauls Church-Yard, London. 1719Folio. Portrait frontispiece facing title, Dedication, Preface, Ode in Praise of Kent, List of subscribers. [2] + iii + [1] + iv + ii + iv + 592 pp. + xl pp. index and addenda. Illustrated with a large folding engraved map of the county within heraldic border. Maps of the Beacons of Kent, Dover, Romney Marsh and the Isle of Thanet (two maps) and 3 views (32 double-page) of Kentish houses; a fine panorama of Rochester and Chatham and the famous view of the Pantiles at Tunbridge Wells. Also views of Dover Castle and Reculver Church (total 44 plates and maps). N.B. Lacks the plate of The Mote, p. 192. Also illustrated by three woodcuts in text, Royal Arms at head of dedication and headpiece vignettes and decorated initials. Bound in original calf with gilt borders and expertly rebacked, spine divided into compartments, with gilt decorations, by raised bands and gilt rules, morocco label. Marbled endpapers and red speckled edges, darkened on top. A nice tall copy with the plates and maps in very good preservation, occasionallight foxing affecting a few plates and the text lightly browned as is normal, a few paper faults and the binding worn on extremities; otherwise a very good copy.This magnificent illustrated history was never to be completed (the parts covering the history of the Royal Navy and the natural history of Kent) and Harris's work, which he compiled over many years, was not published until shortly after his death in 1719. It is much prized today for the sumptuous plates and maps which provide us with a picture of Kent at the beginning of the eighteenth century. The views of the great Kentish houses, by Kip and Badeslade, which utilise the birds-eye projection, show not only the house and gardens in detail but the countryside around and its cultivation. The great map of the county by Parker, within the coats of arms of the noblemen and gentry is, probably, the most splendid and decorative ever printed. The Map of Romney Marsh is also a rarity. Dr John Harris (born c.1666) was educated at Cambridge and, after ordination, held a number of livings in Sussex, London and Kent (prebend of Rochester, perpetual curacy of Strood and rector of East Barming). He was involved in the political controversies of the day and was a well known writer and lecturer on science (elected F.R.S. 1696), his 1704 Dictionary being one of the first publications to promote Newtonian science. This book is becoming very hard to find complete as the value of this type of illustration has caused numerous copies to be broken up. ESTC N 7630. Smith, p.6-8. DNB. [ref: 20618 ] £4250

DEFINITIVE HISTORY OF KENT CRICKET618. HARRIS, LORD. EDITOR. THE HISTORY OF KENT COUNTY

CRICKET. CONTAINING CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE SEVERAL CAPTAINS OF THE KENT TEAM. ALSO AN ACCOUNT OF EVERY MATCH PLAYED BY THE KENT ELEVEN AND A COMPLETE

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SUMMARY OF THE PERFOMANCES ACCOMPLISHED BY EVERY CRICKETER WHO HAS PLAYED FOR KENT.

Canterbury, Kent County Cricket Club. 20033 volumes. 4to. 10 x 7 inches: Vol 1, 510 pp. + 16 + [3]. Vol 2, 54 pp. + 56 pp. +70 pp. +163 pp. Vol 3, [iv] + ii + 221 pp. Photo illustrations throughout. Original decorated cloth, a very good copy.This is a facsimile reprint of the original 1907 edition with the later printed appendices A.B.C.D. & E. in Volume One. Volume 2 contains reprints of the appendices F. G. H. & I which completed the history up to 1984. Volume 3 contains appendix J and completes the history up to 2003. The binding is also a facsimile of the original. This was a limited subscription edition and is out of print. [ref: 21314 ] £220

619. HARRISON, SHIRLEY. THE CHANNEL. DIVIDING LINK BETWEEN BRITAIN AND FRANCE.

Collins. 19868vo. 320 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper, very good condition in similar wrapper.From prehistory to the date of publication, a detailed and interesting account very well illustrated. [ref: 16204 ] £15

620. HART. ANN. ENGRAVINGS OF KENT. Robert Hale, 19894to. 238 pp. Illustrated throughout. A mint copy in like, unclipped dust wrapper.Provides some useful information on old Kentish prints. [ref: 17211 ] £15

621. HART, BRIAN. THE CANTERBURY AND WHITSTABLE RAILWAY.Wild Swan Publications, 19914to. [6] + 186 pp. with photo illustrations throughout. A fine copy in original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. The now standard history of this historic branch line, the largest collection ofpictures of the line ever published. Only a small number were printed and the book is now scarce. [ref: 20850 ] £45

622. HART, BRIAN. THE ELHAM VALLEY LINE. 1887-1947. Wild Swan Publications. 19844to. [8] + 104 pp. with photo illustration throughout. A fine copy in original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper.The now standard history of this romantic branch line, the product of over 20 years’ research. Only a small number were produced and the book is nowvery scarce. [ref: 18673 ] £60

623. HARTLEY - BANCKS, REV. G.W. HARTLEY THROUGH THE AGES. THE STORY OF A KENTISH VILLAGE.

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Privately printed for the Author. 19274to. 172 pp. with photo illustration. Original boards as issued. Spine lettering worn and corners bumped, otherwise a good copy.Scarce. [ref: 15459 ] £65

624. HARVEY, WALLACE. THE MERCHANT SHIPS OF WHITSTABLE. Whitstable Emprint Publications, 9 Harbour Street, Whitstable, Kent, CT5 1AG. 1993Large 8vo. 6 x 8.25 inches. 320 pp. Half-title. Illustrated by black and white photographs and line drawings. In pictorial card wrappers. Slight wear to extremities but otherwise fine condition. A comprehensive guide to Whitstable shipping up to about 1900. It includes manifests of seventeenth century ships but the greater part of the book is the illustrated section on nineteenth century ships. [ref: 21121 ] £25

DEFINITIVE HISTORY625. HASENSON, ALEC. THE HISTORY OF DOVER HARBOUR.

Arum Special Editions, 11 Garrick Street, London, 1980First Edition, 475 pp. + [5]. 6 x 9 inches, Illustrated with maps, plans, and black and white photographs. Original blue cloth, gilt, with blue endpapers, without the slip case, otherwise a near mint example.Definitive modern history of the harbour, containing a wealth of accurate information. Now thirty years out of print and becoming increasingly difficult to find. Appendix A comprises a list of all the passenger steam boats, car ferries and commercial vehicle ferries which have used the harbour on a regular basis over the last 150 years. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 20914 ] £100

SUBSCRIBERS RECEIPTS FOR HASTED’S KENT626. HASTED - ORIGINAL RECEIPTS FOR SUBSCRIPTION TO

HASTED’S HISTORY OF KENT. Two letterpress receipts on laid paper, with manuscript completions and additions.

No place or publisher but [Simmons, Canterbury] 1775 and 1776Receipt one. 6.75 x 4.25 inches, dated 1st April 1775, made out to Edw. Marshall in the amount of £1:11:6 and signed A. Senior. The printing on the receipt is as follows:Received this_Day of _ 177_ of ___ the Sum of One Guinea and an Half, being the first payment

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towards a subscription of Three Guineas, for the History of the County of Kent, in two volumes folio; which books will be delivered, according to the proposals, as soon as printed, on the payment of the remainder of the said sum. I say received for the use of the Editor. [On the line below, between two horizontal lines] £1:11:6. Receipt two. 6.25 x 3.75 inches, dated 1st April 1776, made out to Edw. Marshall in the amount of £2:0:0 and signed A. Senior.The printing on the receipt is as follows:Received this_Day of _ 177_ of ___ the Sum of One Guinea and an Half, being in full of his subscription, for the second volume of the History of Kent, in folio, by Edward Hasted, Esq; which book will be delivered as soon as printed. I say received for the use of the Editor. [On the line below, between two horizontal lines] £1:11:6. There is an alteration in ink to the word One, it being crossed out and the word ‘two’ substituted; an ‘s’ has been added to the word Guinea. Signs of old vertical folds in both receipts. Receipt I. has a closed tear slightly affecting the first letter of Received. The left margin has a chip and the left lower corner is missing without affecting the printed matter. A stain darkens the left lower part and the paper is evenly browned. These signs of age notwithstanding, the printing is clear and crisp.Receipt II. has some signs of ageing but is intact and the printing is clear and crisp.These receipts are rare survivors, examples of the type used by booksellers toacknowledge subscriptions to Hasted’s monumental work. Hasted originallyenvisaged a two-volume work, to be published by James Simmons in Canterbury, when, in 1774, he issued his proposals for his History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent. This is supported by the wording of Receipt I. It eventually became clear that the original amount of the subscription, three guineas, would not, given the inordinate length of time taken to produce the work, be enough to cover his costs. In addition, the historical content was greater than could be published in two volumes. Volume III was offered at two and a half guineas to current subscribers or three guineas for purchase of the single volume. Volume I was published in 1778, and Volume II in 1782.

Richard Goulden, noted authority on Kentish provincial booksellers, notes that A. Senior was Anne, the wife of David Senior, schoolmaster and bookseller of Sittingbourne. David Senior died in February 1777. Ann evidently helped in the bookselling business, and after her husband’s death, continued the bookshop until her death in October 1801.No mention is made of Edw. Marshall in the list of subscribers in either volume I or II but there is an Edward Marshall mentioned in the text of volume I as a Rector of Fawkham. Mr. Senior however does appear in the list in volume I. [ref: 21058 ] £150

THE COUNTY IN 1783627. HASTED, EDWARD. AN ACCURATE MAP OF THE COUNTY OF

KENT, TAKEN FROM A LATE ACTUAL SURVEY. [Simmons and Kirkby] Canterbury. 1783

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Hand-coloured copper-engraved map. 19 x 27 inches with good margins. Scalequarter of an inch to one mile. Traces of old folds. A good copy of the first edition in original outlined hand-colouring.This sheet shows the whole county and was designed to form an index map for reference to the Hundreds contained within the ‘History’. The late actual survey was that of Andrews, Dury and Herbert of 1769, which forms the basis for all the maps of Hundreds in Hasted’s work. He had much criticised the survey when it first appeared for inaccurate place-names etc., and he made great efforts to correct these for his re-publication of the map. This is an attractive example. [ref: 18011 ] £300

HASTED’S MAPS OF KENT628. HASTED, EDWARD. aMAPS OF THE HUNDREDS aIN KENT. WE

ALWAYS HAVE IN STOCK A WIDE SELECTION OF ORIGINAL EXAMPLES OF HASTED’S FAMOUS MAPS OF THE HUNDREDS, ANDTHE PLAN OF CANTERBURY, FROM THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT.

Canterbury, 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved maps (engraved area approximately 15 x 20 inches). Scale 2 inches to one mile. The 34 sheets show the whole county in great detail and are the best maps prior to the modern maps of the Ordnance Survey. Maps can be coloured, mounted and framed as required, using conservation materials and a wide range of mount colours and mouldings. Prices are dependent on geographical location and popularity and range from £65 to £300 but are generally at the lower end of the scale.We also offer modern reproductions of all the maps, printed on good quality,acid-free, off-white paper and priced at £12 each or £300 for the whole set. [ref: 15850 ] £85

BARONESS BRASSEY’S COPY629. HASTED, EDWARD. THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL

SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. CONTAINING THE ANTIENT AND PRESENT STATE OF IT, CIVIL AND ECCLESIASTICAL; COLLECTED FROM PUBLIC RECORDS, AND OTHER THE BEST AUTHORITIES, BOTH MANUSCRIPT AND PRINTED: AND ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS, ANDVIEWS OF ANTIQUITIES, SEATS OF THE NOBILITY AND GENTRY, ETC. By Edward Hasted, of Canterbury, Esq; F.S.A. and S.A. Volumes I-IV.

Canterbury Printed for the author, by Simmons and Kirkby. 1779-1799FIRST EDITION. 4 vols. Folio. 10.25 x 16.5 inches. Vol. I, [4] + xii + cli + [i] +580 pp. + 42 + [2]. Vol. II, [4] + iv +817 pp. + [1] + 72 + [2]. Vol. III, [4] +ii + 765 pp. + [1] + 51 + [1] + [2]. Vol.

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IV, vi + 788 pp. + 46 + [2]. List of subscribers, Vol. I and Additional list, Vol. II. Illustrated with large coloured folding map of Kent, plan of Canterbury, 35 folding maps of the hundreds, and 124 full page engraved plates (some folding), of which 54 are are additional copies in a second state and 7 are new and not called for in the list of plates, depicting the houses, churches and antiquities of Kent; with coats of arms vignettes on title pages, end piece vignettes and numerous engravings in the text. Includes all plates, maps and other illustrations called for in lists of plates at the end of each volume. The majority of the second state additional plates differ only in the captions, adding the owner’s name of the property; a few others have altered details in the plates themselves, e.g. a more impressive vessel added to the lake, at Beachborough, a reduced size, non-folding view of the Town and Port of Folkestone, figures added to the print of St Martin’s Priory ruins, Dover and the combination of the separate plates of both the castles of Dover and Canterbury. Bound in contemporary full diced calf, with Greek key pattern decorating the boards and striking Gothic style decoration to the spine. Marbled edges and endpapers. A handsome set. Armourial bookplates of Baroness Brassey of Bulkeley and T. A. Brassey.Edward Hasted (1732-1812), devoted forty years of his life to the compilationof this superlative county history, which records in minute detail the village, parochial and town life of the entire county. Embellished with maps of the hundreds, and fine architectural views, the four volumes present a picture of Kent from the Saxons to the late 18th century; it remains the primary source book for the Kentish historian. A very attractive, extra-illustrated copy of this imposing work. It prints the text of the first edition but but adds the second state prints and the new plates, engraved for the publication of the second, octavo, edition of 1797-1800. This copy was owned by Baroness Brassey. Anna Allnutt (1839-1887) married Thomas Brassey in 1860 and made her name as a travel writer, describing her ocean voyages with her husband, Thomas Brassey, M.P. (1836-1918), created Baron Brassey in 1860, the year in which his Naval Annual was first published. Baroness Brassey died at sea, after contracting malaria, in 1887. ESTC T139786. Upcott 1/358. Smith p.8 [ref: 21373 ] £3500

630. HASTED, EDWARD. THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY ALAN EVERITT.

W. Bristow, Canterbury, 1797 - 1801- Republished by E.P. Publishing & Kent County Library, 197212 volumes with folding maps and plates throughout. Original red cloth, gilt. Near fine in like dust wrappers.A complete set of the reprint of the 12 volume second edition. The second edition of Hasted’s great county history was aimed at those who could not afford the four volume set. The text was reset and the maps of the Hundreds were folded to conform to the smaller size. This reprint is itself now scarce complete. [ref: 21156 ] £750

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631. HASTED, EDWARD. THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. VOLUME XII

632. W. Bristow, Canterbury, 1797 - 1801- Republished by E.P. Publishing and Kent County Library. 1972

Volume 12 of the reprint. Original cloth, gilt, in the original dust wrappers. A very good ex-library copy [ref: 18683 ] £55

633. HASTED, EDWARD. THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. VOLUME X.

W. Bristow, 1801, but reprinted E.P. Publishing, 1972Thick 8vo. 611 pp. with folding maps and plates. Original red cloth, gilt, cloth in price-clipped dust wrapper. A near fine copy.Volume 10 of the reprint of the second edition of Hasted covers the Towns and Hundreds of Deal and Walmer, Eastry, Sandwich and the Island of Thanet. [ref: 21235 ] £45

634. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF AXSTANE. Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15.5 x 13.5 inches) with good margins. Scale 1.5 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows the river Thames at Greenhythe in the north, the Darenth Valley from Hawley to Eynsford in the centre and Hartly, Fawkham and Kingsdown in the south. [ref: 10444 ] £95

635. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF BOUGHTON, BLEAN, THE LIBERTY OF SEASALTER AND THE LIBERTY OF THE VILLE OF DUNKIRK, ANTIENTLY THE KINGS FOREST OF BLEAN.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows in the north the coast between Graveney and Whitstable, Boughton and Bossenden in the centre with Selling in the south. [ref: 19583 ] £45

636. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF BRENCHLEY AND HORSEMONDEN, AND THE HUNDRED OF WEST BARNFIELD.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Traces of old folds but a very good copy.The sheet shows Brenchley in the north, Horsmonden and Lamberhurst in the centre, with Bedgbury and Flimwell to the south. [ref: 10454 ] £85

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637. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF BROMLEY AND BECKENHAM AND THE HUNDRED OF RUXLEY.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 14½ inches) with good margins. Scale 1 inch to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows Beckenham, Bromley, Chislehurst and the Crays in the north, and Hayes, Keston, Farnborough and Chelsfield in the centre, with Down in the south. [ref: 16383 ] £150

638. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF CRANBROOK, BARKLEY AND ROLVENDON.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.This sheet shows Cranbrook and Staplehurst in the north with Biddenden in the centre Benenden and Rolvenden to the west and just short of Smarden to the east. [ref: 14258 ] £110

639. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF DOWNHAMFORD AND OF BRIDGE AND PETHAM; WITH THE CITY AND COUNTY OF THE CITY OF CANTERBURY, AND THE LIBERTY OF FORDWICH.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Traces of old folds, but a very good copy.This sheet shows the River Stour from just east of Chartham in the west to Grove Ferry in the east. The City of Canterbury is in the centre, with the landsouth of the Stour as far as Bridge with Bekesbourne, Littlebourne, Wickhambreux and Stodmarsh to the east, and Nackington, the Upper and Lower Hardres and Petham and Waltham to the south and west. [ref: 15516 ] £110

640. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF FAVERSHAM.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Traces of old folds but a very good copy.The sheet shows the The Isle of Harty in Sheppey, The East Swale and Faversham Creek down to the town. To the south the map follows the Ashford Road through Sheldwich as far as Badlesmere Lees with Newnham to the west and Badlesmere in the east. [ref: 18324 ] £85

641. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF FELBOROUGH AND WYE.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.

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This sheet shows the River Stour from Chartham in the north to Wye in the south. Godmersham is in the centre, with Molash, Challock and Eastwell Park to the east, and Brook, Crundale and Bodsham to the south and west. [ref: 15520 ] £90

642. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF GREAT BARNFIELD AND SHELBRITTENDEN.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.This sheet shows Glassenbury House just outside Cranbrook in the north with Hawkhurst, Sandhurst and Newenden along the Tunbridge to HastingsRoad, with Sussex forming the southern border, and the Isle of Oxney just to the east. [ref: 10461 ] £85

643. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF HOO AND OFCHATHAM AND GILLINGHAM.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 18 inches) with good margins. Scale 1.25 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows the Hoo Peninsula and the Isle of Grain in the north, the mouth of the river Medway down to Chatham and Gillingham in the centre, with Waldeslade and Lydsying Green in the south. [ref: 12081 ] £85

644. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF LITTLE AND LESNES AND DARTFORD AND WILMINGTON.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15.5x 13.5 inches) with goodmargins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows the river Thames from Woolwich to Dartford Marshes in thenorth, Plumstead, East Wickham and Erith in the centre and Dartford and Wilmington in the south. [ref: 14744 ] £75

645. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF MAIDSTONE.Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.Original map from Hasted’s History of Kent. The sheet shows Boxley and Barming ether side of the town of Maidstone in the centre with East Farleigh, Loose and Lynton in the south. [ref: 15840 ] £100

646. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF MARDEN. Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Hand-coloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Mounted in conservation materials.

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The sheet shows, a strip with Teise river forming the west border, with Stile Bridge in the North, Marden and Staplehurst central and further south Goudhurst and Killdown. [ref: 10458 ] £110

647. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF MARDEN. Canterbury. n.d. but 1790Hand-coloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Traces of old folds but a very good copy.The sheet shows, a strip with Teise river forming the west border, with Stile Bridge in the North, Marden and Staplehurst central and further south Goudhurst and Killdown. [ref: 18146 ] £75

648. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF RINGSLOW CONTAINING THE ISLAND OF THANET.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 17 inches) with good margins. Scale 1.25 inches to one mile. A very good copy.This sheet shows the whole of the Island of Thanet from Sandwich Bay to Reculver with the fledgling towns of Margate, Broadstairs, Ramsgate and Minster as well as the numerous villages, farms and hamlets. [ref: 10471 ] £100

649. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE hundred of rochester LIBERTY, FORMERLY CALLED THE HUNDRED, OF ROCHESTER AND OF THE HUNDRED OF LARKFIELD.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19.5 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows Rochester and the north bank of the Medway down to Aylesford, and south of the river Medway from Snodland to Allington with the hinterland of the Mallings, Birling, and Addington in the south. [ref: 10448 ] £95

650. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF STOWTING, STREET AND HEANE AND OF BIRCHOLT BARONY AND FRANCHISE.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 18 inches) with good margins. Scale 1¼ inches to one mile. Traces of old folds, otherwise a very good example.This sheet shows from outside Waltham the land to the left of Stone Street, with Elmsted, Hastingleigh, Braborne and Stowting in the north with Sellinge, Aldington, Stanford and Lympne in the centre, and Saltwood and the town of Hythe in the south and the sea forming the southern border. [ref: 16203 ] £110

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651. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF TENTERDEN,BLACKBORNE, OXNEY AND HAM.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.This sheet shows High Halden and Shadoxhurst in the north with Tenterden left of centre, and Woodchurch central and Warehorne right centre, The Isle of Oxney and Appledore are south of these. [ref: 14093 ] £75

652. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF the hundred of tun LOWY OF TUNBRIDGE.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map. (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) From the first edition. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A good copy.The sheet shows Tunbridge in the centre, Hadlow to the north, with Leigh Green to the west with Tunbridge Wells just off the map to the south. [ref: 10452 ] £70

653. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF TWYFORD. Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows the confluence of the Medway and Bewle rivers at Yalding with Wateringbury to the north and West Farleigh to the east and North Hatch to the west, and Brenchley in the south. [ref: 10451 ] £75

654. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF TWYFORD. Canterbury. n.d. but 1782Hand-coloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Trace of original folds. A very good copy.The sheet shows the confluence of the Medway and Bewle rivers at Yalding with Wateringbury to the north and West Farleigh to the east and North Hatch to the west, and Brenchley in the south. [ref: 18145 ] £100

655. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF WACHLINGSTONE.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 19 x 15 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows Tonbridge in the north, Quarry Hill, Bidborough, Speldhurst and Ashurst to the west, Tudeley, Pembury to the east with Tunbridge Wells to the south, the centre sector is blank as the separate map of the Lowy of Tunbridge fits in here. [ref: 12079 ] £75

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656. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF WESTGATE, WHITSTABLE, BLENGATE AND PRESTON.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 1¼ inches to one mile. A very good copy.This sheet shows the sea coast from Whitstable to Reculver in the north. The City of Canterbury in the south west and all the land between the north of theRiver Stour and the Isle of Thanet at Sarre in the east. Below this are Preston, Stourmouth and Elmstone. ref: [ 14750 ] £100

657. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF the hundred of westWESTERHAM AND EATONBRIDGE HUNDRED, WITH THE PARISH AND VILLE OF BRASTED: AND THE HUNDRED OF SOMERDEN.

Canterbury, n.d. but 1778-1801Hand-coloured copper engraved map (engraved area 15 x 15 inches) with goodmargins. Scale 1¼ inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows Westerham and Brasted in the north, Eatonbridge, Hever, Chidingstone and Penshurst in the centre, with Cowden in the south. [ref: 19140 ] £110

658. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF the hundred of westWESTERHAM AND EATONBRIDGE HUNDRED, WITH THE PARISH AND VILLE OF BRASTED: AND THE HUNDRED OF SOMERDEN.

Canterbury, n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper engraved map (engraved area 15 x 15 inches) with good margins. Scale 1¼ inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows Westerham and Brasted in the north, Eatonbridge, Hever, Chidingstone and Penshurst in the centre, with Cowden in the south. [ref: 20666 ] £90

659. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDRED OF WROTHAM, AND THE HUNDRED OF LITTLEFIELD.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 19 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. A very good copy.The sheet shows Stansted to the north and Wrotham, Ightham and Borough Green in the centre and Plaxtol and Mereworth in the south. [ref: 15519 ] £100

660. HASTED, EDWARD. A MAP OF THE HUNDREDS OF WINGHAM AND KINGHAMFORD.

Canterbury. n.d. but 1778-1801Uncoloured copper-engraved map (engraved area 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 15 inches to one mile. A very good copy.This sheet shows Ash and Wingham in the north, Goodneston and Noningtonin the centre and Bishopsborne, Kingston and Barham in the south. [ref: 10470 ] £65

REPRODUCTIONS OF HASTED’S MAPS OF KENT

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661. HASTED, EDWARD. MAPS OF THE HUNDREDS IN KENT. WE HAVE REPRINTED THE COMPLETE SET OF 35 OF HASTED'S FAMOUS MAPS OF THE HUNDREDS OF KENT AND THE PLAN OF CANTERBURY. INDIVIDUAL MAPS ARE AVAILABLE @ £12.

Canterbury, 1778-1801 but reprinted 2004Uncoloured copper-engraved maps (engraved area aprox 15 x 20 inches) with good margins. Scale 2 inches to one mile. Printed on good quality, acid-free off-white/cream paper. Price per map. £12

The sheets show the whole county in great detail and are the best maps priorto the modern maps of the Ordnance Survey. [ref: 15851 ] £12

662. HASTINGS, PAUL. UPON THE QUARRY HILLS. A History of Boughton Monchelsea by Paul Hastings with a survey of buildings by Sarah Pearson.

Boughton Monchelsea Parish Council. 20008vo. 5.75 x 8.25 inches. viii + 231 pp. + [1] pp. Illustrated with black and white photographs, maps, graphs and plans. In laminated pictorial card wrappers. Fine condition. Scholarly and well researched history of the parish lying on the southern ragstone ridge overlooking the Weald, south east of Maidstone [ref: 21184 ] £12

663. HAWKINGE - HUMPHREYS, ROY. HAWKINGE 1912 - 1961. Meresborough Books. 1981192 pp. with maps and photo illustrations. Original laminated pictorial boards, spine sunned, otherwise a very good copyStandard history of the airfield, now long out of print. [ref: 13419 ] £22

664. HAY, DAVID & JOAN. THE DOWNS FROM THE SEA. Langstone Harbour To The Pool Of London.

Edward Stanford, London. 19728vo. 96 pp. Illustrated throughout with b/w photgraphic plates, charts, and line drawings Original cloth in pictorial dust wrapper,Langstone Harbour to the pool of London. A journey by boat around the bottom right hand corner of England. Part travelogue, part memoir, part local history. [ref: 18186 ] £10

665. HAY, PETER. STEAMING THROUGH KENT. Middleton Press. 19848vo. 100 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original laminated boards, a very good copyTypical Middleton press collection of nostalgic views of steam in its heyday. [ref: 15975 ] £12

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FINE PORTRAIT OF KENTISH M.P.666. HAYTER, SIR GEORGE. (Painter) and JAMES SCOTT.

(Engraver). THOMAS LAW HODGES, ESQ. OF HEMSTED. M.P. FOR KENT FROM 1830 TO I832, - FOR WEST KENT FROM 1832 TO 1841, AND FROM 1847 TO 1852. From a Portrait by Sir George Hayter, Painted at the Expence of his former Constituents and Presented to Mr Hodges as a tribute of respect for his Public Services and private worth.

Printed by J. Brooker, no place or date, but c.1853Black Mezzotint engraved portrait, 14 x 20 inches, a proof example printed on India paper and signed in pencil in the lower margin ‘Selected, Sir George Hayter’ showing this to be an artist’s proof. Some faint marginal foxing, otherwise a fine example. Recently remounted in conservation materials and refixed into the original gilt frame, which is a little worn and rubbed but, as the original frame, worthy of preservation.A fine, dark impression from the plate, depicting the distinguished man in a frock coat, with gloves and stick in hand, standing in front of a classical pillar with an extensive landscape behind. Sir George Hayter was the leading Royal and society portrait artist of the day and his work is represented in numerous collections. Thomas Law Hodges was Liberal MP for Kent from 1830-32 and for West Kent until the dissolution of Parliament in 1841; he was again elected in 1847 and sat until defeated in 1852. He died 14 May 1857. Hodges is listed in Pigott’s Directory for 1840 as living in Benenden; Hemsted House was subsequently sold and demolished by its newowner, Gathorne Hardy, later Lord Cranbrook, and replaced by a new building which is the basis for Benenden School, one of the top private girls’ schools in the country. [ref: 14120 ] £250

667. HAZELTON, IVAN. TIME BEFORE THE MAST. Chaffcutter Books, Ware. 2003Revised edition. 176 pp. with numerous b/w photo illustrations. Original pictorial card wrappers. A near fine copy.East Coast reminiscences of a Sprits’l Sailorman. [ref: 20810 ] £15

668. HEADCORN LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY HEADCORN A PICTORIAL HISTORY.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198748 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18655 ] £10

ORIGINAL WATERCOLOUR669. HEMSTED, WATERCOLOUR PAINTING. HEMSTED, KENT.

[c.1820]Watercolour. Image size, 17 x 13.5 inches. The initials FF, after the title, are presumably those of the artist. Mounted on the original paper page from the album, with heading ‘Benenden’ at top and numbered 142 (143 on reverse). Slight tear to the top centre.

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The watercolour shows a view of the wooded park, taken from the interior ofa rustic wooden summerhouse, with a shell ornamentation above, on the interior of the thatched roof.Hemsted was a separate manor within the parish of Benenden, Kent and passed within many generations of the Guldeford family. It may have been rebuilt around the time of Queen Elizabeth’s visit in the 1570s. It was sold to Admiral of the Fleet, Sir John Norris after 1719 and later to the Hodges family, in 1788.At the time of the painting, which was extracted from an album used by several generations of the family at Hemsted and at Jennings, near Maidstone, the house was in the possession of Thomas Law Hodges. He was Liberal MP for Kent from 1830-32 and for West Kent from 1832 until the dissolution of Parliament in 1841; he was again elected in 1847 and sat until defeated in 1852. He died 14 May 1857. Hemsted House was subsequently sold and demolished by its new owner, Gathorne Hardy, later Lord Cranbrook, and replaced by a new building which is the basis for Benenden School, one of the top private girls’ schools in the country.A charming watercolour of a peaceful parkland scene. Hasted [ref: 19761 ] £175

670. HENDERSON, ROY. CROSSING THE CHANNEL. Silver link Press 19974to. 128 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Original cloth gilt. *From the library of author David Collyer.Story of the Channel crossing’s over the last 50 years. [ref: 18167 ] £15

671. HERNE BAY - WARD, LOCK AND CO. PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO HERNE BAY, WHITSTABLE, CANTERBURYAND NORTH EAST KENT.

Ward, Lock & Co. 1921-2218 + viii + 12 + ix to xxiv + 24 + 32 + 40 + 12 + 32 + [4] adverts + [4] + 80 + [2] pp. adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth.Universally popular guides now becoming more difficult to find. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 17503 ] £20

672. HIGHWOOD, PHYLLIS and SKELTON, PEGGY. A WEALDEN VILLAGE: MARDEN By Phyllis Highwood and Peggy Skelton. Illustrations by Robert Highwood.

Rainham Meresborough Books. 19868vo. 5.75 x 8 inches. 128 pp., including [4] pp. advertisements. Half-title. Illustrated by black and white photographs, maps, drawings and facsimiles. Inoriginal laminated pictorial card wrappers. Small sunned strip on edge of front cover, otherwise fine condition.Well illustrated and documented village history. [ref: 21179 ] £12

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673. HILLIER, CAROLINE. THE BULWARK SHORE. THANET AND THE CINQUE PORTS.

Eyre Methuen. 1980317 pp. with endpaper maps and photo illustration. Original cloth in dustwrapper.Very readable modern account. [ref: 10815 ] £10

674. HOATH. [VARIOUS AUTHORS]. HOATH AND HERNE. The LastOf The Forest.with articles on Chislet, Upstreet, Westbere, Sturry and Fordwich

K.H.McIntosh 8vo. 184 pp. illustrated throughout. Original pictorial card covers.Wonderful and varied insights into Hoath, Herne and surrounding villages. [ref: 18184 ] £8

POOTER STYLED SEASIDE HOLIDAY, 1888.675. HOBSON, LIEUTENANT [MISS STANIFORD] AND LONG,

SERGEANT [W.A. STANIFORD]. OUR LIFE AT HERNE BAY. Beinga short and faithful account of an eight days’ holiday spent in that delightful locality by a party of six persons in the beginning of September, 1888. By Lieutenant Hobson and Sergeant Long of the Honourable Herne Bay Company. Published privately at Bredon in Loughborough, London. 1888.

1888 with additions to 1935.Manuscript. 6 x 7.75 inches. [20] + 268 pp. + [4] + [12] pp. 3 letters (dated 1902, 1906, 1912) tipped in + orig. p.

111-2, partly crossed through, and tipped in here, having been replaced by a cancel leaf + [74] blank leaves. Red ink occasionally used for emphasis. Half-title. Illustrated by [4] watercolour plates, protected by tissue guards. Ruled exercise book, bound in original black half morocco over cloth boards, gilt. Endpapers and all edges marbled. Joints split but reinforced by tape on inside.Introductory letter of 1911, by W. A. Staniford, 13 Bredon Road, Coldharbour Lane, Camberwell, London, SE. added to free endpaper. An account of a late Victorian seasideholiday, in style reminiscent of the fictitiousDiary of a Nobody. The Staniford family ofCamberwell arrive in early September 1888for an eight day holiday at Herne Bay. It iswritten in a mock pompous style as ifconducting a military campaign. The partyconsisted of ‘Sergeant’ Long (W. A.Staniford, the paterfamilias), ‘Lieutenant’ Hobson (his sister, Miss Staniford,renowned in the diary for her voracious appetite), ‘Corporal’ Jolliffe (Miss Emma West, a cousin), ‘Gunner’ Miriam (sister to Miss West, described as ‘very stout,’ probably Mary (Polly) Biggs), ‘Gunner’ Mum (the materfamilias, possibly Emma Eliza Staniford), and ‘Orderly’ Tom (the young son, possibly Thomas Henry Staniford). The names Hobson and

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Jolliffe were taken from characters in The Fur Traders, a Jules Verne novel that ‘Sergeant’ Long brought with him. The diary is written in two hands, by Staniford and his sister and provides detailed descriptions including their meals, bathing machines at Herne Bay and Margate, the entertainment at the pier, trips on the water, excursions to Margate, and a walk to the village of Herne where they get lost at dusk on the way back. There is an interesting comment on the bicycles and tricycles for hire, mostly ‘abominable old ramshackle out of date monstrosities on wheels; they lookedas though they had been packed off to the provinces after becoming obsolete in London.’ The family appear to be inclined to Roman Catholicism judging by their comments on Herne church and Herne Bay being ‘most fearfully and wonderfully ultra Protestant.’ A diatribe against Sunday observance is sparked off by the difficulty of hiring a bathing machine on that day: eventually they have to haul the machines themselves with the help of some ‘young imps ... humbugging about.’ As well as the fine watercolour sketchesby Staniford, the diary adds several verses and songs composed by the writers. The Herne Bay diary is well composed with dedication, preface, introduction, contents, list of illustrations, running summaries at the tops of pages and pagination. Mary Stanley comments, in an inserted letter from her of 1906: ‘I wonder you have never had it printed and published so that the public at large may read it.’ Indeed as an example of late Victorian humour, it may well be compared to the Grossmiths’ The Diary of a Nobody, its exact contemporary in date of composition. [ref: 21044 ] £400

676. HOGARTH, WILLIAM. HOGARTH'S FROLIC. THE FIVE DAYS' PEREGRINATION AROUND THE ISLE OF SHEPPEY OF WILLIAM HOGARTH AND HIS FELLOW PILGRIMS, SCOTT, TOTHALL, THORNHILL, AND FORREST. With sketches in sepia from the original drawings illustrating the tour by W. Hogarth and Sam. Scott.

London John Camden Hotten, 74 and 75, Piccadilly, W. No date but 1872Large 8vo. 6.75 x 8.5 inches. [2] + xiv + [ii} + 42 pp. Transcript of original title and additional title for The Five Days’ Peregrinations, imitated in Hudibrasticks By one well acquainted with some of the Travellers, and of the places here Celebrated. Illustrated with 13 lithographic plates and half title title, all printed in sepia and folding

coloured plate and other wood engravings in text, after original drawings by William Hogarth and Samuel Scott. Bound in original green decorated cloth, blocked gilt. All edges gilt. Occasional foxing but otherwise a good copy. Label of G. Bond, Bookseller and Stationer, 3, Market Row Gt. Yarmouth, on front pastedown.The famous tour took place in late May of1732. ‘The party consists of Hogarth,Thornhill, Scott, Tothall, and Forrest,and each of the five has his allotteddepartment. Thornhill made the map,Hogarth [1696-1764] and [Samuel] Scott

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[c.1710-1772] furnished the sketches, Tothall faithfully discharged the joint offices of treasurer and caterer, and [Ebenezer] Forrest wrote the journal...They sent the manuscript to their friend, The Rev. W.[illiam] Gostling, the author of ‘A walk in and about Canterbury,’...Amused by the Humour of Forrest’s description, he wrote an imitation in Hudibrastic verse, with additions of his own.’ It was first published in 1782. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21667 ] £150

677. HOGARTH, WILLIAM. HOGARTH'S PEREGRINATION. Edited with an Introduction by Charles Mitchell. [Title of manuscript text:] AN ACCOUNT OF WHAT SEEM’D MOST REMARKABLE IN THE FIVE DAYS PEREGRINATION OF THE FIVE FOLLOWING PERSONS VIZT. MESSIEURS TOTHALL, SCOTT, HOGARTH, THORNHILL AND FORREST. BEGUN ON SATURDAY MAY THE 27TH. 1732 AND FINISH’D ON THE 31ST. OF THE SAME MONTH.

Oxford At The Clarendon Press 1952Large 8vo. 6.75 x 9 inches. xxxi + [i] + 51 pp. + 3. Illustrated with frontispieceand 12 plates, including map (by Thornhill), 10 after original drawings by Hogarth and Scott, and wood engravings in text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt in price clipped dust wrapper with publisher’s device on back.This famous tour took place in late May of 1732. ‘Mr.Thornhill Made the map...Mr. Hogarth [1696-1764] and Mr.[Samuel] Scott [c.1710-1772] all the other Drawings,Mr.Tothall was our Treasurer...and the foregoing Memoirs was the Work of [Ebenezer] fforrest.’ The text is based on the original manuscript in the British Museum, Department of Prints and Drawings. The Rev. William Gostling, the author of A walk in and about Canterbury, wrote the Account in imitation of Hudibrastic verse, with additions of his own.’ It was first published in 1782. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21723 ] £20

678. HOGG, ALEXANDER. A NEW MAP OF KENT DRAWN FROM THELATEST AUTHORITIES.

1784Hand coloured copper engraving. 8.5 x 4.5 inches. Includes remarks and engraved by Thomas Conder. A fine example.From Walpole’s The New British Traveller. [ref: 17977 ] £50

679. HOLLINGBOURNE - CAVE-BROWNE, J. THE STORY OF HOLLINGBOURNE, ITS CHURCH AND ITSCLERGY.

Maidstone, E. J. Dickinson. 1890106 pp. with 10 illustrations and a folding pedigree. Original dark brown cloth, gilt.A very good copy of this very scarce local history.[ref: 18151 ] £165

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680.HOLMES, F.M. THE LIFEBOAT - ITS HISTORY AND HEROES. S.W. Partridge, London. [1908]Second impression. 160 pp. + 32 pp. catalogue with frontis and five other b/w plates, and illustrations and plans to the text. Original pictorial blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy.[ref: 18618 ] £35

681. HOMAN, ROGER. THE VICTORIAN CHURCHES OF KENT Phillimore, 19844to. 122 pp. well illustrated throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper.A useful contribution the history of the county, concerning these much neglected buildings. Now out of print. [ref: 18064 ] £12

SIGNED COPY682. HOME, GORDON. CANTERBURY OF OUR GRANDFATHERS AND

OF TODAY. The Homeland Assoc. London. 1927Slim 4to. 40 pp. including numerous b/w plates and line drawings to the text and map to front endpapers. Quarter-bound in grey cloth. The rear free endpaper and pastedown have been covered with a section of a coloured one inch Ordnance Survey map showing the country from Chipstead, Surrey to Chipstead, Kent. Some foxing to the text otherwise a good copy. Signed and inscribed on the half-title ‘With the author’s compliments Gordon Home Dec.14 1927’This useful little book contains reproductions of many of the best and rarest early engravings of Canterbury. [ref: 21411 ] £20

ARTICLE ON MINSTER ABBEY, THANET683. HONEYBOURNE, MARJORIE B., ED TRANSACTIONS OF THE

ANCIENT MONUMENTS SOCIETY New series. Volume seventeen.Edited by Marjorie B. Honeybourne.London: Ancient Monuments Society 19708vo. 130 + [2] pp. Illustrated with black and white photographs in text. Bound in original cloth, gilt with Society’s monogram on front boards. Small neat bookplate. Contains article, Minster Abbey, Thanet, by Brian R. Fagg, pp, 39-50 (and frontispiece). [ref: 19209 ] £10

684. HOOK, DAEVID and AMBROSE, ROBIN. BOXLEY The Story of an English Parish.

Maidstone Published for the authors. 19998vo. 6 x 8.25 inches. viii + 258 pp. Illustrated with black and white photographs, drawings and maps in text. In laminated coloured pictorial card

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boards. Letter to Elizabeth Melling on purchase price of book enclosed. In fine condition. A detailed history of the parish of Boxley, bordering the River Medway, nearMaidstone. It includes accounts of the local families, great houses, the paper mills, Penenden Heath, (the traditional gathering place for the people of Kent) and the hamlets of Weavering, Grove Green, Sandling, Boarley and Tyland. [ref: 21181 ] £15

685. HOPE, LADY ELIZABETH REID. ENGLISH HOMES AND VILLAGES (KENT AND SUSSEX). By Lady Hope. With Illustrations

J. Salmon, 85 and 87 High Street, Sevenoaks. 1909First edition. 4to. 9.5 inches x 6.5 inches, [xvi] + 296 pp. With 63 colour plates and 17 black and white plates and numerous other photographs and vignettes within the text. Bound in original green pictorial cloth with gilt decoration, including illustration of Pantiles on front board; extremities worn,contents and illustrations all clean and tight, a very good example. Bookplate of Gerald J. Davey and ink inscription, Natalie Beard, 25 December 1910.A lavishly illustrated book describing the topography and history of the Weald and adjoining areas, within twenty-five miles of Tunbridge Wells. With 63 full page colour representations of the countryside, houses and gardens from paintings by: Sidney Baker, F. W. Burton, C. Essenhigh Corke and others. All beautifully reproduced by Salmon, the renowned Sevenoaks printers. Chapters on places of interest ranging from Maidstone and Rochester, through Knole, Ightham Mote, Penshurst and The Weald, to Tunbridge Wells, Tonbridge, East Grinstead, Lamberhurst, Eridge Castle, Bayham Abbey and Lewes. Elizabeth Reid, Lady Hope, nee Cotton (1842-1922) was born in Tasmania and married Admiral Sir James Hope in 1877; although later remarried to T.A. Denny in 1893, she continued to use the name Lady Hope. In 1915 she claimed that she had visited Charles Darwin athis home at Downe and that he had recanted his theory of evolution (she andher father had been part of the evangelistic Temperance movement and livedat Beckenham in the early 1880s). Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 20215 ] £150

686. HORSLEY, CANON J. W. PLACE NAMES IN KENT. South Eastern Gazette. Maidstone: 1921First Edition. 8vo. 84 pp. Original brown blind-stamped cloth, gilt to spine. Afine copy.[ref: 18542 ] £25

687. HORSLEY, JOHN WILLIAM. PLACE NAMES IN KENT. By Canon J. W. Horsley, Late Vicar of Detling.

Maidstone: South Eastern Gazette Co., Ltd., 4 High Street. 1921First Edition. 8vo. 5 x 7.5 inches. 84 pp. Original brown blind-stamped cloth, gilt to spine. Library stampsof St. Augustine’s Abbey Library, Ramsgate. 1944 ink inscription on first free endpaper and pencil notes in

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margins and at end. Extremities slightly worn and some spotting, otherwise a fine copy.An early study of Kent place names, following the author’s articles in the South Eastern Gazette. John William Horsley (1845-1921) was born at Dunkirk, near Canterbury, and educated at the King’s School and at Pembroke, Oxford. Horsley was ordained in 1870 and spent the greater partof his career serving the London parishes of Shoreditch, Clerkenwell (where he was prison chaplain), Woolwich and Walworth. He was appointed an honorary canon of Rochester Cathedral in 1903 and of the cathedral of the newly-created Southwark diocese in 1905. A freemason, botanist and alpine walker, Horsley was best-known as a social reformer and author of books on social questions. He retired to the living of Detling in 1911. Kent Bibliography. DNB. [ref: 20858 ] £30

HANDSOME PRESENTATION OF KENT PEDIGREES688. HOWARD, JOSEPH JACKSON AND HOVENDEN, ROBERT.

SOME PEDIGREES FROM THE VISITATION OF KENT, 1663-68. Annotated by Joseph Jackson Howard, LL.D., and Robert Hovenden. Privately Printed. 100 copies.

London: Mitchell and Hughes, 140 Wardour Street, W. 1887Small folio. 7.5 x 10.5 inches. [iv] + 134 + [2] pp. advertisements at end + [71] blank sheets interleaved. Illustrated with two plates and engravings in text. Half bound in thick art vellum boards. Dent to centre of, and some fraying at top of, spine. Wear on lower edges of boards and attached paper shards at bottom of last four pages. Slight foxing of endpapers but fine clean interior. Ink inscription on front paste-down and upside down bookplate in the same name, dated 1924, on rear paste-down. Limited edition of one hundred copies.‘The Editors...have issued these Pedigrees from ‘the

Visitation of Kent in 1663-68 as a separate Volume. Many of them have appeared previously in the ‘Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica,’ but the Annotations have all been amplified, and the data specially authenticated.’The Visitation was a detailed heraldic investigation of the main Kentish families taken at intervals in the17th century. This volume examines twelve families, employing family trees (pedigrees), wills, register extracts, marriage licences and inscriptions from church monuments, etc.A handsome copy of this genealogical work. [ref: 19475 ] £200

689. HUFTON, GEOFFREY and ELAINE BAIRD. THE SCARECROW'S LEGION, OR SMUGGLING IN THE SOUTH EAST.

Rochester Press, Upchurch, Sittingbourne. 1983

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Slim folio. 8 x 11.5 inches. v + [i] +106 pp. Illustrated throughout. Bound in original blue glazed pictorial boards, with map on rear board. Inscription on first free endpaper. Very good condition.Readable account of the activities of all the most famous gangs and smuggling locations. Now out of print. [ref: 20679 ] £20

690. HUGHES, PENNETHORNE. A SHELL GUIDE TO KENT. Edited byJohn Betjeman and John Piper.

Faber & Faber. 19694to. 176 pp. with map and numerous illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.Re-written and enlarged version of the mid 1930's guide. A large number of the photographs are by John Piper, who revised and edited the text which, due to the death of Hughes, came to him as an unfinished typscript. [ref: 16756 ] £20

691. HULL, DR. FELIX. ORDNANCE SURVEY HISTORICAL GUIDES - KENT.

George Philip / Ordnance Survey. 19884to. 136 pp. illustrated with maps and photos throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A near mint copy.Contrasts and compares the first survey of 1801 with those of today, and photos of the turn of last century with recent ones. [ref: 16784 ] £15

692. HULL, DR. FELIX. Edited by. CATALOGUE OF ESTATE MAPS 1590-1840 IN THE KENT COUNTY ARCHIVES OFFICE. With a preface

by Miss H. M Wallis, Superintendent of the Map Room, British Library.

Kent County Council. 1973Large 4to. xiii + 288 pp. With colour and black and white plates. Original stiff printed card wrappers. A very good copy.An invaluable guide to the manuscript maps in the Kent Archives. Fully indexed as to places people and surveyors, the catalogue is very nicely produced and is long out of

print. [ref: 19462 ] £45

693. HULL, F. (Ed). A KENTISH MISCELLANY. Volume XXI of the Kent Records.

Kent Archæological Society. 1979.8vo., 162 pp., with photo illustration. Original cloth, gilt. Fine in dust wrapper.Contains:Canterbury's Earliest Rolls of Freemen Admissions 1297 - 1363.A Rental of the Manor of East Malling A.D. 1410.Memoranda from the Queenborough Statute Book, 1452 - 1556,2 - 1556.The View and State of the Commandery of Swingfield 1452 - 1363.

206

A Sixteenth Century Precedent Book of Indictments. [ref: 17405 ] £10

694. HULL, FELIX. GUIDE TO THE KENT COUNTY ARCHIVES OFFICE.

Kent County Council. 1958.8vo. xvi + 290 pp. with photographic illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy. [ref: 19037 ] £20

695. HUMPHERY-SMITH, CECIL R. PHILLIMORE ATLAS AND INDEX OF PARISH REGISTERS Phillimore & Co. Ltd., 1984

Original blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper."The genealogist’s bible." The Atlas includes the famous county "parish" maps, which show pre-1832 parochial boundaries, colour-coded probate jurisdictions, starting dates of surviving registers, and churches and chapels,where relevant. Topographical maps face each "parish" map, and show the contemporary road system and other local features, to help deduce the likely movement of people beyond the searcher’s starting point. The Index lists the parishes, with grid references to the county maps. It indicates the present whereabouts of original registers and copies, and whether a parish is included in other indexes. It also gives registration districts and census information [ref: 20298 ] £45

696. HUMPHREYS, ROY. A PICTORIAL STUDY OF HAWKINGE PARISH.

Meresborough Books. 1987with maps and photo illustrations. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18657 ] £10

697. HUMPHREYS, ROY. and others. FLIGHT IN KENT. Kent Aviation Historical and Research Society/Meresborough. 198564 pp., illustrated throughout in b/w. Pictorial card wrappers. Very good.Nine articles on the history of flight in Kent, ranging from the first airmen tofly in the county to Barrage Balloons on the Isle of Sheppey. [ref: 18051 ] £5

698. HUSSEY, ARTHUR. KENT RECORDS - KENT OBIT AND LAMP RENTS. Compiled and edited by Arthur Hussey. Issued to Subscribers tothe Records Branch.

(Kent Records. Volume XIV).Ashford: Kent Archaeological Society. Records Branch. 19368vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. vii + [i] +138 pp. Series half-title. Original blue cloth, gilt., with Society’s device on front boards. Some foxing, especially on edges, otherwise a fine copy.This work complements Hussey’s Kent Chantries. It prints the information contained in the certificates returned in 1548 in compliance with the Chantries Act of 1547, with relevant entries from the Court of Augmentations

207

books, recording the sale particulars of Chantry and Obit lands. The intention of Edward VII’s protestant government was the need to correct t views about purgatory and masses for the departed and the Chantries wherethese were said and lamps hung (and elsewhere inside the church). The lands left to support these foundations were to be converted for more godly purposes, including the establishment of grammar schools, the augmentation of the two universities, better provision for the poor and needy, as well as providing revenue for the king (the last being the dominating reason). Kent Bibliography [ref: 21174 ] £25

699. HUTCHINSON, JOHN. MEN OF KENT AND KENTISHMEN. A MANUAL OF KENTISH BIOGRAPHY.

Canterbury : Cross and Jackman, 1892Subscription Edition. Small 8vo. 160 pp. Bound in the original terracotta cloth, gilt. Bookplate to front pastedown endpaper and a surface tear with loss to rear free endpaper otherwise a very good copy.Containing 227 individual biographies of natives of the county who have attained distinction in Arts, Science, Literature etc. A scarce and useful work, we have record of only two other copies having passed through our hands in 20years.

[ref: 21237 ] £85

700. HYNDMAN, OONAGH. WARTIME KENT 1939-40. A Selection of Memories from the BBC Radio Kent series.

Meresborough Books. 1990160pp illustrated with b/w photographs. Laminated pictorial card wrappers.VG[ref: 19697 ] £8

701. HYNDMAN, OONAGH. WARTIME KENT 1939-40. A Selection of Memories from the BBC Radio Kent series.

Meresborough Books. 1990160pp 8x6 inches illustrated with b/w photographs. Laminated pictorial card wrappers. VG[ref: 21773 ] £8

702. HYTHE. AUCTION PARTICULARS. Particulars and Conditions of Sale of the Valuable Freehold Property.......situate and being No. 93, High Street, Hythe, Formerly Licenced as a Beer House, and known as The Providence Inn..... to be Sold by Auction, by Cobay Brothers, Limd....on Monday, February25th, 1979 .... etc., etc.

Printed by W.S. Paine, Hythe. 1907Large sheet, approximately 16 x 21 inches, printed on both sides and folded. With full particulars of the site, conditions of sale and receipt form. [ref: 19118 ] £20

208

703. HYTHE. AUCTION PARTICULARS. Particulars and Conditions of Sale of the Valuable Freehold Building Site....... being the Old Sportsman Inn, Recently Destroyed by Fire..... to be Sold by Auction, by Cobay Brothers, Limd.... on Monday, February 8th, 1909 .... etc., etc.

Printed by W.S. Paine, Hythe. 1909Large sheet, approximately 16 x 21 inches, printed on both sides and folded. With full particulars of the site, conditions of sale and receipt form. [ref: 14024 ] £20

704. HYTHE - COX, DAVID. HYTHE, KENT. Drawn by D. Cox Engraved by J. C. Allen.

Published for the Proprietors n.d. but c. 1840Hand-coloured steel engraving, approximately 5.5 x 8.5 inches. Mounted in conservation materials.A lively view by the English landscape artist David Cox looking south from the high ground above the church, with the town and English Channel beyond. Fort Twiss and Fort Sutherland, the two strong points built on the seashore during the Napoleon invasion scare, are still in evidence. [ref: 15826 ] £65

705. HYTHE - DAVIES, W.J.K. THE ROMNEY, HYTHE & DYMCHURCH RAILWAY.

David & Charles. 1975.208 pp., with photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper.First edition of the standard history. [ref: 17100 ] £20

706. HYTHE - DAWSON, ROBERT, Lieut. R.E. HYTHE. (FROM THE ORDNANCE SURVEY) BOUNDARY COMMISSION MAP.

House of Commons. n.d. but 1831Lithographic map, 17 x 11 inches, with contemporary hand-colouring. A fine example with very attractive colouring.These maps were produced from the Ordnance Survey maps on a scale of 2 inches to one mile, to redefine the parliamentary boundaries, in this case Hythe, Folkestone and Sandgate became one constituency. The map is sold together with the 4pp. of text and statistics which accompanied the map in the report. [ref: 16650 ] £75

707. HYTHE - DAWSON, ROBERT, Lieut. R.E. HYTHE. (FROM THE ORDNANCE SURVEY) BOUNDARY COMMISSION MAP.

House of Commons. 1831Lithographic map, 15 x 12 inches. With contemporary hand-colouring. A fine example with attractive colouring.These maps were produced from the Ordnance Survey maps, in this instanceon a scale of 3 inches to one mile, to redefine the town boundaries, which now encompassed small fragments of the parishes of Newington and Saltwood. Five windmills are marked in Hythe, as are the three forts which were built to defend the town in the Napoleonic wars, Fort Twiss, Fort Sutherland, and Fort Moncrief.

209

[ref: 16832 ] £75

708. HYTHE - FORBES, DUNCAN. HYTHE HAVEN. THE STORY OF THE TOWN AND CINQUE PORT OF HYTHE.

Shearwater Press, Hythe. 19828vo. 240 pp. with maps and illustrations throughout. Original blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in a very good wrapper.*This copy is signed by th e author. We also have available another, unsigned, copy (wrapper has neat repair at top) for the same price.

[ref: 16730 ] £20

709. HYTHE - ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPS. MAP OF HYTHE. Ordnance Survey. No date but before or about 1884Specially constructed folding map, 25 x 21 inches approximately, dissected into ten panels and laid on to linen. Folding to 12.5 x 4.25 inches, the map extends from Lympne down to Dymchurch Wall and across to just east of Cannongate Road, with a hand-coloured strip of beach below High Water Mark extending from the western Municipal Boundary of Hythe , just east of the Redoubt to the eastern Municipal Boundary at Twiss Road. A neat stamp in the bottom right (blank) corner shows that it was received Aug 18 1884 at the Board of Trade. Next to this is stamped the number 6588. Bright and clean with one short split to one fold otherwise very good.This map was clearly a piece of evidential information in a case between ‘The Attorney General (for the Crown) and The Mayor &c of Hythe’ for this much is written in a neat hand on the back of the map. It is referred to as a ‘Plan referred to in Information’. Above this, in another hand, is the wording ‘Plan referred to in Mr. Redgrave’s letter of 16 Aug 1884 to C. Cecil Trevor Esq., C.B.’ C. Cecil Trevor was at the Board of Trade in the Harbour Department. [ref: 17465 ] £25

710. HYTHE - ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPS OF KENT - 25 inch maps. Sheets 74.15. & 74.14. HYTHE SOUTH OF THE CANAL AND THE RANGES AS FAR AS WEST HYTHE AND BOTOLPH’S BRIDGE.

O/S 18982 hand-coloured lithographed maps 25 x 38 inches. Dissected and laid on to linen and preserved in a slipcase. (Included is a section of another O/S map with a small parcel of land highlighted at Baronet Bridge near Dymchurch which must have been part of the same estate). A trifle dusty but very good copies. These maps have been specially prepared by Stanfords for F. W. Butler, Estate Agents and Auctioneers in Hythe, for the sale of land, (marked on the maps in red). The land is now been built upon and is known as the Pennypot Estate. Apart from this, the detail of Hythe before the extensive development between the sea and the canal is most interesting. [ref: 8606 ] £75

210

711. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL XXIV

Ashford : The Kentish Express, 1930. 4to 10x7.5 inches. 82 pp. with illustration by Xavier Willis. Original decoratedcloth. A very good copy.Hythe, Newington-next-Hythe, Borden, Tunstall, Newenden. [ref: 21771 ] £30

712. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL. XX.

Ashford, Kentish Express, 19274to. 10 x 7 inches, 88 pp. with original illustrations. by Xavier Willis. Orig. pictorial cloth. From Westminster library with the usual stamps but very cleanand neat.Barfrestone, Coldred, Tilmanstone, Shepherdswell, Eythorne, Lydden, Kingsdown, Ringwould, Oxney, Worth, Ripple, Waldershare. [ref: 21306 ] £25

713. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME II.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19114to. 81 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Appledore, Hollingbourne, Benenden, Hemsted, Great Chart, Godington, Littlebourne, Ickham and Willesborough. [ref: 14219 ] £20

714. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME III.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19014to. 95 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Eastwell, Elham, Lyminge, Allington, Aylesford and the Old Carmelite Priory at Aylesford. [ref: 15794 ] £25

715. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME IV.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19024to 10x7.5 inches. 95 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated clotha little faded. Tenterden, St Michael's, Smallhythe, Betteshanger, Little Chart, Northbourne, Brenchley and Matfield. [ref: 21772 ] £20

716. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME V.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19034to. 110 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth.

211

Minster in Thanet, Ebbsfleet, Biddenden, Staplehurst, Rolvenden, Brookland and Fairfield. [ref: 10826 ] £20

717. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME V.

The Kentish Express, Ashford 19034to., 112 pp. + [2] . Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Small neat bookplate on front paste down. Ink signature on front end paperMinster in Thanet, Ebbsfleet, Biddenden, Staplehurst, Rolvenden, Brookland and Fairfield. [ref: 19019 ] £20

718. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME VII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19064to. 92 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Cranbrook, Bilsington, Bilsington Priory and Woodchurch. [ref: 10829 ] £20

719. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME VIII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19084to. 88 pp. illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Herne, Hoath, Herne Bay, Broomfield, Leeds and Leeds Castle. [ref: 16923 ] £20

720. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME IX.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19104to. 88 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A good copy.Sissinghurst, Goodnestone-Next-Wingham, Loose, Coxheath, Chartham, Bridge and Patrixbourne. [ref: 16927 ] £25

721. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME X.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19134to. 82 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Brabourne, Bircholt, Smeeth, Sellindge, Nonington and Womenswold. [ref: 16924 ] £25

722. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL. X.

Ashford, Kentish Express. 191382 pp. with illustrations by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth.

212

Brabourne, Bircholt, Smeeth, Sellindge, Nonington, Womenswold. [ref: 20671 ] £25

723. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. no date but c.19164to. 8o pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Godmersham, Goudhurst, Kilndown, Luddesdown, Cuxton and Halling. [ref: 16631 ] £25

724. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XIII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19194to., 85 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Slight cockling to text but a very good copy.Dymchurch, Aldington, Sevington, Mersham and Egerton. [ref: 16919 ] £20

725. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL XIII

Ashford : The Kentish Express, 1919.4to. 8o pp. with illus. by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Dymchurch, Aldington, Sevington, Mersham, Egerton. [ref: 20670 ] £25

SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR.726. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH

PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XIV.Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19204to 10x7.5 inches. 80 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis, this copy includes an additional photographic portrait of sir Charles Igglesden which is signed and inscribed ,‘yours truly’. Original decorated cloth. Westwell, Hothfield, Bearsted, Thurnham and Kingsnorth. [ref: 10832 ] £45

727. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XV.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19224to. 88 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Hawkhurst, Sandhurst, Flimwell, Hamstreet, Orlestone, Warehorne and Ruckinge. [ref: 16920 ] £25

728. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. xp A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XVI.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19234to. 89 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.

213

Kenardington, Stone-in-Oxney, Wittersham, East Sutton, Chart Sutton, Sutton Valence and Frittenden. [ref: 16921 ] £25

729. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XVII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19244to. 84 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Ulcombe, Headcorn, Horsmonden, Lamberhurst, Bayham Abbey and Scotney Castle. [ref: 16922 ] £25

730. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XVIII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19254to. 83 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Westbeer, Chislet, Upstreet, Grove Ferry, Reculver, Sarre, Ash and Woodnesbough. [ref: 17428 ] £25

731. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XIX.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19264to. 80 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Richborough, Sandwich, Eastry, Staple and Ham. [ref: 17429 ] £30

732. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XX.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19274to., 88 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original pictorial cloth. A near fine copy.Barfrestone, Coldred, Tilmanstone, Shepherdswell, Eythorne, Lydden, Kingsdown, Ringwould, Oxney, Worth, Ripple and Waldershare. [ref: 16913 ] £25

733. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XX.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19274to. 88 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original pictorial cloth. Ex-library copy with usual stamps. Boards rather damp-stained otherwise a very good copy.Barfrestone, Coldred, Tilmanstone, Shepherdswell, Eythorne, Lydden, Kingsdown, Ringwould, Oxney, Worth, Ripple and Waldershare. [ref: 18512 ] £20

214

734. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL. XXI.

Ashford, Kentish Express, 1927.4to. 83 pp. with original illustrations by Xavier Willis. Original pictorial cloth,A good copy.Challock, Molash, Badlesmere, Leaveland, Throwley, Newchurch, Ivychurch,Adisham and Witfield. [ref: 20595 ] £30

735. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19284to. 93 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Sheldwich, Ospringe, Stone-by-Faversham, Greenstreet, Teynham, Lynsted, Wateringbury andYalding. [ref: 15791 ] £25

736. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXIII.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19284to. 80 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fine copy.Barham, Kingston, Stanford, Westenhanger Castle, Saltwood and Saltwood Castle. [ref: 16910 ] £30

737. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXIV.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19304to. 82 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A very good copy.Hythe, Newington-next-Hythe, Borden, Tunstall and Newenden.. [ref: 15536 ] £28

738. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXV.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19314to. 93 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. Lacking front endpaper otherwise a very good copy.Sandgate, Doddington, Newnham, Boughton Aluph, Brook and Hinxhill. [ref: 21701 ] £25

739. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXVI.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19324to. 98 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fine copy.Boughton Malherbe, Linton, Denton, Bishopsbourne, Monkton and St. Nicholas-at-Wade. [ref: 18052 ] £28

215

PRESENTATION COPY FROM XAVIER WILLIS740. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH

PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXVI.Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19324to. 98 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fine copy.Boughton Malherbe, Linton, Denton, Bishopsbourne, Monkton and St. Nicholas-at-Wade. [ref: 20597 ] £30

741. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL. XXVII.

Kentish Express. 193391 pp. illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fine copy.Faversham, Davington, Birchington, Bekesbourne. [ref: 20598 ] £30

742. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXIX.

The Kentish Express. Ashford: 19344to. 78 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fine copy.Harbledown, Hackington, New Romney and Hawkinge. [ref: 14595 ] £30

743. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXX.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 19394to. 84 pp. Illustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fine copy.Broadstairs, East Farleigh, West Farleigh, Mongeham, Sholden, Acrise and Swingfield. [ref: 16918 ] £50

744. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOL XXXI

Ashford : The Kentish Express 1939.4to. 76 pp. with illustrations by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth. A fne copy.Capel-Le-Ferne, Hougham, Paddlesworth, Hartlip, Bredhurst, Stockbury and Bredgar. [ref: 20600 ] £50

745. IGGLESDEN, CHARLES. A SAUNTER THROUGH KENT WITH PEN AND PENCIL. VOLUME XXXIV.

Ashford: The Kentish Express. 1946

216

4to. 74 pp. Ilustrated by Xavier Willis. Original decorated cloth, bumped at the head of spine otherwise a good copy.Ashford, Lower Hardres, Nackington, Upper Hardres, Stelling and Thanington.*The last volume of the series. Scarce. [ref: 17431 ] £70

746. INDENTURE. LEASE OF LANDS IN THE PARISHES OF KENNINGTON, BOUGHTON ALUPH AND WORMSHILL. MR THO: TITHERTON TO MR. RICH: PECKHAM. A MORTGAGE FOR 100YEARS...£105..8th AP: 1731.

1731-32Folded vellum with embossed stamp and seal. Receipt and witness statements, etc. on verso. 32 x 26 inches. A few edge tears, small holes and wear around creases, not significantly affecting legibility of text. Browning and staining on verso.In this document of 1731, Thomas Titherton, yeoman of Allington, transfers landed property (technically on a lease ‘one thousand years from hence’) to Richard Peckham, yeoman of Hollingbourne. The properties in question are situated in the parishes of Kennington, in the neighbouring parish of Boughton Alulph and in the parish of Wormshill. They include arable lands, orchards, cottages, ‘Ye Great Park-house,’ (with courts, gardens, stables, etc.) and various ‘waters water courses woods underwoods feedings parks comons comon of pasture,’ etc., ‘to have and to hold.’ On the verso, Thomas Titherton acknowledges receipt of payment of £100 from Richard Peckham. In a later statement of 16 November 1732, Peckham notes that he has received the sum of £105.14s., including interest, from an executor or of Thomas Titherton, now deceased. Both statements are signed and witnessed. [ref: 20882 ] £45

747. INGRAMS, RICHARD & FAY GODWIN. ROMNEY MARSH AND THE ROYAL MILITARY CANAL.

Wildwood House, 1980.First Edition, 8vo 192 pp. with photo illus. Original cloth in unclipped dust wrapper, previous ownership inscription on first flyleaf, otherwise a very good example.Fay Godwin's fine evocative photographs combine with Richard Ingrams’ interesting text to make this a sought-after volume. [ref: 21303 ] £30

748. IRELAND, SAMUEL. PICTURESQUE VIEWS, ON THE RIVER MEDWAY, FROM THE NORE TO THE VICINITY OF ITS SOURCE IN SUSSEX: WITH OBSERVATIONS ON PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND OTHER WORKS OF ART IN ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.

London. T. and J. Egerton, Whitehall. 1793First Edition, small 4to. xii + 206 + (1) pp with aquatint engraved frontis and 28 fine

217

sepia aquatint plates and a map and 8 wood-cuts in the text. Bound in original diapered calf, gilt, with board edges and dentelles decorated gilt. Professionally rebacked with original, gilt decorated, spine and contrasting title label laid on. Internally a very clean fresh copy.The finest illustrated view-book of Kent’s principal river, performed in classic 18th century style, at the height of the cult of the Picturesque. Sadly copies of this book have been much broken for the plates and have become quite scarce. [ref: 21635 ] £400

749. IRELAND, WILLIAM HENRY. ENGLAND'S TOPOGRAPHER OR A NEW AND COMPLETE HISTORY OF KENT: FROM THE EARLIEST RECORDS TO THE PRESENT TIME. INCLUDING EVERY MODERN IMPROVEMENT. EMBELLISHED WITH A SERIES OF VIEWS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS BY GEO. SHEPHERD, H. GASTINEAU, Etc.

Geo.Virtue. London: 1828-9.First Edition. 4 volumes, 8vo. Engraved titles and 124 steel engraved plates (some foxing as is usual) and a folding engraved map. Bound in later half-calf,gilt. A very good set.W.H. Ireland was known as ‘Shakespeare’ Ireland, after his involvement in forging documents by the Bard. The importance of this work is now recognised as being the steel engravings - they give a unique picture of Kent in the early 19th century. [ref: 17094 ] £400

750. IRELAND, WILLIAM HENRY. ENGLAND'S TOPOGRAPHER OR A NEW AND COMPLETE HISTORY OF KENT: FROM THE EARLIEST RECORDS TO THE PRESENT TIME. INCLUDING EVERY MODERN IMPROVEMENT. EMBELLISHED WITH A SERIES OF VIEWS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS BY GEO. SHEPHERD, H. GASTINEAU, Etc.

Geo.Virtue. London: 1828-9.First Edition. 4 volumes, 8vo. Engraved titles and 122 steel engraved plates (some foxing as is usual) and a folding engraved map of the county. Bound in full diced calf, gilt, skilfully rebacked. Appears to lack two plates from volume two but a very good set.W.H. Ireland was known as ‘Shakespeare’ Ireland, after his involvement in forging documents by the Bard. The importance of this work is now recognised as being the steel engravings - they give a unique picture of Kent in the early 19th century. [ref: 20620 ] £300

IRELAND’S HISTORY IN ORIGINAL CLOTH.751. IRELAND, WILLIAM HENRY. ENGLAND'S TOPOGRAPHER, OR

A NEW AND COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT: FROM THE EARLIEST RECORDS TO THE PRESENT TIME, INCLUDING EVERY MODERN IMPROVEMENT. Embellished with a

series of views From Original Drawings byGeo.Shepherd, H.Gastineau, etc. with historical, topographical, critical and biographical delineations.

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Geo.Virtue. London: 1828-30First Edition, 4 vols. 8vo. 5.75 x 9 inches. Illustrated with 124 steel engraved plates, vignette and map. Vol.I. Folding map, [iv] + 712 pp. + xix + [i] index. [2], B-4X4, [10]. Illustrated with folding map of Kent (and added map by Thomas Moule showing railways, c.1850), title page vignette and 29 engraved plates. Vol.II. 713 pp. + [1] + xv + [i] index. B4-4X4, [8]. Illustrated with 27 engraved plates. Vol.III. [ii] + 698 pp. + xviii index. [3], C-4U3. Illustrated with 29 engraved plates. Vol.IV. [ii] + 786 pp. + xiii + [xviii]. [1], B-S6, T-5G2,[8]. [Vol.IV has irregular pagination, pp.137-140 repeated, to accommodate cancel pages]. Illustrated with 38 engraved plates. Bound in publisher’s original cloth with labels. Some plates are foxed. Dedication at the beginning of Vol.I, indexesto all four volumes, lists of plates for Vols. I-II at beginning of Vol I and for Vols. III-IVat the end of Vol. IV with errata and list ofsubscribers. As some of the plates (e.g. ofDover) are dated as late as 1839, it seemslikely that the sole printing of the letterpresswas kept in sheets and was bound up onlyupon demand, incorporating the sameplates. Virtue, who also published some ofthe prints separately, presumably updatedthem from time to time, so an example of thebook bound up in 1840 would account for a later dating of some of the plates. William Henry Ireland (1775-1835) became known as ‘Shakespeare’ Ireland, after his activities in forging Elizabethan documents, originally for his Shakespeare obsessed father and then to display them to the general public. At first accepted, these forgeries were soon denounced and his alleged lost Shakespeare play, Vortigern, was howled down on its opening night in Drury Lane in 1796. In his ‘Confessions’ of 1805, Ireland justified his forgeries as works equal to those of Shakespeare. He was a prolific writer, producing ninety literary works of all types, ‘dramas, Gothic and

sentimental novels, imitation ballads, satirical and political poems, romances,topographic works and Chattertonian fantasies’. A stay in France resulted in works on French history and culture.This account of Kent is derided by Smith(Bibliotheca Cantiana) as a ‘miserable performance, with pretensions of being a County History; it is chiefly taken

from Hasted and others; the owners of estates are brought no later down than the time of Hasted; he does not appear to have set his foot in the County, but at some of its fashionable watering-places.’Of course today, the importance of the work is recognised as lying in the superb quality of its steel engravings. They give a unique picture of Kent in the early 19th. century. We have in stock another example of this work, bound in later half-calf, gilt, at the same price DNB Smith [ref: 19257 ] £400

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752. JACOB, EDWARD. THE HISTORY OF THE TOWN AND PORT OF FAVERSHAM, IN THE COUNTY OF KENT.

Printed for the Author, by J. March, 1774First Edition. 222 pp. + 16 copper-engraved plates including a folding engraved plan. Bound in recent full-calf. A little foxed, with some offsetting and repairs to several leaves and the view of Faversham church, but a good copy.Jacob's famous 18th century history of the town. Smith pp.199. [ref: 21629 ] £250

KENT 1683753. JANSSON, J., [SCHENK, PETER and GERALD VALK.]

CANTIUM VERNACULE KENT. Amsterdam. [1646] but reissued [c.1683]Hand-coloured copper engraved map, 15 x 19 inches, with good margins. A very good impression in very attractive hand-colouring.This is an example of the art of Dutch mapmaking at its height. In this reissue of Jansson's map of 1646, all the art of the engraver and cartographer are combined to produce a finished ‘accurate’ map of the county together with such embellishments as sea monsters, galleons, compass roses and coats of arms held aloft by angels, combined to make this one of the most decorative and accomplished examples of 17th century cartography. [ref: 10723 ] £450

KENT 1644754. JANSSON, JOANNES. PROVINCIAE CANTII VULGO KENDT

NOVA DESCRIPTIO. Amsterdam, 1644Engraved map in original outline hand colour. 15 x 20 inches. Dutch text on verso. A crisp impression with excellent margins. A fine example.This impression comes from the Dutch text appendix published by Jansson in1644, in which he published eleven English county maps, derived from Speed’s maps. However, the plates are in an unfinished state [state I] and were to be extensively re-engraved and augmented before being published inthe more commonly seen Novus Atlas in 1646. These rare impressions differ in the decoration of the cartouche, which is without its familiar embellishments. These were to appear on the later issues and differ in several other features. They only appeared in this state once and the impression was probably not large. Rare. See R A Skelton p.224. [ref: 17987 ] £600

755. JARVIS, M.A. CAPTAIN WEBB AND 100 YEARS OF CHANNEL SWIMMING.

David and Charles, 19754to. 64 pp. with maps and illustrations throughout. Original black cloth. Very good, in like dust wrapper.

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Well-illustrated account. [ref: 20844 ] £20

756. JENKINS, REV. R.C. THE SAXON DYNASTY. PEDIGREE OF THE KENTISH KINGS.

Folkestone, J. English. 18678vo. 48 pp. with 5 steel and 2 wood-engraved plates. Modern rebind in half leather over cloth with gilt title to spine. Internally very good though some slight water-staining to margins of illustrations. Some pertinent pencil annotations.Scarce - the illustrations include one of the fewengraved views of Lyminge Church.

[ref: 21384 ] £75

757. JENNER, THOMAS, and JACOB VAN LANGEREN. [A MAP OF]KENT.

Thomas Jenner. 1643Copper-engraved map, 4 x 4 inches, with letterpress below (and to verso) 6 x 4inches overall. Hand-coloured and mounted in conservation materials, and attractively framed and glazed. A very crisp example with a good plate mark and delicate colouring.A very concise map and distance table within a four-inch square. The towns and distances between, are in the form that is commonplace in road atlases today. The map occupies the lower right corner of the square, inclined at 45 degrees, and covering about one third of the square. It includes the rivers of Kent, parts of Surrey and Sussex and the north bank of the Thames as far up as London. Thomas Jenner published these county maps in several editions of "A Direction to the English Traveller" and "A Booke Of The Names Of All Parishes" between 1643 and 1668. This map is from the latter as evidenced by the letterpress on both sides of the paper, with a catch word at the lower right corner. [ref: 17989 ] £95

‘QUARTERMASTER’S MAP’758. JENNER, THOMAS and WENCESLAUS HOLLAR. A MAPPE OF

KENT, SOUTHSEX, SVRREY, MIDDLESEX, BARKE, and SOUTHAMPTON SHIRE, AND THE ISLE OF WIGHT, PART OF ESSEX, AND WILTSHIRE, ETC.

Printed Coloured and Sold by Iohn Garrett: at the South Entrance of the Royall Exchange in London. [1676]Engraved hand-coloured map. 20 x 11 inches. Previously folded. Small compass rose above imprint, lower centre. Title in frame above scale of miles, lower right. Coastal shoals depicted off North Kent and Essex and a number of ships at sea, with a small naval battle in progress in the Channel. Some browning to borders and occasional foxing, otherwise fine condition.A later edition of the so-called Quartermaster’s Map, engraved by Hollar and first published by Jenner in 1644 as part of The Kingdome of England

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and Principality of Wales. It consisted of six folding maps, this being the south eastern part. These had been reduced from Christopher Saxton’s large twenty sheet wall map of c.1583. The title of Quartermaster’s Map derives from the title description of the original 1644 edition, which refers to the map’s usefulness to ‘all Commanders for Quarteringe of Souldiers, and all sorts of Persons, that would be informed, Where the Armies be...’ It proved tobe especially popular with the Parliamentarian army, the Civil War having greatly increased the demand for easily portable maps. The Royal Arms, present on many maps of the period, has probably been deliberately omitted by Jenner, who sympathised with Parliament. Following Jenner’s death in 1673, the plates which had been used by him for the 1671 reprint, passed into the possession of John Garrett of the Royal Exchange, who published it, with the addition of roads, in 1675 (on silk), 1676 and 1688. A fine copy of this historically significant map. Chubb. Skelton. Wing 2448a. [ref: 20635 ] £750

759. JERROLD, WALTER. HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS IN KENT. Macmillan. 19088vo. 447 pp. with folding map and illustrations by Hugh Thomson. Original cloth, gilt. A trifle worn at head and tail of spine. A good copy of this well-illustrated compendium. [ref: 16862 ] £20

760. JERROLD, WALTER. HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS IN KENT. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY HUGH THOMPSON

Macmillan. 1920.447 pp. with folding map and illustrations by Hugh Thomson. Original cloth, gilt, A clean and neat example.Fine copy of this well-illustrated compendium which remains one of the best companions to the county. [ref: 18748 ] £8

761. JERROLD, WALTER. HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN KENT. Macmillan. 1907First Edition. 447 pp. with folding map and illustrations by Hugh Thomson. Original cloth, gilt. Top edges gilt. Worn at head and tail of spine, but a clean and neat example.A good copy of the first edition of this well-illustrated compendium, which was much reprinted. We usually have copies of the later editions. [ref: 13053 ] £20

762. JESSUP, F. W. SIR ROGER TWYSDEN 1597-1672 London The Cresset Press; 1965.First Edition 8vo. 9 x 6 inches 229 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper. A very good copy.A very good biography, typical of Jessup's encyclopaedic Kentish knowledge.[ref: 21354 ] £20

763. JESSUP, F.W. KENT HISTORY

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Phillimore, 19744to., 164 pp., with maps and illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper.As an introduction to a fascinating subject this remains the most useful and readable modern county history. [ref: 7913 ] £10

764. JESSUP, F.W. KENT HISTORY ILLUSTRATED. WITH MAPS AND DIAGRAMS PREPARED BY R.R. SELLMAN.

Maidstone: KCC. 1966Reprint of second edition, 1978. Oblong 4to., 70 pp. Original pictorial boards. A very good copy.Designed for educational use, as a quick reference book I find I use it a lot. For example - when did x railway open? When was x road turnpiked? The answers are to be found easily here. [ref: 15908 ] £12

765. JESSUP, F.W. SIR ROGER TWYSDEN 1597-1672 London The Cresset Press. 1965First Edition 8vo. 9 x 6 inches 229 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper. Some spotting to edges otherwise a fine copy in a very good dust wrapper. Inscribed by the author, ‘Miss Elizabeth Melling. With many thanks. Frank Jessup. January 1966.’A very good biography, typical of Jessup's encyclopaedic Kentish knowledge.[ref: 21142 ] £35

766. JESSUP, R.F. THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF KENT. Methuen. 1930272 pp., with folding map and photo illustration. Original blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy.Part of the County Archaeologies series, a useful work. [ref: 16321 ] £10

767. JESSUP, R.F. KENT. Methuen. 195012mo. 6 x4 inches. 7th edition. First thus, 307 pp., with folding map and original and photo illustration throughout. Original cloth in the original dust wrapper designed by Brian Cook.Based on Cox's "Little Guide". [ref: 15903 ] £12

768. JESSUP, R.F. SOUTH EAST ENGLAND Ancient People and Places.Thames and Hudson, 1970273 pp. Illus. throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper.Primarily concerned with pre-history, Roman Kent, Sussex and Surrey. [ref: 19574 ] £25

769. JESSUP, R.F. and F.W. THE CINQUE PORTS. With a Foreword by Elizabeth Bowen.

Batsford. 1952

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128 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth in an unclipped dust wrapper designed by Brian Cook.[ref: 16033 ] £12

770. JESSUP, RONALD. MAN OF MANY TALENTS. An Informal Biography of James Douglas 1753-1819. By Ronald Jessup.

Chichester Phillimore 19758vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches.[xiv] + 310 pp. Half title. Illustrated by 32 pp. of 36 black and white plates and by vignettes and facsimiles in text. Bound in original cloth, gilt, in red and cream pictorial dust wrapper. Top edge yellow. Fine condition. James Douglas, antiquary and geologist, had a varied career. Born in London, he was educated at Manchester Grammar School, and sent to Italy as an agent for his brother William, a Manchester cloth merchant. Having misappropriated funds, he eventually ended up as a junior officer in the Austrian army, serving in Flanders before returning home and enrolling as a student at Peterhouse, Cambridge. After receiving a commission in the British army in 1779, he was sent to work on the Chatham Lines, under construction to protect the Dockyard, living in Rochester. This appointment gave him the opportunity to excavate barrows on the Lines and helped to develop his interest in archaeology, which had first been awakened by his visits to Vienna and Tongres in the Low Countries. His Travelling Anecdotes through Various Parts of Europe, was first published in Rochester in 1782. The following year he was elected to the Royal Society of Antiquaries and was also ordained. His two most influential publications were A Dissertation on the History of the Earth (1785) and Nenia Britannica (1793 in book form), both works relying to great extent on his excavations in Kent. His novels, including The Maid of Kent (1790 met with less success. The second part of this biography by Jessup, himself a distinguished archaeologist of Kent and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, provides as selection of letters written by Douglas to a number of correspondents. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21361 ] £25

771. JOHNSON, STEPHEN. THE ROMAN FORTS OF THE SAXON SHORE.

Paul Elek, London. 1976First edition, 172 pp. with numerous figures to the text. Original burgundy cloth, gilt. A mint copy in a fine, unclipped dust wrapper.A comprehensive account of the Saxon Shore Forts explaining the complete system of Forts on our coast and on the continent. [ref: 19904 ] £40

772. JONES, DAVID K. C. THE SHAPING OF SOUTHERN ENGLAND. Edited by David K. C. Jones, Department of Geography, London School of Economics and Political Science. (Institute of British Geographers Special Publication, No. 11).

Academic Press, A Subsidary of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, London, etc. 1980

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4to. 7.25 x 10 inches. x, 274 pp. Illustrated by maps and figures, including black and white photographs, in text. Bound in original green cloth, gilt in pictorial dust wrapper. Fine condition.‘The Shaping of Southern England presents a compilation of essays written to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of the publication of S.W. Wooldridge and D.L. Linton’s classic monograph Structure, Surface and Drainage in South-East England. Originally published in 1939, and subsequently revised in 1955...’ This new study considers new interpretations on their synthesis of landscape evolution and presents the results of more recent research. Chapters by the different contributors include the Tertiary evolution of the south-east, sarsens, the North Downs of Surrey, glaciation of the London Basin, the rivers Thames and Kennet and the weathering and erosion of the chalk. [ref: 20275 ] £45

773. JOYCE, PATRICK. PATRONAGE AND POVERTY IN MERCHANT SOCIETY THE HISTORY OF MORDEN COLLEGE BLCKHEATH 1095 to the Present. Patrick Joyce.

Gresham Books in association with Morden College, Henley-onThames. 19824to. 7.5 x 10 inches. xi + [iii] + 106 pp. Illustrated with four colour portraits and numerous black and white images in text. Half-title. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with blue endpapers. A full and well illustrated history of Morden College, Blackheath. It was founded by the Levant Company and East India Company merchant, Sir John Morden (1623-1708) in 1695, and built 1695-1700, to a design attributed to Sir Christopher Wren, as a home for elderly and decayed merchants, the only such institution of its kind in the country. Since 1884 it has been administered by the Court of Aldermen of the City of London. A fulllist of Trustees and Officers is given in an appendix. [ref: 20941 ] £30

774. KAYE-SMITH, SHEILA. WEALD OF KENT AND SUSSEX. Robert Hale, reprint. 1963viii + 232 pp. with photo illustration. A fine copy in dust wrapper.[ref: 7528 ] £15

LIFE, LITERATURE AND MARGATE. 775. KEATE, GEORGE. SKETCHES FROM NATURE, TAKEN AND

COLOURED, IN A JOURNEY TO MARGATE. Published from the Original Designs. By George Keate, Esq. To which is now first added Memoirs of the Life of the Author.

Printed by J. Cundee, Ivy Lane, For T. Hurst, Paternoster Row, London; J. Booth, Duke Street, Portland Chapel; J. Dingle, Bury; T. Richards, Plymouth; W. Robinson, Liverpool; H. Holmes and A. Bothhomley, Leeds. 1802Fifth Edition. 12mo. 4.5 x 7 inches. [2] + viii + [6] + 261 pp. + [1] (p. ii misnumbered iv). Illustrated by two copper engraved

plates, A. Zucchi pinx. C. Grignion fc., including frontispiece, title page

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vignette and numerous head and tailpiece wood engravings, some signed Austin, or RA, in text. Bound in original marbled calf; recently rebacked, spine in compartments with raised bands, decorated gilt, with gilt title. New endpapers and all edges red. Extremities worn. paper embrittled on lower edges, C10-12. Small tear in text of D1-2, not affecting legibility and tear on top margin of L1-2. Occasional spotting but otherwise fine condition.The author’s observations on life and literature,structured around a visit to Margate, and writtenin imitation of Sterne’s Sentimental Journey.Described by the DNB as one whose ‘wide-rangingintellectual curiosity about literary, artistic, andscientific fields was genuine and deeply committed.’George Keate (1729-1797) was a writer and artist,who was called to the bar in 1753, but neverpractised. After making the Grand Tour, he visitedGeneva in 1756, where he became a friend of Voltaire, the two becoming correspondents for the next twenty years. Keate was a founder of the Royal Academy in 1768 and was elected a fellow of both the Royal Society and the Society of Arts in 1766. His capacity for friendship is testified by the names of David Garrick, Samuel Johnson and Angelica Kauffmann. Among Keate’s other publications were his short account of Geneva (1761) and the Poetical Works (1781). The Sketches from Nature was first published in two volumes in 1779 and proved popular with new editions appearing in that year, in 1784 and 1790. A US edition appeared in Boston in 1793 and it was also translated into French. This is the last edition, with the life of the authoradded. It has the copper engravings drawn by Antonio Pietro Zucchi (1726-1795) and engraved by Charles Grignion (1717-1810), with many of the woodcuts being the work of Richard T. Austin (1781-1842), who worked for numerous British publishers, producing very attractive Bewick like wood engravings. Although primarily a literary work in its Sketches from Natureaspect, the Journey to Margate part of the work offers many insights on life at the time. We learn of the Long-Coaches to Margate, which ran from 1761-68 (although Keate preferred a more comfortable post-chaise), of the use of the bathing-rooms at the seaside and of the hoys which plied the sea route between London and Margate. There is a colourful account of ‘all Margate running down to the Pier-head to see them land,’ and of the seasick ladies, freight and livestock, ‘odd bundles, and bandboxes,’ which they carried. His account of his journey home on the London hoy is equally graphic and eloquently expressed. A charming work, quite rare in this fifth and most complete edition; COPAC records only five copies in British libraries. DNB. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 20869 ] £175

776. KEESEY, WALTER M.A. CANTERBURY SKETCH BOOK. A. and C. Black. 191524 sketches by Walter Keesey. Original boards with paper label to upper cover.Attractive pencil drawings of the City. [ref: 14813 ] £10

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777. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, HYTHE, SANDGATE AND SALTWOOD, 1970.

Kelly's Directories. 1970402 pp. Original printed wrappers. Lacking map.[ref: 17733 ] £10

778. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, HYTHE, SANDGATE AND SALTWOOD, 1970.

Kelly's Directories. 1970402 pp. Original printed wrappers, with the map.[ref: 18444 ] £10

779. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, HYTHE, SANDGATE AND SALTWOOD, 1971.

Kelly's Directories. 1971404 pp. Original printed wrappers. Lacking map.[ref: 17732 ] £10

780. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, HYTHE, SANDGATE AND SALTWOOD, 1973.

Kelly's Directories. 1973416 pp., with folding map Original printed wrappers. [ref: 17736 ] £12

781. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, HYTHE, SANDGATE AND SALTWOOD, 1974.

Kelly's Directories. 1974408 pp., with folding map Original printed wrappers. [ref: 17731 ] £12

782. KELLY’S DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD.

Kelly's. 1962410 pp. lacking folding map as usual. Original printed cloth binding.A very useful source of local information for historians or family researchers. [ref: 21275 ] £30

783. KELLY’S DIRECTORY OF FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE AND SALTWOOD. Thirty-Seventh Edition

Kelly's. 1964402 pp. lacking folding map as usual. Original printed cloth binding. Hinges and lower spine worn otherwise a very good copy.A very useful source of local information for historians or family researchers. [ref: 21276 ] £25

784. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF KENT. 1903. Kelly's Directories. 1903

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4to. 1066 pp. +178 pp adverts, without the map. Original cloth very faded andworn but the text block is in very good condition. Usable and stitching holding well, could do with rebacking, so priced accordinglyA good reference copy of a scarce year. [ref: 18344 ] £110

785. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19691096 pp. complete with folding map. Original printed wrappers. A good, cleancopy.[ref: 19547 ] £15

786. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19721128 pp. lacking folding map. Original printed wrappers. A good, clean copy.[ref: 21387 ] £15

787. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19731144 pp. Lacks folding map. Original printed wrappers.[ref: 18173 ] £15

788. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19731144 pp. with the folding map. Original printed boards.

[ref: 18174 ] £15

789. KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19741134 pp. lacking folding map. Original printed wrappers.[ref: 18170 ] £15

790. KELLY'S. KELLY’S MAP OF KENT. Kelly's Directories. c.1883Large folding map of the county, 41 x 27 inches, coloured by hand in outline, dissected and laid on to linen. Bound in original red cloth-covered stiff card with embossed decoration and gilt title. Spine amateurishly repaired but serviceable. Some chipping to edges of panels but a good example. Borough of Chatham Library label to pastedown.

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[ref: 18172 ] £75

791. KELLY'S. TRADEFINDER OF MAIDSTONE AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 1970-71

Kelly's Directories. 1970pp. 485 - 588 Original printed wrappers, which are slightly stained. Text browned as usual, otherwise a very good copyDedicated trade section for Maidstone area. [ref: 18189 ] £10

792. KEMP, JOHN. MEMOIR OF JOHN KEMP, FIRST PASTOR OF 'EBENEZER' STRICT BAPTIST CHAPEL, BOUNDS CROSS, BIDDENDEN, KENT. INCLUDING AUTOBIOGRAPHY, EXTRACTS FROM LETTERS, MEDITATIONS, VERSES, AND SERMONS....PUBLISHED IN GRATEFUL REMEMBRANCE BY HIS WIDOW.

Farncombe and Sons Ltd; 1933viii + 232 pp. with 10 photo plates. Original green cloth, gilt. A very good copy.Despite the religious nature of the work it reveals an unexpected amount of the social history of the small Wealden parishes of Wadhurst, Ticehurst and Biddenden. [ref: 19946 ] £30

793. KEMPE, A. B. C. MIDST BANDS AND BOMBS BY THE TOP HAT MAYOR OF RAMSGATE.

Maidstone: Kent Messenger, 1946Small 8vo. 136 pp. and photo plates throughout. Original cloth gilt. A very good copy of this war economy production, which is very difficult to find in good order.Interesting, humourous, and well-illustrated record of the Second World War in Ramsgate by the larger than life Mayor. [ref: 21334 ] £25

794. KEMPE, A. B. C. MIDST BANDS AND BOMBS BY THE TOP HAT MAYOR OF RAMSGATE.

Maidstone: Kent Messenger, 1946Small 8vo. 136 pp. and photo plates throughout. Original cloth gilt. A very good copy of this war economy production, which is very difficult to find in good order.Interesting, humourous, and well-illustrated record of the Second World War in Ramsgate by the larger than life Mayor.

[ref: 21595 ] £

795. KENNINGTON - FURLEY, ROBERT. THE ANNALS OF KENNINGTON, IN KENT. A LECTURE DELIVERED BY ROBERT FURLEY, OF

229

ASHFORD, F.S.A., AT THE KENNINGTON NATIONAL SCHOOL, ON MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1877.

Headley Brothers, Ashford. 1877First Edition. Slim 8vo. 37 pp. Original grey printed card wrappers, with minimal rubbing to extremities, a little dusty and time-stained but a good copy.The very scarce original edition of this Kennington item which is one of the few works on the subject and very informative. [ref: 19108 ] £45

796. KENT AVIATION HISTORICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY. KENT AIRFIELDS IN THE BATTLE OF BRITAIN.

Meresborough Books. 1981192pp. Illustrated throughout. Original laminated boards. Spine slightly sunned, otherwise a very good copyThis copy signed by one of the authors David G. Collyer. A well-compiled survey. ***An unsigned copy is available at £10*** [ref: 15076 ] £15

797. KENT COUNTY COUNCIL. KENT THE COUNTY ADMINISTRATION IN WAR 1939-1945.

Kent County Council. 1946Folio. 8 x 13 inches. [8] + 170 pp. with maps, one colour and black and white illustrations; includes folding map showing the location of flying bombs that fell in Kent. Original pictorial paper-covered boards. Spine missing and boards edge worn but a very good copy.The official story of the events in war time Kent and how the county coped with it. W. L. Platts, Clerk of the County Council, at foot of title page.We have another similar copy, with most of the spine intact.

[ref: 18200 ] £45

798. KENT COUNTY COUNCIL PLANNING BASIS FOR KENT. INCORPORATING REPORTS UPON THE COUNTY PLANNING

SURVEY AND THE COUNTY ROAD PLAN.Kent County Council. 1948Folio. [10] + 121 p. with photo illustration throughout and 12 large folding maps and diagrams. Original cloth in dust wrapper.A very good copy.With the benefit of hindsight some of this is very sad. This was such an important document and so much of it was wrong. [ref: 17661 ] £45

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THE KENT COUNTY YEAR BOOK. THE KENT COUNTY YEAR BOOK 1953. Edited by DOROTHY PILCHER. Incorporating Kent Personalities.Kent Messenger, Maidstone. 1953[xvi] + 272 pp. with a folding map. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A very goodcopyMostly comprised of lists of Kent personalities and local Government information, etc. [ref: 14522 ] £20

799. KENT ELECTION BROADSIDE. EAST KENT ELECTION. BROTHER ELECTORS ...

... I call upon my Brother Blues to VOTE FOR DERING AND DEEDES, and by their vote to shew SIR BROOKE BRIDGES and his compatriot CAPTAIN ACHESON, that in Politics, as in all other matters, ‘Honesty is the best policy.’Ramsgate, 31st March, 1857Printed broadside, 12 x 18 inches, black letterpress on white paper Traces of old folds, otherwise fine.An interesting example of the style of electioneering typical of the era. Boldly designed and printed. [ref: 18310 ] £150

800.KENT ELECTION BROADSIDE. THE THREE CANDIDATES BEFORE THE COUNTY. KENT WANTS A TRIED MAN -- AN ABLE MAN -- AN INDEPENDENT MAN.

KNATCHBULL. 1. A TRIED MAN. In Four Parliaments, and found valuable and influential in all ....HODGES.1. In one Parliament, and valuable to the amount of AYE and NO...RYDER.1. Non mi ricordo. 2. Non mi ricordo. 3. Non mi ricordo. 4. Non mi ricordo. 5. Non mi ricordo. 6. Non mi ricordo.

Shall we ask which of these we ought to choose? Shall we ask whether the Freeholders of Kent can dream of discarding the Representative who they know has always devoted his whole heart and time to our interests, and who understands those interests better than any man living? No! We only ask how the Men of Kent can be so blinded, as not to call for ANOTHR COLLEAGUE toKnatchbull, and drive BOTH THESE QUACKS ENTIRELY OUT OF THE FIELD.H. Ward, Printer, Canterbury. n.d. but [1831]Printed broadside, 9 x 11 inches. Some faint glue stains, but a very good example.The Reform Bill caused a cataclysmic upheaval in the political landscape of the 1830’s. At this extremely significant time in the country’s political evolution, two factions of the Conservative party emerged. The anti-bill Ultras were mostly devout landowners and provincial notables who were, on the whole, agrarian paternalists. Although they were styled as ‘a selfish, aristocratic clique’ by their opponents, they were more populist and innovative than the pro-bill ‘Red Tapist’ elite, represented by the Duke of

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Wellington and Sir Robert Peel, against whom they ranged themselves. In Kent, Sir Edward Knatchbull, MP between 1819 and 1830, and again in 1832, represented the anti-bill faction. He and his fellows were defeated in the subsequent election. [ref: 16435 ] £145

801. KENT. HISTORICAL, BIOGRAPHICAL AND PICTORIAL. Published for Subscribers.

Allan North, London. 1907.4to. 8 x 10.5 inches, unpaginated (approx. 240 pp.) with biographical details of 99 subscribers and 42 tissue-guarded, photographic plates of Kentish notaries, some with their residences. Original half calf over blue cloth, gilt. Inscribed in ink on title page ‘H.W. Selby-Lowndes from F.D. Brockman.’ Francis Drake Brockman was a member of an old Kent family whose seat was at Beachborough House, near Folkestone, and who is included among the subscribers. Henry William Selby Lowndes became Master of Foxhoundsat the East Kent Hunt in 1900. Interesting picture of the great and the good in early 20th century Kent. [ref: 20025 ] £175

802.KENT MAP BURROW'S RAC COUNTY MAP & GAZETTEER: KENT Ed. J. Burrows and Co. Cheltenham and London. No date but c.1938Fourth edition. Booklet approx. 6 x 9 inches. 72 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations and two double-page coloured maps of East and West Kent with coloured key map. Original printed card wrappers a little stained and rubbed at spine with neat contemporary ownership signature to front.In addition to the maps there is a comprehensive list with descriptions of places to see in the county, suggested tours and interesting adverts. [ref: 18402 ] £12

803.KENT PAPER MANUFACTURE. HOLLINGWORTH PAPERS. A BOOK OF SAMPLES SHOWING A RANGE OF THESE BEAUTIFUL PAPERS IN SEVERAL WEIGHTS AND FINISHES APPLIED TO VARIOUS PROCESSES OF PRINTING AND REPRODUCTION.

Hollingworth and Co., Maidstone. No date but c.1920sFolio. Unpaginated. 34 leaves of varying weights and finishes of papers manufactured by Hollingworth at Turkey Mill, bound together, and 3 heavily-embossed loose leaves inside the lower board. Top edges gilt. Comprises a brief history and description of the famous mill near Maidstone with 6 monochrome photogravure plates, 3 coloured photogravures, 2 etchings, a stamped and illuminated coat of arms, and an offset lithograph in colour. In addition there are examples of illuminated and rubricated texts. The heavily embossed leaves are three examples of the same die, of a large printing machine, stamped on different qualities of paper. Original vellum quarter-binding over turquoise cloth, gilt.A very impressive sample-book of Hollingworth paper products from TurkeyMill, where James Whatman developed wove paper. His son, also James, sold the mill to the Hollingworths, Thomas, Robert and Finch, in 1792 and high-quality paper-making continued there until the mill closed finally in the1970s.

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[ref: 21377 ] £80

804.THE KENT POLICE CENTENARY. Recollections of a hundred years.

Canterbury Kent County Constabulary, 1957.161 pp. + 42 pp. + xxxiv advertisements. Illustrated by black and white photographs, including portrait frontispiece. Bound in original blue cloth withsilver embossed Kent Constabulary badge to upper board. A fine copy in a good, unclipped pictorial dust wrapper.An excellent copy of the celebratory book published for the 100th anniversary of the police in Kent. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21151 ] £15

805. KENT RECORDS. A SEVENTEENTH CENTURY MISCELLANY. Prepared for the Records Publication Committee of the Kent Archaeological Society.

(Kent Records. Volume XVII).Ashford: Kent Archaeological Society. Records Publication Committee. 19608vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. ix + 186 pp. Series title page. Illustrated by five plates, including one folding map and drawings in text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with Society’s device on front boards. Extremities a little worn, otherwise fine condition. Pencil signature of Elizabeth Melling on first free endpaper.Includes ‘Court Rolls of the Manor of Chilham, 1654-6’; ‘The Tufton Sequestration Papers, 1644-7’; ‘An Account Book of the Committee of Kent, 1646-7’; and ‘The Compton Census of 1676 - the Dioceses of Canterbury and Rochester’. The latter enumerates conformists, papists and nonconformists by parish. The Tufton papers, one of the two Civil War items, includes lists of farm stock, crops and woods with woodland products. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21173 ] £25

806.KENT WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS. MAIDSTONE JOURNAL AND KENTISH ADVERTISER and MAIDSTONE GAZETTE AND KENTISH COURIER.

Printed and published every Tuesday by John Vine Hall, King’s Arms Office, Maidstone. 1832-33Broadsheet newspapers. Maidstone Journal between Nos. 2398 and 2452, from January 3rd, 1832 to January 13th, 1833, 34 of 54 issues; with Maidstone Gazette between Nos.1816 and 1839, January 22nd, 1833 to July 2nd, 1833, complete run of 24 issues. Recent half-leather over marbled boards with spine in compartments with raised bands and contrasting title label, gilt. The contents are clean and free from tears.In all, 58 issues of one of Kent’s principal papers, published during the period of upheaval and political reform in Britain. [ref: 19658 ] £600

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807. KENTISH WEALD - CLEERE, HENRY. and DAVID CROSSLEY. THE IRON INDUSTRY OF THE WEALD.

Leicester University Press . 1985xvi + 395 pp. With numerous illustrations. Original cloth gilt, in dust wrapper. A fine copy.A highly scholarly work by the foremost experts, gathering much scattered information under one cover. Now out of print.

[ref: 21761 ] £55

808.KENTISH WEALD - DEARN, T.D.W. AN HISTORICAL, TOPOGRAPHICAL, AND DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE WEALD OF KENT.

Cranbrook, S. Reader. 1814First Edition, 8vo., lvi + 277 + [5] index and [1] pp. advert. Illustratedwith map and eight sepia aquatint plates after drawings by the author. Bound in recent half-calf over marbled boards. Apart from some offsetting from plates and a little light browning, a very good copy.Rare history of the Weald with fine engraved illustrations including the well-known view of the High Street at Cranbrook.

[ref: 19912 ] £350

809.KENTISH WEALD - FURLEY, ROBERT. A HISTORY OF THE WEALD OF KENT. WITH AN OUTLINE OF THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE COUNTY, ALSO A SKETCH OF THE PHYSICAL FEATURES OF THE DISTRICT BY HENRY B. MACKESON.

Igglesden. Ashford, 1871-74FIRST EDITION Two volumes bound in three. Vol. I. xvi + 462 pp. Vol. II. part one, xii + 424 pp. Vol. II part two, [iv] + 425- 935 pp. with folding maps throughout.. Original green decorated cloth, gilt, only very slightly worn at extremities otherwise a very good copy.A very good set of the standard source book on the geology and history of theWeald. Much under-rated work which is central to the county’s history. [ref: 19988 ] £200

FURLEY’S OWN INTERLEAVED COPY810. KENTISH WEALD - FURLEY, ROBERT. A HISTORY OF THE

WEALD OF KENT. WITH AN OUTLINE OF THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE COUNTY, ALSO A SKETCH OF THE PHYSICAL FEATURES OF THE DISTRICT BY HENRY B. MACKESON.

Ashford, Igglesden. Ashford, 1871-74FIRST EDITION Two volumes bound in three. 5.5 X 8.5 inches. Fully interleaved. Vol. I. xvi + 462 pp. Vol. II. Part one, xii + 424 pp. Vol. II Part two, [iv] + 425- 935 pp. with 6 folding maps. The interleaving and the printed pages show numerous annotations in ink, a number (according to a note by

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Furley, facing the Preface) transcribed from the copy owned by the Earl of Winchilsea and Nottingham, with many cuttings and notes tipped in or looselyinserted, other day-to-day printed and plain paper items, personal letters, etc.,used as page markers. There is also loosely inserted the original prospectus forthe book comprising the title page, table of contents and pp.[ix] to xvi of the preface. Furley’s ownership signature appears on all three title pages. Originalgreen decorated cloth with gilt titles and gilt and black decoration and different gilt vignettes to upper boards. These volumes are almost twice the thickness of the standard edition. The binding on these books was never very strong and these volumes show, unsurprisingly, signs of much use. Internally very good.A very good set of the standard source book on the geology and history of theWeald. A much under-rated work which is central to the county’s history and made more interesting by the additional materials.Furley was clearly on close terms with George James Finch-Hatton, 11th Earl of Winchilsea and 6th Earl of Nottingham, whose family seat was Eastwell Park, Ashford, Kent. [ref: 21077 ] £

811. KENYON, G. H. THE GLASS INDUSTRY OF THE WEALD. By G. H. Kenyon, F.S.A. With a Foreword by D. B. Harden, O.B.E, Ph.D, F.S.A.Leicester Leicester University Press, 19674to. 7.5 x 10 inches. xxii + 231 pp. [i]. Illustrated with 22 black and white plates, text figures and folding map at end. Bound in original green cloth,gilt,in pictorial dust wrapper. Extremities a little worn and wrapper price-clipped and slightly chipped on spine; otherwise a fine copy. Comprehensive account of the forest industry, located in the Weald of Sussex and Surrey, which thrived for at least 200 years until the seventeenth century. Forty-two sites are described with another nine outside the Weald district. The standard work. [ref: 21686 ] £45 SIGNED COPY

812. KEYES, SIDNEY KILWORTH. DARTFORD. SOME HISTORICAL NOTES...FURTHER HISTORICAL NOTES.

Dartford, Perry Son and Lack Ltd. 1933 & 1938Two volumes. Thick Royal 8vo. 727 pp. and 984 pp. with maps, plans, and illustrations throughout. Original blue cloth, gilt. A good set. With a signed portrait of the author in Vol. I. Good copies of the scarce first editions of the author's monumental history of Dartford. Both volumes wereissued in a very small edition. The subscribers list in Vol. I. accounts for 162 copies. [ref: 20843 ] £275

813. KEYS, DICK and KEN SMITH. BLACK DIAMONDS BY SEA. NORTH-EAST SAILING COLLIERS 1780-1880.

Newcastle Libraries. 1998Oblong folio. 9.5 x 8 inches. 48 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations. Bound in original laminated coloured pictorial card wrappers. A near fine copy.

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[ref: 20841 ] £10

FIRST FULL GAZETTEER OF KENT, 1659814. KILBURNE, RICHARD. A TOPOGRAPHIE OR SURVEY OF THE

COUNTY OF KENT. WITH SOME CHRONOLOGICAL, HISTORICAL, AND OTHER MATTERS TOUCHING THE SAME, AND SEVERAL PARISHES THEREIN.

Thomas Mabb, for Henry Atkinson, London, 1659422 pp. with copper-engraved frontis of the author. Original full calf. Rebacked twice, with the spine from the first rebacking re-used, having raised bands, gilt decoration and contrasting title labels, gilt. A very good copy with good margins. The most important 17th century gazetteer of the county. This copy is inscribed on the free endpaper by an early owner ‘John Guy 1680/81’. Another early hand has inscribed some remarks about the book and concludes with the opinion that ‘Kilburn’s Survey of Kent is all modern and superficial’. A further early hand has made some neat inscriptions on another free endpaper. Additionally, one or another of these owners has carefully been through the list of Errata at the rear of the book and correctedthe text as necessary. Richard Kilburne (1605 - 1678), was an eminent solicitor in the Court of Chancery and a resident of Hawkhurst. This is a 'must' in any definitive Kent collection. [ref: 19362 ] £650

815. KILBURNE, RICHARD. A TOPOGRAPHIE OR SURVEY OF THE

COUNTY OF KENT. WITH SOME CHRONOLOGICAL, HISTORICAL, AND OTHER MATTERS TOUCHING THE SAME, AND SEVERAL PARISHES THEREIN.

Thomas Mabb, for Henry Atkinson, London, 1659Small 4to. 7 x 5.5 inches, 422 pp. with copper-engraved frontispiece of the author. Bound in original full panelled calf, gilt neatly rebacked. The fore edges of the first gathering have been trimmed rather crudely but the text is unaffected.The most important 17th century gazetteer of the county. Richard Kilburne (1605 - 1678) was an eminent solicitor in the Court of Chancery and a resident of Hawkhurst. This is one of the definitive Kent books. Wing K434 Upcott Vol 1 pp351-2 Smith p4 [ref: 21190 ] £450

FIRST FULL GAZETTEER OF KENT, 1659816. KILBURNE, RICHARD. A TOPOGRAPHIE OR SURVEY OF THE

COUNTY OF KENT. WITH SOME CHRONOLOGICAL, HISTORICAL, AND OTHER MATTERS TOUCHING THE SAME, AND SEVERAL PARISHES THEREIN.

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Thomas Mabb, for Henry Atkinson, London, 1659Small 4to. 7 x 5.5 inches. 422 pp. with copper-engraved frontis portrait of the author. Original full mottled calf, spinewith raised bands. No title externally but very early library accession label to base of spine. Embossed decoration to edges of boards. The upper hinge is cracked but sound. Top inner corner isdamp stained affecting frontis portrait,

title and first few leaves otherwise a very clean copy with good margins in a contemporary unrestored binding. The most important 17th century gazetteer of the county. Richard Kilburne (1605 - 1678) was an eminent solicitor in the Court of Chancery and a resident of Hawkhurst. This is a ‘must-have’ in any definitive Kent collection.[ref: 21631 ] £600

817. KIP, JOHANNES. THE GRANGE AND LEYBOURN CASTLE. THE SEATS OF WILLIAM SAXBY ESQ.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 16 x 13 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade, this illustration varies in that it is engraved by John Harris. [ref: 20228 ] £150

818. KIP, JOHANNES. HIGH STREET HOUSE. THE SEAT OF HENRY STREATFIELD ESQ.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 17 x 14 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade. [ref: 20224 ] £125

819. KIP, JOHANNES. TUTSHAM HALL. THE SEAT OF EDWARD GOULSTON ESQ.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 16 x 13 inches,, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade, and engraved by Kip. [ref: 20229 ] £150

820.KIP, JOHANNES. WALDERSHARE. THE SEAT OF SIR ROBERT FURNESE BARONETT IN KENT.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 17 x 13 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade,

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[ref: 20223 ] £150

821. KIP, JOHANNES. WIERTON. THE SEAT OF Sr CHRISTOPHER POWELL Bart.

London, Printed and sold by D. Midwinter, 1719Large copper-engraving, 16 x 13 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing. From Harris’ History of Kent. Drawn by Thomas Badeslade, this illustration varies in that it is engraved by John Harris. [ref: 20226 ] £150

822. KIP, WILLIAM, after NORDEN, JOHN. CANTIUM QUOD NUNCKENT.

[George Bishop, John Norton, London]. 1610Copper engraved map, finely hand-coloured. 15 x 11 inches. Title, upper central panel. Numbered key to hundreds, dated 1605, upper right panel. Scale of miles. Johannes Norden deliniauit above, William Kip, Sculpsit, below. Compass rose lower right, in Britannici Maris pars. [Pl no.] 11 appears lower left. Backed on to two sheets of paper. Small tear to upper left corner (Parte of Middlesex) and lower centre left (Sussex), before backing. Early fold line in centre, otherwise fine condition.The so-called ‘Saxton-Kip’ maps appeared in editions of Camden's Britannia from 1607 and were based on Christopher Saxton's great county atlas of 1579. This map of Kent, drawn in 1605, was based on a survey by John Norden (c.1547-1625), the surveyor and cartographer and engraved by William Kip (fl.1585-1618). The engraving is typical of the early seventeenth century with a fine compass rose in the English Channel and scroll work cartouches around the title and list of hundreds. The 1607 Britannia (which included six of Norden’s county maps and thirty-four Norden and Saxton maps engraved by Kip) was the sixth and last Latin edition (first, 1586). The last to be published in Camden’s lifetime, it has been described as the first true English county atlas. The plate no. 11 indicates that this map was prepared for insertion in the 1610 edition of Camden, the first in English, the plate numbers being added before 1622, although the 1610 text continued to be used unaltered until the 1637 edition, which included the same maps. This map includes some interesting details in the Romney Marsh area, commenting on Denge Marshe, ‘Holme or hollye growing to great trees on the mayn beach.’ It also indicates the ‘Vindelis Insula Old Winchelsey whose ruynes lurk unseen under the sea waues’ (Sussex). An attractive copy of thisearly map of Kent. Skelton, 6. O’Shea Gallery, Kent and the Channel, 15. Burden, Catalogue V (2010), 17. Burgess, Printed Maps of Kent, 8/ii. [ref: 20615 ] £250

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SCARCE TRANSCRIPT OF ORPINGTON PARISH REGISTERS

823. KIRBY, HERBERT CHARLES THE REGISTER OF THE MARRIAGES, CHRISTENINGS AND BURIALS IN THE PARISH CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS, ORPINGTON, IN THE COUNTY OF KENT, FROM 1560 TO 1754. At head of title: Lewisham Antiquarian Society. Edited by Herbert Charles Kirby. Lewisham Antiquarian Society Publications No.8.

London: Printed by Charles North, Blackheath Printing Works, S.E. 1895110 copies privately printed, of which this is No.3. Small folio. 7.5 x 11 inches. [iv] + iv + 98 pp. Title page and index rubricated. Original cloth, gilt, with blind stamped borders and black endpapers. All corners bumped, with some abrasions on rear top right corner with creasing extending into pages. An ex-library copy with several small stamps,

including title page. Ink inscription on half title and brief pencil note at end.The transcript reproduces the black letter title of 1597 from the beginning of the parchment register and the unusually styled preface of Christopher Monckton, who became vicar in 1620. An appendix of relevant wills is followed by indexes of persons and of places.A scarce item produced only in a very limited edition. Only two copies are recorded in London libraries, including the British Library copy. COPAC [ref: 19476 ] £250

824. KITCHIN, THOMAS. KENT DRAWN FROM AN ACTUAL SURVEY AND REGULATED BY ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS.

[R. Baldwin, The London Magazine] 1747Hand-coloured copper-engraved map. 6 x 8 inches. A fine example.Attractive map of the county with a cartouche showing hop pickers strippinga hop bine and cannon and flags to show Kent’s martial achievements. The arms of Canterbury also appear, as does the coast of France (from Calais to Ambletuse). Rivers and main roads are clearly marked. [ref: 17990 ] £75

825. KITCHIN, THOMAS. KENT DRAWN FROM AN ACTUAL SURVEY AND REGULATED BY ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS.

[R. Baldwin, The London Magazine] 1747

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Hand coloured copper engraved map. 6 x 8 inches. Mounted, framed and glazed in conservation materials. Overall size 11 x 14. A fine example.Attractive map of the county with a cartouche showing hop pickers strippinga hop bine, plus canon and flags to show Kent’s martial achievements. The arms of Canterbury also appear as does the coast of France (from Calais to Ambleteuse). Rivers and main roads are clearly marked. [ref: 18326 ] £125

826. KITCHIN, THOMAS. A MAP OF KENT. Kitchin and Jeffreys, London. 1749Hand-coloured copper-engraved plate. 7 x 5 inches. With letterpress below. Also engraved on the plate is an explanation of the map, statistical information, and a list of towns with their fairs and market days noted. A fine example.Attractively coloured map in full body colour and the statistical information underneath makes this a curious and quaint item. [ref: 17991 ] £75

827. KITCHIN, THOMAS. A NEW MAP OF KENT DRAWN FROM THE BEST AUTHORITIES. By Thomas Kitchin, Geographer. Engraver to H.R.H. The Duke of York.

[R. and J. Dodsley] 1770Uncoloured copper engraving, 8 x 10 inches, with good margins. A fine example.From Kitchin’s ‘English Atlas or A Complete Set of Maps of all the Counties ofEngland and Wales’ published by R. and J. Dodsley, using the maps from Kitchin’s ‘England Illustrated’ published in 1764. [ref: 17992 ] £85

828. KLOPPER, HARRY. TO FIRE COMMITTED. THE HISTORY OF FIRE-FIGHTING IN KENT.

Kent Council of Fire Services Benevolent Fund 1984x + 254 pp. with photo illustrations. Soft-cover, original printed wrappers. A very good copy.This excellent history was not widely distributed outside the fire service. A hardback edition was issued in very limited numbers. [ref: 18451 ] £12

829. KNIGHT, H.R. LOYAL TO THE KING: THE STORY OF THE KENTISH PROTESTANT MARTYRS.

D. Catt, 74 Strand, W.C. Ashford, Headley Brothers, One Shilling. Cloth Boards, Eighteenpence. 1903First Edition, 8vo.105 pp. + [6] pp. adverts, Illustrated with photographic plates and line drawings. Bound in the original pictorial cloth, smallbit missing from spine, but a very good copy.A well illustrated and detailed account of Kent’s 75 Protestant Martyrs who perished under Queen Mary’s short but bloody rule.

[ref: 20734 ] £35

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AUTHOR’S OWN COPY830.KNOCKER, EDWARD. A LECTURE ON THE ARCHIVES OF THE

CINQUE PORT AND BOROUGH OF DOVOR, Delivered before the Corporation and Inhabitants on the 25th day of April, 1877; to which is added a paper on The Ancient Connection between the Cinque Ports, and the Borough of Great Yarmouth. With an Appendix. By Edward Knocker, F.S.A., Honorary Librarian. George Fielding, Esq., Mayor. Wollaston Knocker, Town Clerk.

Printed at the ‘Standard’ Office, Snargate Street, Dover. 18798vo., 117 pp., interleaved with blank pages. Decorated with tailpiece vignettes. Extra illustrated by woodcut pasted to blank leaf opposite. p. 36. 1883. Five pages of blank leaves contain

manuscript notes by author. Manuscript inserts: 1. Letter (on printed headed paper, from Ryde, I.o.W.), initialled by author. 2. Signed note from Wollaston Knocker to his father. The author’s own copy with his bookplate and by descent to R. E. Knocker with this later presentation inscription on second free endpaper. Bound in red morocco, decorated gilt, with inside dentelles; spine in compartments, with raised bands, gilt, with contrasting title label, gilt. All edges gilt. Some foxing to text and slight wear to extremities; otherwise a very good copy.Scarce Dover-printed book which systematically describes the early chartersetc., right up to the 17th century, quoting from a large number of examples. At 94 pages (excluding the appendix), it must have been a very long lecture to deliver on a single day. Edward Knocker (1804-84), historian and antiquarian, was a member of a Dover family of solicitors, which also provided municipal officials; the son, Wollaston serving as town clerk. This lecture was first published as a 104 page booklet in 1878; both editions are very scarce and the 1879 one is known only from the three copies recorded inthe Kent Bibliography (Dover, Maidstone and Bexley). Attractive presentation copy in a handsome red binding. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 20907 ] £250

831. KNOLE - BRIDGMAN, JOHN. AN HISTORICAL AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF KNOLE, IN KENT; WITH A BRIEF

GENEALOGY OF THE SACKVILLE FAMILY. EMBELLISHED WITH ENGRAVINGS.

Published by W. Lindsell, 87, Wimpole-Street; W. Hodsoll and T. Clout, Sevenoaks; and Strange, and Nash, Tonbridge Wells. 1817

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First Edition 8vo. viii + 164 pp. with 3 aquatint plates and 6 plates of Coats of Arms Bound in marbled paper wrappers with paper title label. Some slight offsetting and spotting otherwise a very good copy.The first detailed description of the great house, with a catalogue of the then contents. Scarce. Smith p.236 [ref: 18128 ] £180

832. KNOLE - BRIDGMAN, JOHN. AN HISTORICAL AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF KNOLE, IN KENT; WITH A BRIEF GENEALOGY OF THE SACKVILLE FAMILY. EMBELLISHED WITH ENGRAVINGS.

Published by W. Lindsell, 87, Wimpole-Street; 1827Second Edition, 8vo., viii + 164 pp., with 1 aquatint plate and 5 plates of coats of arms. Bound in recent blue half-morocco, gilt, over marbled paper boards with title label. Some slight offsetting and spotting otherwise a very good copy.The second edition of the first detailed description of the great house, with a catalogue of the then contents. Scarce. Smith p.236

[ref: 19084 ] £180

KNOX, G. J. [Artist] and E.R. WALKER, [Lithographer]. LITHOGRAPH PANORAMA OF SANDGATE. John Churchill, Princes Street, Soho. London. S. and M. Purday, Sandgate. 1853136 pp. + two tinted lithographic plates, one folding. Original blind-stamped cloth, gilt. Spine and edges faded otherwise a very good copy of a very rare work.MOSELEY, SANDGATE AS A RESIDENCE FOR INVALIDS John Churchill, Princes Street, Soho. London. S. and M. Purday, Sandgate. A major feature of this work is the large (22 x 8 inches) folding lithographic panorama of Sandgate, taken from the heights at the end of the Leas looking down on Sandgate and Shorncliffe, with an undeveloped Sandgate Hill in the foreground and the sweep of Hythe Bay in the distance. Figures dot the landscape, a group picnicking, a shepherd rounding up his sheep and others strolling, taking in the sights and fine air. The view was drawn by G. J. Knoxand lithographed by E. Walker. The second plate, also by them, depicts Radnor Terrace From the Beach (9 x 8 inches). This is another lively view looking up at the elegant houses then recently built on Radnor Cliff, with groups of people disporting themselves on the beach. The author, a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, and Surgeon to the Sandgate Dispensary, presents a considerable amount of evidence as to the suitability of Sandgate as a healthy locale. The benefits of the local climate, atmosphere and generalhealthiness are examined and propounded and various afflictions are considered in this light. Three copies are recorded in the Kent Bibliography, and we have records of three copies having passed through our hands but only one with the two plates present. This copy has the label of George Marrin Bookseller at 16a Cheriton Place, which was our first Folkestone shop in the early 1950s.

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[ref: 19944 ] £

833. LABARGE, MARGARET WADE. A BARONIAL HOUSEHOLD OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY.

Eyre and Spottiswoode, London. 19658vo. 235 pp. + 9 b/w illustrations on 7 plates. Original terra cotta cloth, gilt. Slight spotting to board otherwise a fine copy in a good unclipped dust wrapper.‘A succinct account of the organisation and daily life of the household of a great baron in the thirteenth century. In all its detail, their every everyday life is explored and explained.’ The Economist [ref: 21141 ] £18

834. LAKER, JOHN. HISTORY OF DEAL. By John Laker, B.A., B.Sc.Deal T.F. Pain and Sons, ‘Mercury’ Office, Queen Street, Deal. 1917First Edition. 8vo. 6.5 x 9.75 inches. 420 pp. Fine condition. Bound in original decorated cloth, gilt.A very good copy of the scarce first edition of Laker's history, itself a reworking with many additions, of Stephen Pritchard's 1864 history. Kent Bibliography.

[ref: 21719 ] £120

835. LAKER, JOHN. HISTORY OF DEAL. Deal T.F. Pain & Sons. Second Edition. 1921.Second Edition, 4to. 10 x 6.5 inches. 443 pp. illustrated with plates from original drawings. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Lacks the rear free endpaper, otherwise a very good copy.This is the second, much updated edition of Laker's history - itself areworking with many additions of Pritchard's 1865 history.

[ref: 21304 ] £115

836. LAMBARDE, WILLIAM. A PERAMBULATION OF KENT. CONTAINING THE DESCRIPTION, HYSTORIE, AND CUSTOMES OF THAT SHIRE. WRITTEN IN THE YEERE 1570.

Chatham, W. Burrill, 1826 but reprinted by Adams and Dart 1970538 pp. with portrait. Original cloth in dust wrapper, a very good copy.This useful and affordable 1970 reprint of the Sixth Edition is surprisingly difficult to find. Richard Church contributes an interesting introduction to this edition. [ref: 17197 ] £45

EXTRA ILLUSTRATED COPY837. LAMBARDE, WILLIAM. A PERAMBULATION

OF KENT: CONTEINING THE DESCRIPTION, HYSTORIE, AND CUSTOMES OF THAT SHYRE. WRITTEN IN THE YEERE 1570. BY WILLIAM LAMBARD, OF LINCOLNE'S INN, GENT: First

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published in the yeere 1576. and now increased and altered after the Authors own last Copie.

Imprinted at London by Edm. Bollifant, 15962nd edition. 8vo. 5 x 7 inches let into large folio 10.5 x 16 inches. Frontis. + [10] + 588 pp. + [5] + [1].(Pagination errors, p.35 is numbered 31, p.239, 139).A-2O8, 2P-2P5. Illustrated with decorated title page, within broad border, vignette at beginning of epistle and 2 maps, a full page woodcut map, Anglia Heptarchia, with table of Saxon characters and exposition and a folding woodcut map, 'A Carde of the Beacons, in Kent.’ Extra illustrated with portrait and facsimile signature of Lambarde, 1594, serving as frontispiece, two page folding map, Mappa Thaneti Insule, similar to that in John Harris’ The History of Kent, 1719, and folding plate, The North Prospect of Canterbury, engraved by Wenceslaus Hollar (1607-77) and published by John Ogilby (1600-76). Includes two dedication epistles and a Table (index), followed by list of ‘Faultes escaped’ (errata). Printed in black letter. Bound inrecent calf, gilt; boards have blind stampedand gilt decorated borders; Spine incompartments with raised bands, gilt.Generally a fine clean copy. Early signature,Snm Galfridi Brissenden, on title page andpartly cropped signature, John .?.way, 1614,at top of first dedication page. An impressive copy of the book that is thefirst English county history, here in thesecond and best edition (it was firstpublished 1570 and later editions appeared in 1640, 1656, 1826, 1970, etc.). Itis this work that inspired all subsequent county histories. William Lambarde(1536-1601) was a lawyer and antiquary and a personal consultant to Elizabeth I. This second edition contains the fine map of the beacon system for signalling danger from the coast to London, which was not to reappear in subsequent editions. ‘The description and historie of the shyre of Kent’ forms the greater part of the work and includes an account of its geography and pre-Conquest history, a new section on the execution of justice, a taxation summary by lathe, hundred and parish, a list of particular features (e.g. fairs, poorhouses, etc.), an account of the see of Canterbury and archbishops and a parish by parish account, with Thanet, the Goodwin Sands area and the Cinque Ports grouped together at the beginning. The final section lists the customs of Kent. The text of all later editions is taken from this beautiful Elizabethan black letter printing, one of the most desirable of Kentish books. This copy has been enhanced by being skilfully let into folio pages, extra illustrated with a portrait of Lambarde, an early map of the Isle of Thanet and a Hollar/Ogilby engraving of Canterbury and handsomely bound in calf. S108239 Smith p.1. Upcott 1/350 [ref: 20191 ] £2000

A FINE LAMBARDE 838. LAMBARDE, WILLIAM. A PERAMBULATION OF KENT:

CONTEINING THE DESCRIPTION, HYSTORIE, AND CUSTOMES OF THAT SHYRE, WRITTEN IN THE YEERE 1570, BY WILLIAM LAMBARD, OF LINCOLNE'S INN, GENT. FIRST PUBLISHED IN THE

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YEERE 1576, AND NOW INCREASED AND ALTERED AFTER THE AUTHOR'S OWNE LAST COPIE.

Imprinted at London by Edm. Bollifant. 15964to. [10] + 588 + [5] pp. With a full page woodcut map of the Saxon Heptarchy and a folding woodcut map, 'A Card, of the Beacons, in Kent'. The Heptarchy map is trimmed close at the lower margin but retaining border. The ‘Card’ is complete with except for a small restoration to the lower edge only affecting about 1/8th of an inch of printed matter, otherwise it is in very good condition. Bound in 19th century full-calf, gilt, boards ruled, gilt . A fine crisp clean copy with good margins, the text is clean and fresh throughout. A single, neat marginal note in an old hand otherwise pristine. A fine copy.

The first English county history, herein the second and most complete edition,dedicated to Thomas Wotton. Lambarde wasa lawyer and antiquary and a personalconsultant to Elizabeth 1. This 2nd editioncontains the fine anonymous map of thebeacon system for signalling danger from thecoast to London, which was not to reappear insubsequent editions. The text of all latereditions is taken from this beautiful Elizabethan black letter printing, one of the most desirable of Kentish books. A fine example.Smith p. 1. S.T.C. 15176. Upcott 1/350 [ref: 21626 ] £1950

839. LANGLEY, EDWARD. and WILLIAM BELCH. LANGLEY’S NEW MAP OF KENT.

Langley and Belch, No.17 High Street Borough, London. n.d. but c.1817Steel-engraved map of Kent, 10 x 8 inches, in original full hand colouring, with two uncoloured inset vignettes, one depicting Hop picking, and the other Shipbuilding and Agriculture. A fine example, in very good condition.Attractive early 19th century map of the county with the decorative vignetteswhich show the county’s claims to fame. [ref: 17506 ] £150

840.LANGTON, ROBERT. CHARLES DICKENS AND ROCHESTER. With Numerous Illustrations From Original Drawings by the late William Hull and the Author.

Chapman & Hall, 193 Piccadilly. 1880Booklet. 24 pp. + 12 illustrations on nine plates with a number of illustrations to the text. Original pictoral grey-blue paper wrappers. Front a little dusty and creased otherwise a good copy.This nicely produced item is an offprint of a paper presented to the Manchester Literary Club, and reprinted by Dickens Publishers in a paper wrapper made to resemble the weekly parts of Dickens Works.

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[ref: 17704 ] £75

841. LANSBERRY, FREDERICK. GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS IN KENT, 1640-1914

The Boydell Press, Woodbridge/Kent County Council. 20018vo. 302 pp. + 12 b/w illustrations on 8 plates, with 7 figures to the text and 6 maps. Original black cloth. As new in like dust wrapper.This volume, the seventh in the Kent History Project, complements those already published on the economy of Kent and religion and society in Kent between 1640 and 1914. The volume begins with an important new assessment of the impact of the Civil Wars and Interregnum in Kent, which challenges some of the interpretations of previous studies of this period of Kent's history. The major thrust of the volume is, however, the transformation of Kent’s government from a system controlled by a small number of landed families into one which, on the eve of the First World War, involved a much broader range of people from the commercial, industrial and professional classes. There are also detailed studies of political radicalism in Kent between the late eighteenth and early twentieth centuries and of the impact of crime and the maintenance of public order. [ref: 19666 ] £65

842. LANSBERRY, H. C. F. SEVENOAKS WILLS AND INVENTORIES IN THE REIGN OF CHARLES II. Edited by H. C. F. Lansberry.

(Kent Records. Volume XXV).Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19888vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xxxiv + 266 pp. Serial title. Illustrated by 8 black and white photographic plates at end. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with Society’s device on front board, in laminated pictorial dust wrapper. Fine condition.This volume of the Kent Records series prints the wills and inventories of 153 households in the parish of Sevenoaks, which includes Sevenoaks Town, Sevenoaks Weald and Riverhead. The occupations covered include yeomen and husbandmen, craftsmen, tradesmen and innkeepers as well as gentlemen. The inventories are of particular value to economic historians, listing not only domestic and household items, but also the tools, equipment and stock of various trades and the implements, grain, hay, hops and livestock held by the farmers. For instance we find there were seven teams of four and one team of six oxen, the most favoured draught animals for working the land, particularly the heavy clay of the Weald. Appendices provide the 1664 Hearth Tax Returns for the area, the Rental of the Manor ofSevenoaks, 1665 and livestock and crop prices in the inventories, 1665-80. [ref: 21200 ] £30

843. LARN, RICHARD. GOODWIN SANDS SHIPWRECKS. Newton Abbot David & Charles, 1977.

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8vo. 5.5 x 8.75 inches. 176 pp. Half title. Illustrated with ten maps in frontispiece and 32 numbered photographic plates, plus frontispiece. Bound in original red cloth in dust wrapper. Fine condition.Now scarce standard work on the subject. The chronological maps record the sites of every known wreck, and there is a comprehensive alphabetical index of ships lost at the end. [ref: 21297 ] £25

844. LARN, RICHARD and BRIDGET. SHIPWRECKS OF THE GOODWIN SANDS.

David & Charles. 1979191 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations. Laminated pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.Now scarce standard work on the subject. This is the paperback reissue of original edition. [ref: 18118 ] £12

LEA’S KENT, 1693.845. LEA, PHILIP. TO HIS GRACE THE MOST REVEREND FATHER IN

GOD JOHN [TILLOTSON] BY DIVINE PROVIDENCE LORD ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY PRIMATE OF ALL ENGLAND AND METRAPOLITAN, AND ONE OF HIS MAJESTIES MOST HONOURABLE PRIVY COUNCIL, &C. THIS NEW MAP OF KENT IS MOST HUMBLY PRESENTED AND DEDICATED BY P. LEA. [From TheShires of England and Wales, described by Christopher Saxton, Being theBest and Originall Mapps With many Additions and Corrections Viz: ye Hundds, Roads, etc. by Philip Lea. Also the new Surveis of Ogilby, Seller, etc. Sold by Phillip Lea. [c.1693] ].

P. Lea, London. [1693]Large copper-engraved map. First state, 21.25 x 16.25 inches to plate mark, margins concealed by mount. [approx. scale, one inch to three miles]. Upper left panel with key to River Thames and, to the right, eight shields with coats of arms. Centre left, A Table of Explanations and below it A Scale of Miles. Lower left, a plan of Canterbury, based on Speed, and to the right of it a panel with four columns listing the places identified on the plan. Lower right, dedication panel, surmounted by mitre and Archbishop’s coat of arms. Very attractively later hand-colouring. Traces of old folds and an old, minor repair to top right margin where small piece has been torn away and skilfully replaced (so skilfully it could not be detected until map was removed from frame and held to the light), affecting about one inch of the border of the map and blank sea area. Otherwise a fine copy. A fine hand-coloured map of Kent, divided into the five lathes and further divided into hundreds, with a separate plan of Canterbury. Symbols are used to indicate the sees, deaneries, shire towns, corporations, market, fair and post towns, cinque ports, country houses, parish churches, etc. The City of London is shown at the top left and the estuary and lower reaches of the Thames are shown in some detail with the channels, shoals and banks indicated and coloured.This new map of Kent was commissioned by Philip Lea, instrument-maker and mapseller, who had bought the Saxton plates in 1665, prior to reworking

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and updating them. It replaced the original Saxton (also including Surrey and Sussex) and later Ogilby maps, used in earlier editions of his county atlas, The Shires of England and Wales. The date of this edition, in its first state, may be inferred by the dedication to John Tillotson, who was Archbishop, 1691-94. After Lea’s death in 1700 his widow Anne continued thebusiness; following her death in about 1730, the copper plates were again sold and a new printing of the Kent map was issued by John and Thomas Bowles, 1730-33. A handsome depiction of the county. Burgess, Printed Maps of Kent, 26-ii. Skelton, 12. O’Shea Gallery Catalogue, Kent and the Channel, 38. Burden, Catalogue V, 49. B.L. Maps C 7 c 4 and Maps C 21 e 11. [ref: 20604 ] £1650

846. LEATHER, JOHN. THE SAILOR’S COAST. An East Coast Evocation from the Photographs of Douglas Went.

Barrie and Jenkins, London. 1979Folio. 112 pp. with b/w illustration throughout. Original black cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.[ref: 20812 ] £15

847. LEE - HART, F. H. HISTORY OF LEE AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD, By F. H. Hart, Member of the Lee Parochial Committees, Guardian of the Poor, etc., and formerly Overseer for the Parish of Lee, and Surveyor of Highways. (Thamesmead Histories Vol. II).

Conway Maritime Press, 7 Nelson Road, Greenwich, London, S.E.10. 1971Reprint of first edition of 1882. 8vo. 6.5 x 9.25 inches. [viii], 100 pp. + [8] pp. new index. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with price clipped blue and grey pictorial dust wrapper and blue top edges. Slight spotting of edges otherwise a fine clean copy.Hart lived in the parish of Lee for more than seventy years and collected his material for this history while serving on various parochial committees. In addition to Lee, the work covers Eltham, Lewisham, Blackheath, Charlton and Greenwich. A fine reprint of a work first published in 1882. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20209 ] £25

848. LEEDS CASTLE - HARRIS, EDWIN. THE SIEGE OF LEEDS CASTLE. By Edwin Harris.

Ilkley The Scholar Press. No date but c.1980.8vo. 5 x 7.75 inches. [xii] + 240 pp. + [12]. Illustrated by 7 plates, including frontispiece. In printed card wrappers. Printed address label on first free endpaper.Undated facsimile reprint by the Scholar Press of the this novel, originally published by Edwin Harris and Sons, Printers, Eastgate, Rochester, 1906. [ref: 21748 ] £12

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849. LEEDS, C.S. CHATS ABOUT GILLINGHAM. AN OUTLINE OF ITS PAST AND PRESENT HISTORY.

Gillingham: Parrett & Neves, 1906First Edition, Tall 8vo., [12] + 247 + (4) pp. with photo illustrations throughout. Bound in full morocco gilt, with thealms of the town on the upper board in gilt, a little worn on extremities but a very good copy.A good example of this scarce history, the subscribers list printed at the rear of the volume accounts for 230 copies it itlikely only a few more than this number were printed. The work is scarce.

[ref: 18434 ] £175

ENGLAND AND WALES IN 1835.850. LEIGH, SAMUEL. LEIGH’S NEW POCKET ROAD-BOOK OF

ENGLAND AND WALES: Containing an Account of all the direct and Cross-Roads; together with a Description of every remarkable Place: its Curiosities, Manufactures, Commerce, Population, and principal Inns; to which are added Pleasure Tours to the most picturesque Parts of the Country.The whole forming a complete Guide to every Object worthy of the Attention of Travellers. Fifth Edition, carefully revised.

Printed for Leigh and Son, 421, Strand, (removed from18.), London. 183512mo. 3.75 x 5.75 inches. Engraved table serving as frontis. + iv + engraved title + 55 county maps + 498

pp., including 10 pp. advertisemenst. Illustrated by engraved table and title, Leigh’s New Atlas of England and Wales to 55 hand-coloured county maps. There is no general map of England and Wales included in this copy. Bound in green morocco, gilt. Extremities worn, sometime rather crudely rebacked, preserving the original spine. Occasional light foxing but otherwise a good copy. The New Pocket Road-Book was first published bySamuel Leigh in 1825 and was issued until the tenthedition of 1842-43. The fifth edition of 1835 containedone hundred more pages than the first and this versionalso added the fifty-five maps of Leigh’s New Atlas, firstpublished in 1820, with maps engraved by Sidney Hall.The Road-Book contains 247 routes, followed by sectionson cross-roads and six pleasure tours. These list not only

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obvious scenic attractions, but also the mills and iron works of the industrial East Midlands and North. A scarce volume; COPAC lists this fifth edition as being held by only four UK libraries: the British Library, Leeds, Manchester and the National Library of Scotland. [ref: 20962 ] £250

851. LETTS, SON & CO. LETTS’S CYCLING MAP OF FIFTY MILES ROUND LONDON From the Ordnance Survey, Sixth Edition, May 1887,

Ninth Thousand.[Extending from Bicester to Harwich and Portsmouth to Dover, including the entire coast of Kent].

Mason & Payne, 41 Cornhill, London, E.C. 1887Coloured lithographic map, 30 x 23.5 inches, dissected and laid on to linen. Preserved within the original cloth-covered boards with gilt title and Penny-farthing illustration to

upper board, with advertising labels inside upper board and on map end fold. A very good example.Hyde 179 (2a). [ref: 21477 ] £200

852. LEWIS, ARTHUR D. THE KENT COAST. (The County Coast series)T.Fisher Unwin. 1911A interesting picture of the Kent coast at the eve of the first world war; included is a chapter on H.G. Wells and Spade House, and the 'Wells Coast.' [ref: 19026 ] £25

FIRST EDITION OF LEWIS’S HISTORY OF THANET.853. LEWIS, JOHN. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES, AS WELL

ECCLESIASTICAL AS CIVIL, OF THE ISLE OF THANET, IN KENT. For the Author, London. 1723First edition. 4to. 140 pp. + 103 pp. with 2 copper-engraved maps and 5

copper-engraved plates and other illustrations in the text. Contemporary panelled calf, spine tooled in gilt. A fine, unsophisticated copy.One of only 150 copies published at 10/6. Lewis, (1675-1746) who was variously Curate of Acrise, Hawkinge and Saltwood, later expanded this work in the second

edition of 1736. This is much the scarcest of the two editions. [ref: 19668 ] £450

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EXTRA ILLUSTRATED LARGE PAPER COPY854. LEWIS, JOHN. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES, AS WELL

ECCLESIASTICAL AS CIVIL, OF THE ISLE OF THANET, IN KENT and A COLLECTION OF PAPERS, RECORDS, ETC. REFERRED TO IN THE FOREGOING HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF TENET. Second editon with additions.

For the Author and for Joseph Ames, and Peter Thompson; and sold by J. Osborn, at the Golden

Ball in Pater-noster Row. 1736Large 4to. viii + 204 pp. + 124 with 4 copper-engraved maps and 21 copper-engraved plates and other plates in the text.

Bound in full straight-grained crimson morocco, the spine in compartments with raised bands with a single gilt line on the bands and elaborate tooling in blind in the compartments. Boards panelled with a diamond intersecting the square and elaborate blind tooling and an armorial crest in a blind-tooled lozenge in the center. Extremities slightly rubbed and corners bumped, but a fine example.A very attractive large-paper copy of the second and best edition of Lewis’s Thanet, one of the greatest of the eighteenth century histories of the Kentish regions, with some valuable extra material inserted. The extra illustrations are :-A large folding map of Thanet by S. Parker (published in Harris’s History of Kent 1719) bound in bef ore the title.Three hand-coloured etched plates from the extremely rare ‘Six Views in Kent, in colours, by Amelia Noel’ published in 1797. These are loosely inserted into the front of the volume. The binding is impressive and is a rare example of a Staggemeier attributed binding. An old penciled note on the front free endpaper to this effect and comparison with other examples of his work support the attribution. L. Staggemeier came from Germany but was working in London on his own in Villiers Street by about 1793. By 1799 he was in partnership with Samuel Welcher, and in their heyday they were one of the most prolific of the West End binderies, producing ‘extra’ quality work. They seem to have separated about 1810 and had disappeared from the Directories by 1820. [ref: 16213 ] £850

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EXTRA ILLUSTRATED COPY.855. LEWIS, JOHN. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES

ECCLESIASTICAL AND CIVIL OF THE ISLE OF TENET IN KENT. London: Printed in the year 1723Large folio, 10 x 15 inches, within which are skilfully let in the leaves of the quarto first edition with additional illustrations. viii + 140 pp. + 103 pp. with the 8 plates of the first edition and 13 additional plates (see list below). A previous owner, in an old hand, has added 4 sides of neat manuscript index. Bound in later half-calf over marbled boards with spine in compartments,

decorated gilt, raised bands, and a contrasting leather title label, gilt.The additional plates are as follows and include six ofthe twenty-four rare Walker views: Buck’s View ofRichborough from the North-West, 1735; Stukely’sdouble view of Portus Rutupiae from Sandwich, andSouth-West view of Richborough Castle, 1722; TheGentleman’s Magazine illustration of The Palace ofFord, with Salmeston Grange, and Minster Church andManor House, 1811; Walker’s Thorn Farm in Minster,1812; A Plan of Ramsgate Harbour from Smeaton’sHistorical Report, 1791; Stockdale’s View of St.Lawrence Church, 1810, from his Etchings of Antiquitiesin the County of Kent, of which only 250 copies werepublished; A View of Broadstairs, engraved from adrawing by Nixon, showing the famous archway; Walker’s Stone House, nr Broadstairs, 1812; Walker’s Helicon Dale, nr Ramsgate, 1812; Sewell’s view of King’s Gate, near Margate, Kent, from the European Magazine, 1787; Walker’s view of Kingsgate; his view of Joss Stairs, Kingsgate; and of Kingsgate from the Sands, all 1812. The aquatints by George Walker were published in his Twenty-Four Picturesque Views of the Isle of Thanet. Letting-in involves cutting a hole in a larger, heavier leaf, that is slightly smaller than the leaf of the work to be mounted, and pasting the smaller leaf over the aperture, thus exposing both sides of the leaf, much in the manner ofa pane of glass in a window frame. [ref: 20135 ] £1000

856. LEWISHAM - DUNCAN, LELAND. HISTORY OF THE BOROUGHOF LEWISHAM, WITH AN ITINERARY. WITH CHAPTERS ON THE GEOLOGY OF THE DISTRICT BY W.H. GRIFFIN, AND ON THE LOCAL AUTHORITIES BY A.W. HISCOX, SOMETIME MAYOR OF THEBOROUGH.

Charles North, The Blackheath Press. 19088vo. 6 x 9 inches. xvi + 173 pp. with 73 b/w illustrations including frontis. Original cloth, gilt. A very good copy.

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The standard history of that part of London which used to be Kent. [ref: 20190 ] £65

857. LEWISHAM ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY. THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE LEWISHAM ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY FOR 1908-1912.

Printed for the Society by Charles North, The Blackheath Press, London, S.E. 19138vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xxvii + 32 99. Illustrated by [three] plates, one servingas frontispiece. Title page in red and black. Half-title. Bound in original cloth, gilt. Ink inscription, dated 1924, on first free endpaper. Fine clean condition throughout.The preliminaries are concerned with the routine business of the Society, listsof officers and members, reports, list of publications, etc. The one article, Odds and Ends of Lewisham History, is by Leland L. Duncan. It includes sections on the tower of the parish church, two accounts of household possessions, based on probate inventories of 1529 and 1576 and the bounds of the Manor of Lewisham, etc. [ref: 20265 ] £25

BOTH SMUGGLER AND CUSTOMS OFFICER858. THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF GABRIEL TOMKYNS, Who

was executed at Bedford on Friday, March 23, 1749-50, for robbing the Chester Mail. Containing,

I, His Parentage, Education, and excessive Love of Pleasure in his Youth...II, His debauching a young Woman of a good Family, whom he soon slightedIII, His Enlargement from that Prison, and being admitted a Riding Officer of the Customs; his Intrigues with the Kent and Sussex Smugglers...IV, His Adventures in this Course of Life: Robbing the Chester Mail July 2, 1746...V, His Trial...To which are added, The Lives, Transactions, Trial, Behaviour, Confession, and dying speeches of Thomas Munns and John Hall, alias Rich, who were executed at Chelmsford in Essex, on Friday, April 6, 1750, for robbing the Yarmouth Mail, and hang’d in Chains on Haslewood Common.London Printed and sold by T. Wynn in the Old-Baily: and sold at the Pamphlet-shops. No date, but 1750.Pamphlet sewn as issued. 8vo . 4.5 x 7.25 inches. 24 pp. Decorated with headpiece vignette and initial. A very good example.A lively account of the life of one of the lesser-known rogues of the eighteenthcentury, written soon after his execution, by someone who claimed to have known him for thirty-seven years. Gib Tomkyns (as he was known), smuggler turned informer and Customs Riding Officer, turned smuggler again as well as confidence trickster and highwayman. He was born at Burwash, East Sussex. The young Tomkyns joined the Mayfield Gang, being arrested in 1721, 1724 and 1729, often persuading the authorities to release him in exchange for informing on fellow smugglers, including a wealthy London tea dealer. Eventually the government issued him a warrant as a Riding Officer and he used his knowledge of the Sussex smugglers to seize many cargoes. With his official salary ‘and the Hush-Money he received from the Smugglers (besides what he got by his private Trade in that wicked

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Practice),’ he was receiving an income of £600 per annum. However, he became haughty and insolent, squandering his income on high living ‘and took to Drinking hot Gin Flip, and other mean Liquors.’ After leaving the customs service in 1741, he fell on hard times, being slighted by his former associates, and was forced to earn a living by becoming ‘a Walking Smuggler,’ carrying tea into London in his greatcoat pockets, being assisted by ‘an impudent, pert, young Hussey’ on horseback, ‘the Daughter of a Charcoal-Burner near Godstone-Quarry...they agreed so well together, that they made but one Bed when in London, and before the Girl was 14 Years of age, she was delivered of a Son at one Mother Bunce’s, who kept a Bawdy House in Sheer-Lane near Temple-Bar.’ Many more roguish adventures are recounted, including his confidence tricks which gained the silver tankard and a valuable trunk from a coach, his seizure by a smuggling gang on a Flushing cutter and rescue by a sloop of war just as he was going to be thrown overboard, his frauds with counterfeit bank notes, and even the theft of all the whores’ finery from a bawdy house near Covent Garden. The author is inclined to diversion, narrating the activities of other rogues, including members of the Hawkhurst Gang. Tomkyns was executed in late March 1750 and the pamphlet is listed in the May monthly catalogue of the London Magazine for that year. Written in a robust style and full of picturesque anecdotes, this is an is exceptionally rare pamphlet and is not in ESTC; COPAC records only one copy, held by the National Trust, and none are listed in WorldCat. Smugglers’ Britain. East Sussex gangs (web site). [ref: 21274 ] £850

859. LINDLEY, KENNETH COASTLINE Written and illustrated by Kenneth Lindley

Hutchinson and Co. (Publishers) Ltd., 178-202, Great Portland St., London W1. 1967First edition. 4to. 6.75 x 9.75 inches. 159 pp. Illustrated with black and white drawings by author, photographs and reproductions of engravings, etc. Bound in original yellow cloth with pictorial design continuing across boards and spine. Pictorial coloured dust wrapper with watercolour of Edward Ardizzone on front and spine. Blue and black pictorial endpapers. A little wearat extremities, small section missing from lower edge of front inside wrapper and some foxing to edges. Otherwise fine clean copy.An illustrated survey of coastal features and attractions. It includes chapters on ports and resorts, bungalows, piers, beach objects, forgotten industries, lighthouses, creeks and inlets, caravans, signs and notices, souvenirs, etc. Kenneth Arthur Lindley (born 1928) is a well known artist and illustrator who has also published several other books on the coast, including Seaside Architecture (1973). Edward Ardizzone (1900-79), who painted the watercolour drawing of Southend featured on the wrapper, was a famous author and illustrator of children’s books. [ref: 20206 ] £25

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WATERCOLOUR VIEW OF LOST FOLKESTONE STREET860.LIVENS, HORACE MANN DOVER STREET

Partially obscured signature and date, 1908Pencil and watercolour wash on grey/brown paper, approximately 11.5 x 15 inches, mounted and framed to museum conservationstandard. The view seen is looking down Dover Street towards the harbour, with the distinctive building known today as Shangri-La at the end of The Bayle Parade in the distance. Dover Street is known today as the residential area Harbour Way, but in 1908 was lined with Georgian town houses, some shops and at least one pub. This area of Folkestone was completely demolished in the slum clearances after the First World War, and remained undeveloped until the post-war

development of council housing. This scene is typical of Livens’ expressive depiction of slanting sunlight dramatically highlighting buildings, leaving unpainted tinted paper for areas of dark shadow. Two small figures recede at the foot of the hill and another closer to the viewer emerges from a doorway on the left. A dressed mannequin can be seen in the glazed bay window of a dress shop on the right. This painting and another were purchased together, when a number of Levins’ pictures were sold at auction quite recently. Although Levins is not a household name, his paintings are represented in the Tate Gallery, the British Museum, the Government Art Collection, the VandA, the National Museum of Wales, the Honeywood Museum Carshalton, City of Bradford Museum, Brighton Museum, the National Gallery of Canada and the Royal Borough of Kensington Collection.[ref: 20926 ] £1550

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WATERCOLOUR VIEW OF LOST FOLKESTONE STREET861. LIVENS, HORACE MANN LITTLE FENCHURCH STREET

Signed and dated, H M Livens 08. 1908Pencil and watercolour wash on grey/brown paper, approximately 12 x 15 inches, mounted and framed to museum conservation standard. The view seen is looking west up Fenchurch Street, which is known today as St Michael’s Street, from the point where it joined Dover Street, now known as Harbour Way. The building in the centre of the picture is the George III public house, which was open until 1961, when it was demolished and replaced with modern housing. This part of Folkestone is practically unrecognisable today, even to a local, so dramatic are the changes to the once close-knit fishermen’s quarter where streets had evolved unplanned and remained unchanged since the 18th century. Most

artists, if they came to Folkestone at all, painted the picturesque harbour or clifftop views. Livens has been drawn to the seedier, picaresque subject of the tumble-down side streets. A woman animates the scene, trotting along the pavement in a large hat, ankle-length skirt, and bright blue blouse. The chief interest in the picture lies in the dramatic depiction of sunlight falling across the facade of the pub, whilst we, the viewer, peer upwards from the gloom of the narrow, huddled buildings below. The genius lies in Livens’ technique of leaving the dark paper unpainted to depict areas of shadow, including the shape of a tall chimney which lies outside of our view to the left. [ref: 20925 ] £1550

862. LLOYD, DAVID. W. HISTORIC TOWNS OF SOUTH EAST ENGLAND.

Victor Gollancz Ltd. 19874to. 160 pp. Photo illustrated throughout. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A very good copy.An alphabetical guide to the more interesting towns of Kent, Sussex, Surrey and Hampshire. Well-illustrated. [ref: 7996 ] £10

CIVIL WAR PAMPHLET863. THE LONG PARLIAMENT. AN ORDINANCE OF THE LORDS

AND COMMONS ASSEMBLED IN PARLIAMENT. CONCERNING THE LATE REBELLIOUS INSURRECTION IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. WHEREBY A COMMITTEE IS APPOINTED FOR THE SAID COUNTY,

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FORTHWITH TO SEIZE UPON ALL THE ARMES AND HORSES, AND IMPRISON THE PERSONS OF ALL THOSE THAT APPEARED IN, OR GIVEN ANY ASSISTANCE TO THAT INSURRECTION, AND REBELLION; OR HAVE WILLINGLY RELIEVED ANY OF THE SAID REBELS, WITH ARMES, AMMUNITION, MONEY OR OTHERWISE.

August 19. Printed for John Wright, in the Old Bailey, 1643Small 4to. Title (within woodcut typographic border ) + 5 pp. Bound in quarter morocco over marbled boards, title in gilt on spine and manuscript label on upper board. The paper of the pamphlet is uniformly browned as usual. Verso of title page is stamped ‘British Museum sale duplicate 1787’ this records that this example was disposed of by the British Museum in one of their celebrated duplicate sales. A very good example of an extremely rare item.During the first year of the Civil War there were several unsuccessful attempts to organize revolts in Kent and a serious outbreak of violence took place in July 1643. The immediate cause of this uprising was the strong feeling aroused in the county by the attempt to make the people take the Covenant to support the forces raised in defense of Parliament following the discovery of the royalist plot of Edmund Waller in May 1643. The minister ofIghtham refused to administer the Covanant and was consequently arrested despite his parishioners’ attempts to assist him. This incident set off the disturbances. Sevenoaks became a centre of armed resistance and armed groups also gathered at Aylesford and near Faversham. Roads from the county to London and to Surrey were secured, Chatham dockyard was threatened and much of the county was in an unsettled state. Negotiations were opened between the County Committee and the rebels butbefore definite results had been achieved, Parliament sent troops into the county. The rebels in Sevenoaks-Tonbridge area where subdued. Rebel reinforcements from Aylesford got as far as Yalding but submitted there to the Parliamentary forces and pockets of resistance in other parts of were also suppressed. [ref: 17952 ] £650

864. LOXTON, HOWARD. PILGRIMAGE TO CANTERBURY. An interesting account of the Becket murder and the pilgrimages which wereto follow. Who were the pilgrims, where did they come from, and what routes did they travel? [ref: 15604 ] £15

865. LUGARD, CECIL E. (Compiled by) SEASALTER. BOROUGH, MANOR AND PARISH.

Printed by Elvy Bros., “Whitstable Times” Office. No date but c.1930v + 35 pp. + 3 b/w illustrations, 2 full-page, including a drawing by R.H. Goodsall (of Kentish Patchwork fame) of the proposed reconstruction of Old Seasalter Church. Original printed buff card wrappers. Wrapper a trifle dusty otherwise a near fine example.Valuable reference for local historians focussing on the Parish and Church records. Scarce.

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[ref: 18248 ] £60

SCARCE NOVEL OF THE SOUTH DOWNS866. LUSHINGTON, ELLEN E. STORM AND

CALM ON THE DOWNS By Ellen E. Lushington, Author of ‘Westfield Village,’ and ‘ALand and Sea Story.’

Walter Smith, London and Frederick Bunyard, Maidstone 18848vo. [viii] + 391pp. Original brown cloth with embossed decoration in black, gilt Water stains on rear boards Some brown staining and small holes in last twelve pages and rear end papers. Ink inscription on half titleScarce novel of the South Downs by Ellen E. Lushington (1817-after 1881): ‘It was with a desire to represent some of the scenery of the South Downs, and to recall some of their associations, that

this story was commenced.’ [ref: 19055 ] £35

867. LYDD - DUNCAN, LELAND L. Edited by ARTHUR FINN MOMUMENTAL INSCRIPTIONS IN THE CHURCHYARD AND CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS’ LYDD, KENT.

Kent Archæological Society 1927First Edition. ix + 68 pp. Original green card wrappers. Spine repaired, some foxing, otherwise a good copy. [ref: 18719 ] £20

STANDARD HISTORY868. LYON, REV. JOHN. THE HISTORY OF THE TOWN AND PORT OF

DOVER, AND OF DOVER CASTLE; WITH A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE CINQUE PORTS.

Dover, Printed for the Author, by Ledger and Shaw and sold bythem, and all the Booksellers in the County of Kent; and by Longman, Hurst, Reese, Orme, and Brown, 39, Paternoster Row, London. 1813 + 1814First Edition, 2 volumes. 4to. 11.5 x 9 inches. Volume One [xii] + xlviii + 366 pp , Volume two, [viii] +390 pp. illustrated with 18 copper

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engraved plates, 8 of which are folding. Quarter bound in contrasting cloth, lettered on the spines. An attractive copy, internally clean with the folding plates in much better than usual condition, with only a few closed tears and slight offsetting.The first volume gives an account of Dover town and port from the time of Julius Caesar to publication, and the Second volume is devoted to the Historyof the Castle and the Customal of the Cinque Ports. Lyon (1734 - 1814) was minister of St. Mary the Virgin for forty=five years, and devoted his academic life to local research. Apart from anti-liberal pamphlets published during the French Revolution this was his only publication. It remains the most important antiquarian history of the town and port of Dover.

The subscribers list accounts for 203 copies, so it is probable that no more than 250 copies were printed. [ref: 21020 ] £200

PORTRAIT OF WILLIAM HARVEY869. MACARDELL, JAMES. WILLIAM

HARVEY, M.D. OBIT 1657. ÆTAT 79. FROM A PRIVATE PLATE BY MACARDELL.

Published by Messrs., Chas. J Sawyer Ltd. Grafton House London W. n.d. but c.1925Black mezzotint, 10 x 13 inches. A very good example.Attractive mezzotint portrait of the pioneer of medicine, Dr. William Harvey. The artistJames MacArdell was born Dublin in 1729 and died in London in 1765. He worked primarily as a mezzotinter. This plate was published around 1930, in London, by Messrs. Charles J. Sawyer, Ltd. from the original eighteenth century plate which survived in a private collection.

Impressions from this plate taken in the eighteenth century were very rare. When the original plate was discovered in the 1920s, a small number of impressions were taken from it by Sawyer, a London bookseller. These are now very scarce. [ref: 16944 ] £250

870. MACDOUGALL, PHILIP. CHATHAM DOCKYARD IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS

Alan Sutton, Gloucester 19948vo.128 pp. Original laminated card wrappers. A very good example.A thorough history of the great dockyard, in photographs. [ref: 18063 ] £12

871. MACDOUGALL, PHILIP. CHATHAM PAST Phillimore, Chichester. 1999

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4to. 129 pp. with many good illustrations from old documents, prints etc., as well as photographs. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper. A very good example.A thorough history of the town, now out of print. [ref: 17301 ] £14

872. MACDOUGALL, PHILIP. OLD CHATHAM . A SECOND PICTUREBOOK.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198448 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Original laminated card wrappers. Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18663 ] £10

873. MACDOUGALL, PHILIP. THE STORY OF THE HOO PENINSULA. John Hallewell Publications, 172 High Street, Rochester. 1980First Edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xi, 212 pp.+ [3] pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs. Half-title, four appendixes and index. Original blue cloth, gilt, spine a little sunned. A good copy in spine-faded pictorial dust wrapper.Has become quite scarce. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 20207 ] £30

874. MACDOUGALL, PHILLIP. CHATHAM BUILT WARSHIPS SINCE 1860.

Maritime Books, Liskeard, Cornwall. 19828vo. 112 pp. illustrated throughout with photos and drawings. Pictorial card covers. A very good copy.A complete list with an illustration of nearly every ship. [ref: 15590 ] £10

875. MCINTOSH, K.H. (Edited by) CHISLET AND WESTBERE. Villages of the Stour Lathe. With articles on Upstreet, Hersden, Sturry and Fordwich.

K.H. McIntosh, Ramsgate. 1979164 pp., with b/w photographic illustrations and folding map by Roger Higham. Printed card wrappers. Good.[ref: 13691 ] £5

876. McNAY, MICHAEL. PORTRAIT OF A KENTISH VILLAGE. EAST MALLING 827 - 1978.

Gollancz. 1980First Edition, 8vo. 9.5 x 6 inches, 144 pp. with maps and photo illustrations throughout. Original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. A very good copy.A good modern history, now out of print. [ref: 20881 ] £15

KENTISH MIRACLE

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877. MAIDSTONE: THE KENTISH MIRACLE; OR, A SEASONABLE WARNING TO ALL SINNERS. Shewing the wonderful relation of one Mary Moor whose husband died some time ago, and left her with two children, who was reduced to great want. How she wandered about the Country asking relief and went two days without food. How the devil appeared to her, and the many offers he made to her to deny Christ and enter into his service, and how she confuted Satan by her powerful arguments; and she came to a fountain of water where she fell on her knees prayed to Almighty God that he would give that virtue to the water that it might refresh and satisfy her children's hunger. Likewise an account how an angel appeared to her and relieved her, also declared many things that shall happen very speedily. Shewing likewise what strange and surprizing accidents shall happen by means of an approaching war, and concerning a dreadful earthquake, &c.

No place or date but c.1750Small pamphlet, approximately 3.5 x 6 inches. 8 pp. with a decorative headpiece and the Royal Coat-of-Arms George I as a tailpiece. A trifle dusty and fore edges a little creased, but a very good example of a rare item.This item closely resembles the pamphlet entitled ‘A Strange and Wonderful Relation’ (see list under Maidstone) in which a shepherd has a visitation from an Angel who warns of God’s dire retribution on the world’s sinners should they not repent, including war, earthquakes, storms and ‘distemper among horned cattle’. Rare. [ref: 18109 ] £250

878.MAIDSTONE - [ALLCHIN, J.H.] [MAIDSTONE] MUSEUM, PUBLIC LIBRARY, AND BENTLIF ART GALLERY. REPORT OF THE CURATOR AND

LIBRARIAN. From November 1st, 1908, to October 31st, 1910. With an Appendix, being a report on the Annual Conference of The Museums Association in Maidstone, 1909, and York, 1910.Walter Ruck, Maidstone. 191193 pp. + 4 b/w plates. Original printed paper wrappers. A comprehensive report on the activities of the Museum, Library and Gallery including latest acquisitions, exhibitions, loans, exchanges, visitor numbers, etc. Scarce.

[ref: 18101 ] £40

879. MAIDSTONE - AMPREY, A.S. (Edited by) A GUIDE TO THE BOROUGH OF MAIDSTONE. Compiled by Order of the Mayor and Corporation.

Printed and published by Walter Ruck, Maidstone, 1919Second edition, oblong 8vo., 7.25 x 5.75 inches. [10] adverts + 116 pp. + [2] adverts. with numerous b/w photographic illustrations. Original printed boards. Hinges a little loose, otherwise a very good copy.Scarce Maidstone guide with interesting advertisements. [ref: 19729 ] £85

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880.MAIDSTONE - BARTLETT, W. Artist, and H. ADLARD, Engraver. MAIDSTONE FROM THE WATER. ORIGINAL HAND-COLOURED, ENGRAVED VIEWS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS BY SHEPHERD AND OTHERS PUBLISHED.

London. 1829Hand-coloured steel engraving, 6 x 4 inches approx. Mounted in conservation materials.These well-known views show, in detail, Kent in the early nineteenth century. They were published to illustrate Ireland's History of Kent (and Virtue's Picturesque Beauties of Great Britain). [ref: 17051 ] £25

881. MAIDSTONE - GILBERT, WALTER B. MEMORIALS OF THE COLLEGIATE AND PARISH CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS, IN THE KING’S TOWN AND PARISH OF MAIDSTONE, TOGETHER WITH A LIST OF INCUMBENTS, CHURCHWARDENS AND OTHER OFFICERS, FROM THE EARLIEST TIME.

Wescomb and Smith, Maidstone, 1866Small 8vo. 230 pp. Original blind-stamped blue cloth, gilt. A trifle rubbed at extremities otherwise a very good copy.

[ref: 19707 ] £60

882. MAIDSTONE - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF MAIDSTONE AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 1964.

Kelly's Directories. 19648vo. xii + A8b + 514 pp. Lacking the map. Original printed cloth. Clean copy. [ref: 17611 ] £25

883. MAIDSTONE ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY. MEMORIES OF MAIDSTONE.

KENT COUNTY LIBRARY 198776 pp. 4 pp of illustrations Original pictorial card covers A very good copy.A fascinating window on to a variety of experiences. Local people offer an insight into life in Maidstone from the early part of the last century, varying from schools, tramways, to the workhouse etc. [ref: 18353 ] £10

884. MAIDSTONE ELECTORS REGISTER. THE REGISTER OF ELECTORS ENTITLED TO VOTE AT ELECTIONS OF MEMBERS TO SERVE IN PARLIAMENT FOR THE BOROUGH OF MAIDSTONE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT, Between the Thirtieth day of November, 1851, and the First day of December, 1852.

Printed by Smith and Son, 10 Week Street, Maidstone. 1851Folio. 28 pp. Preserved in original paper wrappers, on which is the title page.

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The first 8 pages are a list of Freemen (536), the remainder are ‘A List of Persons entitled to vote in the Election of Members for the Borough of Maidstone, in respect of Property occupied within the Parish of Maidstone ....’ This contains a further 1751 names. Registers like these became statutory in the 1830s and were published frequently, but do not survive in any numbers. [ref: 16849 ] £45

885. MAIDSTONE ELECTORS REGISTER. THE REGISTER OF ELECTORS ENTITLED TO VOTE AT ELECTIONS OF MEMBERS TO SERVE IN PARLIAMENT FOR THE BOROUGH OF MAIDSTONE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT, Between the thirtieth day of November 1855, and the first day of December 1856.

Maidstone: Wickham and Son, Printers, Week Street. 1855Folio. 32 pp. Preserved in original paper wrappers, on which is the title page.The first 8 pages are a list of Freemen (471), the remainder are ‘A List of Persons entitled to vote in the Election of Members for the Borough of Maidstone, in respect of Property occupied within the Parish of Maidstone, .....’ This contains a further 1789 names. Registers like these became statutory in the 1830s and were published frequently, but they do not survive in any numbers. [ref: 16851 ] £45

886. MAIDSTONE ELECTORS REGISTER. THE REGISTER OF ELECTORS ENTITLED TO VOTE AT ELECTIONS OF MEMBERS TO SERVE IN PARLIAMENT FOR THE BOROUGH OF MAIDSTONE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT, During the year 1870.

Maidstone: Printed by W.H. Vale, King Street. 1869Folio. 62 pp. Preserved in original paper wrappers, on which is the title page. The first 10 pages are a list of Freemen (371), the remainder are ‘A List of Persons entitled to vote in the Election of Members for the Borough of Maidstone, in respect of Property occupied within the Parish of Maidstone, .....’. This contains a further 3357 names. Registers like these became statutory in the 1830s and were published frequently, but they do not survive in any numbers. [ref: 16852 ] £65

887. MAIDSTONE ELECTORS REGISTER. THE REGISTER OF ELECTORS ENTITLED TO VOTE AT ELECTIONS OF MEMBERS TO SERVE IN PARLIAMENT FOR THE BOROUGH OF MAIDSTONE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT, During the year 1872.

Maidstone: Printed by W.H. Vale, King Street. 1871Folio. 64 pp. Preserved in original paper wrappers, on which is the title page. The first 10 pages are a list of Freemen (371), the remainder are ‘A List of Persons entitled to vote in the Election of Members for the Borough of Maidstone, in respect of Property occupied within the Parish of Maidstone, .....’. This contains a further 3473 names. Registers like these became statutory in the 1830s and were published frequently, but they do not survive in any numbers. [ref: 16853 ] £65

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888.MAIS, S.P.B. SOUTHERN RAMBLES - KENT. British Railways, Southern Region, London 195012mo. 200 pp. Endpaper maps and illustrations throughout. Original pictorial card wrappers. A little bumped and front endpaper map damp-stained, otherwise a good example.Attractive pocket-sized companion for the Southern Region in the last days of steam. [ref: 18181 ] £10

889. MAJOR, ALAN. A NEW DICTIONARY OF KENT DIALECT. Meresborough Books. 19818vo. 148 pp. with diagrams. Original laminated hardcover. Spine slightly faded, but a very good copy.Augmented and expanded edition of Parish and Shaw’s dialect dictionary published in 1888. This new edition has now become quite hard to find. [ref: 17203 ] £20

890.MAJOR, ALAN. WHO’S BURIED WHERE IN KENT. The Last Resting Places of the Famous, Infamous, Notable, Curious and Eccentric.

Meresborough Books. 1990128 pp. with b/w illustration. Original pictorial card wrappers. A mint copy.[ref: 16938 ] £10

891. MALLING - FIELDING, Rev. C. H. MEMORIES OF MALLING AND ITS VALLEY; WITH A FAUNA AND FLORA OF KENT.

Henry C.H. Oliver, West Malling, Kent. 1893Tall 8vo. xiv + 291 pp. with illustrations throughout and a coloured folding map. Original blue cloth, gilt. A trifle rubbed at the extremities otherwise a very good copy.Although there has been a reprint of this work this first issue is a far superiorproduction. [ref: 18096 ] £85

PRESENTATION COPY OF SHAKESPEARE SOURCE.892. MANNINGHAM, JOHN, edited by BRUCE, JOHN. DIARY OF

JOHN MANNINGHAM, OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE, AND OF BRADBOURNE, KENT, BARRISTER-AT-LAW, 1602-1603. Edited from the original manuscript by John Bruce, Esq., and presented to the Camden Society by William Tite, Esq., M.P.,

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F.R.S., F.S.A., President of the Society. (Camden Society, old ser., 99, 1868).

Printed by J. B. Nichols and Sons, Westminster. 18688vo. 7 x 8.5 inches. frontis. + [iv] + xx + 188 pp. Illustrated by pasted in facsimile lithograph as frontispiece. Bound in half-morocco over red cloth, gilt. Extremities worn. Paste-downs a little cockled. title page detached at top.Occasional foxing. Presentation inscription to E. W. Brayley, F.R.S., Librarianof the London Institution, from William Tite, 1869 on first free endpaper.This Camden Society volume prints British Museum Harleian Manuscript 5353. It covers the years 1602-April 1603 and is therefore an important source for the death of Queen Elizabeth; the diarist receiving first hand information from Dr Parry, her chaplain on duty: ‘This morning about threeat clocke hir Majestie departed this lyfe, mildly like a lambe, easily like a ripeapple from the tree...’ and the proclamation of James I the next morning. As a student at the Middle Temple, Manningham was ideally placed to gather material for his diary, which is replete with news, gossip, rumours, aphorisms legal comments, extracts from books, long notes on sermons and recipes, etc. He describes his enjoyment of the first recorded performance of Twelfth Night (which he compares to The Comedy of Errors) at Candlemas on 2 February 1602, in the hall of the Middle Temple. He also includes an amusing anecdote on Shakespeare, which is worth quoting in full: ‘Vpon a tyme when Burbidge played Richard III, there was a citizen grone soe farr inliking with him, that before shee went from the play shee appointed him to come that night vnto hir, by the name of Richard the Third. Shakespeare ouerhearing their conclusion went before, was intertained and at his game ere Burbidge came. Then message being brought that Richard the Third was at the dore, Shakespeare caused returne to be made that William the Conqueror was before Richard the Third. Shakespeare’s name William.’ John Manningham (c.1575-1622) was the son of Robert Manningham of FenDrayton, Cambridgeshire. He was later formally adopted and made the heir of his kinsman, Richard Manningham, from whom, in 1611, he inherited the manor house of Bradbourne, East Malling, Kent; the diary notes occasional visits to Bradbourne, Godmersham and Canterbury. John Bruce, FSA (1802-69) was a founder of the Camden Society in 1838, served as its treasurer and edited many of its early publications in addition to those of other societies and volumes of the state papers. William Tite (1798-1873) was chiefly renowned as an architect (he designed the Royal Exchange and numerous main line railway stations and served as president of the RIBA) but was also an antiquary (elected FSA 1839) and a book collector. Edward William Brayley, FRS (1801/2-1870), to whom this book was presented by Tite, was a writer and lecturer on science, who served as Joint Librarian, later Principal Librarian to the London Institution, 1834-70. DNB. [ref: 20910 ] £150

893. MANSFIELD, F.A. HISTORY OF GRAVESEND IN THE COUNTY OF KENT.

Rochester Press. 19818vo. 160 pp. Illustrated throughout with b/w photographs and artwork. Interesting and broad history of Gravesend from Middle Ages to present times.

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[ref: 18179 ] £12

GRAVESEND ARCHIVE894. MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION OF DOCUMENTS RELATING

TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF GRAVESEND IN THE EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY. A large quantity of legal documents, leases, indentures, wills, rent books, insurance policies and receipts, maps and plans, auction particulars etc., relating to property in Gravesend and Milton.

1800 - 1930Vellum deeds, bound rent and account books manuscript and printed plans and drawings, printed letterheads and insurance documents, share certificates, etc. The condition is mostly very good, some a little dusty and grubby, mostly folded.A fascinating archive from an estate agent or similar, some of the more interesting items are :-A manuscript plan, dated June 1820 and signed by Edward Mawley, Architect ‘A Freehold Estate at Gravesend property of Mr Charles Mawley’. The plan shows a crescent of villas adjacent to Gravesend Church, pen and ink with watercolour wash.A manuscript plan and elevation of a proposed villa dated 1829 showing a delightful Georgian house.A manuscript ‘Plan of freehold estate property of Charles Mawley, 1831’. at Gravesend depicting four blocks of land, houses etc. between Princess Street, Church Street, Bath Street and New Road, intersected by Wakefield Street and Kempthorne Street. Signed by John Brown, Surveyor, London 1831. Pen and ink with watercolour wash.A lithographic ‘Plan of the Gravesend Freehold Investment Company at Milton next Gravesend, Kent’. depicting plots for disposal. Hand coloured.A number of printed share certificates for the Gravesend and Milton Diamond Steam Boat Company, 1837. Manuscript cheques and/or promissory notes with embossed duty stamps, various banks and dates 1830 -1860.Five bound account books of various sizes, detailing collection of rents and amounts spent on properties and with tradesmen etc. Between 1828 and 1842. Property belonging to William Curd, Mrs Mary Martin, James Turtle in account with William Glover.A large quantity of handsomely printed fire insurance policies completed by hand, issued by County Fire Office and others.Many of the documents relate to the family of Umfreville, notably Samuel, but also to a number of other local families. [ref: 12086 ] £950

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895. MANUSCRIPT HANDOVER INVENTORY OF KENT INNS, 1913. C. Hebden Phillips and Son, Hotel Valuers, DoverContents: ‘Mill House,’ Canterbury, ‘Two Sawyers,’ Canterbury, ‘George and Dragon,’ Ewell, Dover, ‘City Arms’, Canterbury.

1913 (and 1964)Oblong 8vo. 7.25 x 4.5 inches. [180] pp., with 91 + [1] numbered pages, (with 4 blank pages). Ink and pencil manuscript entries in ruled account book,sold by Pettitt and Cox, Account BookMakers, Wholesale Stationers, 22 and 23,

Frith Street, Soho, London, W. (label on front paste-down).Bound in crimson morocco, blind stamped borders and gilttitle on boards, with brass latch. Marbled endpapers. Paperlabel on front paste-down lists contents in red ink (bluebiro for 1964 entry) and pencil date, 1913. Some scuffing ofboards and slight wear to extremities. Lower hingesstarting to crack and spine reinforced with cloth tape.Otherwise very good condition, with clean, legible interior. Manuscript inventories of four Kent inns (three in Canterbury and one at Ewell, Dover), recorded October to November 1913. There is an additional brief record for the George and Dragon, Ewell, in 1964. These are handover inventories made on the occasion of a change of tenancy, recording names ofthe incoming and outgoing licensees and the initials of the valuers acting for them. They are principally concerning with recording the details of the furnishing and fittings, including glasses, and stock is entered only as a totalat the end. The fixtures are recorded in minute detail for every room and, as these were all inns offering accommodation, included the contents of bedrooms and listed food preparation utensils in the larders and sculleries. A scarce surviving document and a valuable source of information on the licensed trade in the year 1913. Kelly’s Directory of Kent, 1903, 1907. [ref: 20939 ] £200

896. MANUSCRIPT INVENTORY. MANUSCRIPT HANDOVER INVENTORY OF KENT PUBLIC HOUSES, 1900. Contents: ‘Leather Bottle’ Sholden, ‘Mechanics Arms’ Folkestone, ‘Castle’ Sandgate, ‘Deal Cutter’ Dover,

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‘Rose and Crown’ Canterbury, ‘Harbour’ Folkestone, ‘Old Commercial Quay’ Dover, ‘Clarendon’ Dover (stock).

1900Oblong 8vo. 7.5 x 5.25 inches. 98 numbered leaves [200] pp. (with 12 blank pages). Red and black ink and pencil manuscript entries in ruled account booksold by Estates Gazette, 6, St Bride Street, London (label on rear paste-down). Bound in quarter vellum with marbled endpapers and edges. Folding pocket on front paste-down. Extremities a little worn and edges faded; p.98 partly removed. Otherwise fine condition. Manuscript inventories of eight East Kent pubs, recorded January to December 1900. The first seven entries are handover inventories made on change of tenancy, recording the names of the outgoing and incoming licensees and of the two valuers acting for them (and sometimes signed by the outgoing valuer). The inventories principally list the details of the furniture and fittings, although there is a brief entry for stock in some cases. The fixtures are recorded in minute detail for every room. A scarce surviving document and a valuable source of information on the licensed trade in 1900. More Tales from the Taproom, 2004. Kelly’s Directory of Kent, 1903. [ref: 20860 ] £200

897. MARCH, EDGAR J. SPRITSAIL BARGES OF THAMES AND MEDWAY.

Percival Marshall, London. 1948First edition. 4to. 304 pp. with photo illustrations throughout and several drawings. Original bright blue cloth, gilt. A fine copy in a near fine dust wrapper.An excellent book, the standard work on the subject. Scarce in this condition. [ref: 20805 ] £120

898. MARCH, EDGAR J. SPRITSAIL BARGES OF THAMES AND MEDWAY. By Edgar J. March, Associate of the Royal Institution of NavalArchitects. A New Edition.

Newton Abbot David and Charles. 1981New Edition. 7.5 x 10 inches. 4to. xiv + 234 pp. Half title. Illustrated by 32 pp,of 64 numbered plates and by numerous drawings and diagrams, including 3 plans, throughout. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. A near fine copy in a verygood dust wrapper.An excellent book, the standard work on the subject. Includes history, construction, How to make miniature models and results of sailing matches. First published in 1948, with new edition 1970 (reprinted 1981), which is alsonow quite scarce. We have another similar copy, at the same price. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20806 ] £60

899. MARGARY, IVAN D. ROMAN WAYS IN THE WEALD. Illustrated with maps, diagrams, and photographs.

London Phoenix House. 1948First edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. 287 pp. + [1]. Half-title.

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Illustrated by 15 black and white plates, including frontispiece, 120 pages of plans, diagrams and strip road maps in text, by a large folding plan and by maps on both endpapers. Bound in original cloth, gilt in pictorial green dust wrapper. Inscription on half-title. Occasional foxing, but otherwise good condition.First edition of the standard work on the subject. A copiously illustrated book which traces the routes of the Roman roads which ran from London to the south coast and the east-west trackways which interconnected with them. A pioneering work of field archaeology which greatly extended knowledge of communications in the Weald, an area important to the Romans for its iron industry.We have a second copy, ex-library with the usual stamps, for £20. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21171 ] £30

900.MARGATE. THE ALBUM OF MARGATE VIEWS. Wm. Z., London. n.d. but c.1899

Oblong concertina type view-book of glazed lithos, containing 21 images. Printed in Germany. Original printed boards, gilt. A very good, clean copy.This type of view book originates in Germany and is an example of the curious mixture of photograph and drawing which were prolific from about 1875 to 1895 when photographyfinally won the day.

[ref: 17382 ] £40

901. MARGATE. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEWS OF MARGATE AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Printed in Bavaria, No date but c.1870Oblong view-book containing 17 tinted images. Original printed boards, rather worn and with aslight water stain in the sky of a few images but a good copy.The photographs are credited to :- Perkins, Son & Venemore Lee-London S.E. or G.E. Houghton, Margate. [ref: 18202 ] £25

902. MARGATE - [BARHAM, REV. R.H.] INGOLDSBY, THOMAS. MISADVENTURES AT MARGATE. A LEGEND OF JARVIS’S JETTY. Pictured by Ernest M. Jessop

Eyre and Spottiswoode, Gt. New St., London. No date but c.1880sLarge folio. 10 x 15 inches approx. [2] Titles + 18 pp. of coloured lithographs printed on recto only. Original pictorial paper-covered bevelled boards. Slight wear at extremities and fore-edges. As usual the gutta-percha binding has disintegrated, so recased, otherwise a very good copy.

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A tale in verse of a visit to Margate by Mr. Simpkinson, whose generosity towards a tearful boy on the pier is rewarded by the boy absconding with hisbelongings. [ref: 17469 ] £100

903. MARGATE - GRITTEN, A. J. CATALOGUE OF THE BOOKS, PAMPHLETS AND EXCERPTS DEALING WITH MARGATE, THE ISLE OF THANET AND THE COUNTY OF KENT IN THE LOCAL COLLECTION OF THE BOROUGH OF MARGATE PUBLIC LIBRARY.

Borough of Margate. 1934166 pp. indexed catalogue. Original printed wrappers. A very good copy.This invaluable catalogue was issued in a small edition and does not appear on the market very often. Essential reference for the Thanet collector. [ref: 17625 ] £40

ASSOCIATION COPY904. MARGATE - KIDD, WILLIAM. THE PICTURESQUE POCKET

COMPANION TO MARGATE, RAMSGATE, BROADSTAIRS, AND PARTS ADJACENT; ILLUSTRATED WITH ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY ENGRAVINGS ON WOOD BY G.W. BONNER.

William Kidd, 228, Regent Street; London, 183112mo. iv + 215 pp. + 1 advert + 12 pp. catalogue. Illustrated with charming wood-engravings throughout. Over 120 views including head and tail-pieces. Quarter-bound with new red morocco spine, lettered in gilt, over the original moiré cloth, with the original paper label on upper board. A contemporary inscription in ink states that ‘F. Witby (?) gave this book to me Geo Bonner Artist of Oswestry Son of the within named G.W. Bonner’ A little worn at the corners, otherwise a very good copy.This is a very good example of the steam packet guide, designed to fit the pocket of the traveller and describe the

journey from London Bridge down the Thames to Thanet. Then, all aspects of the isle are described and illustrated with great detail; the wood engravings by Bonner are particularly charming and skilful. The preface states that since the advent of steam packets visitors had increased from an average of 20,000 per season to 98,128 in 1830. [ref: 21726 ] £250

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905. MARGATE - KIDD, WILLIAM. THE PICTURESQUE POCKET COMPANION TO MARGATE, RAMSGATE, BROADSTAIRS, AND PARTS ADJACENT; ILLUSTRATED WITH ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY ENGRAVINGS ON WOOD BY G.W. BONNER.

William Kidd, 228, Regent Street; London, 183112mo. iv + 215 pp. + 1 advert + 12 pp. catalogue. Illustrated with charming wood-engravings throughout. Over 120 views including head and tail-pieces. Bound in the original dark red quarter-morocco, spine lettered in gilt, over the original cloth, with the original paper label to upper board. Corners bumped and hinges a little weak. The rear board has an odd inverted balloon-shaped mark that may be the result of an object left standing on the book; an inverted jug

perhaps? This aside, a very good copy.This is a very good example of the steam packet guide, designed to fit the pocket of the traveller and describe the journey from London Bridge down the Thames to Thanet. Then, all aspects of the island are described and illustrated with great detail; the wood engravings by Bonner are particularly charming and skilful. The preface states that since the advent of steam packets visitors had increased from an average of 20,000 per season to 98,128 in 1830. [ref: 21727 ] £200

906. MARGATE - WARD, LOCK AND CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO MARGATE, BROADSTAIRS, RAMSGATE, HERNE BAY, CANTERBURY AND NORTH EAST KENT. MAP OF THE DISTRICT AND PLANS OF MARGATE, RAMSGATE, BROADSTAIRS, CANTERBURY AND HERNE BAY. NEARLY ONE HUNDRED ILLUSTRATIONS.

Ward, Lock & Co. 1921-22Seventh Edition, revised. [16] adverts + viii + 12 + ix to xxiv + 40 + 12 + 32 + 24 + 32 pp. + [4] index + 80 pp. adverts with maps and photo illustration throughout. Original red pictorial cloth. Cover faded and spine fragile otherwise a very good copy.Universally popular guides now becoming more difficult to find. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 18154 ] £20

RARE KENTISH PLAY907. A MARINE OFFICER. [BURN, MAJOR-

GENERAL ANDREW.] WHO FARES BEST, THE CHRISTIAN OR THE MAN OF THE WORLD? or The Advantages of a Life of Real Piety to a Life of Fashionable Dissipation. Price one shilling stitched.

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Printed by T. Bensley, for James Mathews, No. 18, Strand. 17898vo. Half-title + v + 62 pp. Some foxing but a neat copy. Bound in marbled paper wrappers. A play in the form of a discourse between the man of the world, Horatio and the Christian Eugenio. Despite its moral tone the play is interesting for its depiction of ‘Fashionable Dissipation’ and modes and manners of the day.Profits were for the benefit of the church in Strood. On the half-title is an ink inscription, ‘Mr Cox July 11 Chatham’ Not in the Kent Bibliography [ref: 16933 ] £150

908.MARKHAM, GERVASE. THE INRICHMENT OF THE WEALD OF KENT, OR, A DIRECTION TO THE HUSBANDMAN, FOR THE TRUE ORDERING, MANURING, AND INRICHING OF ALL THE GROUNDS WITIHN THE WEALDS OF KENT, AND SUSSEX; AND MAY GENERALLY SERVE FOR ALL THE GROUNDS IN ENGLAND OFTHAT NATURE; AS

1. Shewing the nature of Wealdish Ground, comparing it with the Soyl of the Shires at Large.2. Declaring what the Marle is, and the several sorts thereof, and where it is usually found.3. The profitable use of Marle, and other rich manuring, as well in each sort of Arable Land, as also for the increase of Corn and Pasture through

the Kingdome.Painfully gathered for the good of this Island, by a Man of great Eminence andWorth; But Revised, enlarged, and corrected withthe consent and by conference with the firstAuthor. By G.M. Printed by J. Streater for George Sawbridge,Dwelling on Clarken-well-Green. 16684to. (4) + 19 pp. Full old calf, rebacked andlettered gilt. This is a very attractive example.Gervase Markham (1568-1637) descended from aNottinghamshire gentry family, appears to havebegun writing after he settled in London in 1593,although he had to retire to the country and liveas a tenant farmer for several years after the fallof Essex (to whose faction he belonged) in 1601.His output of poetry and drama was extensiveand it is speculated that he may have been the Rival Poet of Shakespeare’s Sonnets (with whom he shared a patron in Southampton). His non-literary works included military training, domestic economy, veterinary medicine and horsemanship, in addition to husbandry. Markham has been frequentlyaccused of plagiarism but in the Inrichment he does at least acknowledge theinput of the original author. To some extent the blame lies with publishers who reissued his work in different forms. This came to a climax in 1617, when five different books on horses, all by Markham, were on the market at

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the same time. He was forced to sign an agreement with the Stationers’ Company: ‘I... do promise hereafter never to write any more book or books to be printed of the diseases or Cure of any Cattle, as Horse, Oxe, Cowe, Sheepe, Swine, Goates etc.’ (quoted in DNB). The Inrichment of the Weald of Kent was first published in 1625 but is better known as one of the six constituent parts (five by Markham) of the popular ‘A Way to get Wealth’, published in fifteen editions, 1631-1684, as a compendium of agricultural practice. As a consequence, although separately paginated, the work has a continuous register with the other parts of the thirteenth edition of 1676. After describing the nature of the Weald and its ‘dens’, the larger part of the text is concerned with farming on the different Wealden soil types and especially with the use of chalky marl as a soil improvement agency. The final part investigates various remedies against what Markham considers tobe the nuisance to the husbandman caused by moles: ‘That if you take green Leeks Garlick or Onions, and chopping them grosly, thrust it in the holes, the very fume or savour thereof will so astonish and amaze the Moals, that they will presently forsake the Earth, and falling into a Trance, you may take them up with your hands.’ This important early text was to be reprinted at least six times in his compendium publications. [ref: 17482 ] £175

ORIGINAL ALBUMEN TYPE PHOTOGRAPHS909. MARTIN, CHARLES WYKEHAM. THE HISTORY AND

DESCRIPTION OF LEEDS CASTLE, KENT. Nichols and Sons, Parlament Street, Westminster: 1869Folio. x + 210 + xxxvi pp. with 8 original photographic plates,vignette illustrations in the text and a full page hand-coloured plan. Original red cloth gilt, spine neatly repaired. but a very good copy.Important not only as the only detailed history and description of the castle, with much genealogical information on its occupiers from Domesday to Wykeham

Martin, but also as an example of early photographic book illustration using Albumen prints. An albumen print was produced on a thin piece of paper that was coated with albumen (egg whites) and salt, floated in silver nitrate, and then mounted on card or to form the plates in a book as here. The Maidstone photographer J. Cruttenden printed and mounted each image by hand. [ref: 19835 ] £300

910. MARTIN, W. STANLEY, and B. PRESCOTT ROW. KENT'S CAPITAL. A HANDBOOK TO MAIDSTONE ON THE MEDWAY AND GUIDE TO THE DISTRICT. The Homeland Association’s Handbooks No.6

Maidstone, Walter Ruck, [1898]First Edition, [16] + 146 pp. + [32] pp. of adverts with photo illustrations. Original red cloth gilt, the hard-cover binding, this copy is without the folding map but

has the plan of Maidstone.

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Scarce late Victorian guide to Maidstone with some fine advert of shop fronts etc. [ref: 17923 ] £65

911. MATE, MAVIS E. TRADE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS 1450-1550 THE EXPERIENCE OF KENT, SURREY, AND SUSSEX.

The Boydell Press, Woodbridge. 20068vo. viii + 261 pp. Original chocolate cloth with contrasting title to upper board and gilt to spine. As new.An academic work by an expert on the period, however due to its limited appeal very few were published. [ref: 18876 ] £65

912. MAXWELL, DONALD. ADVENTURES AMONG CHURCHES. The Faith Press, London. 1928First Edition, 4to. [vi] + 135 pp. illustrated with 24 fine full-page studies in pen and ink, each accompanied by a short essay. Ex-library copy with only one stamp on the rear of the title page, otherwise unmarked. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, rather faded, otherwise a very good example apart from some sporadic foxing.This is the first of a pair of volumes that Maxwell produced at the height of his powers and I think they contain some of his best work in black and white.Nine of the drawings are from Kent, including the Romney Marsh churches of Brookland and Fairfield. [ref: 21150 ] £30

913. MAXWELL, DONALD. UNKNOWN KENT. Being a series of unmethodical Explorations of the County illustrated in line and colour bythe Author.

(The County Series).London John Lane The Bodley Head Limited. 1930.Third printing, 4to, 9 x 7 inches. xv + [i] + 210 pp. + 6 pp. publisher’s advertisements. Half title. Illustrated by 24 colour plates, including frontispiece, and title page vignette and many other original illustrations in the text by the author. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with county shield on front boards, and spine, gilt. Spine and boards faded otherwise a very good copy.Maxwell’s highly distinctive and attractive illustrations add an extra dimension to the erudite charm of this book. First published 1921.We have a second similar copy, with 1931 gift inscription on first free endpaper. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21145 ] £25

914. MAXWELL, DONALD. UNKNOWN SUSSEX BEING A SERIES OF UNMETHODICAL EXPLORATIONS OF THE COUNTY ILLUSTRATED IN LINE AND COLOUR BY THE AUTHOR.

John Lane, The Bodley Head. 1923

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First Edition, 4to. 207 pp. with 21 colour plates and many other original illustrations by the author. Original cloth, gilt. Spine slightly faded, a good copy.A nice example of Maxwell’s ‘Unknown’ series of county books. [ref: 17283 ] £45

915. MAYCOCK, ALAN. SAINT MARY’S ABBEY. WEST MALLING.Printed by W.J. Mackay, Chatham. 195323 pp., + 6 b/w photographic illustrations and numerous pencil sketches to the text. Original grey cloth, gilt. A fine copy in glassine dust wrapper.An interesting and informative little book describing the history and the fabric of St. Mary’s Abbey. [ref: 15681 ] £10

916. MEASOM, GEORGE. THE OFFICIAL ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO THE SOUTH-EASTERN RAILWAY AND ALL ITS BRANCHES.

W.H.Smith and Son, 1853 but reprinted Countryside Books. 19878vo. viii + 104 pp. with numerous illustrations to the text. Laminated pictorialboards, slight chip but a fine copy.A facsimile of the guide originally published in 1853. George Measom wrote guide books for many of the great railway companies, all containing considerable detail about the places encountered en route. The original guidecommands a three-figure sum, but this is an affordable alternative. [ref: 17913 ] £25

917. MEASOM, GEORGE. THE OFFICIAL ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO THE SOUTH-EASTERN RAILWAY, AND ITS BRANCHES: INCLUDING THE NORTH KENT AND GREENWICH LINES. Embellished with two hundred engravings and a map. [Together with]: THE OFFICIAL ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO THE NORTHERN RAILWAY OF FRANCE. WITH SIX DAYS IN PARIS. Embellished with one hundred engravings

and a map. [Both by] George Measom.London. Published under the Authority of the Directors, by W. H. Smith and Son, 186, Strand;Arthur Hall, Virtue and Co., Paternoster-Row. [1858]2 volumes, bound in one. 8vo. 5x 7.5 inches. First work, [xxii] + 324 pp. with folding map. Second work, [x] + 164 pp. + [2(inc. Index)] + 110 pp. advertisements + [8] pp. advertisements and one folding advertisement. Date from

author’s preface. Illustrated by folding map of south east England, (right end replaced with facsimile); with wood engravings throughout, including vignettes and advertisements. Lacks

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folding map of Paris in second work. Bound in later maroon cloth, gilt, all edges gilt. Fine clean interior. Good copy of this rare combination guide, first published in 1853. In his preface, George Measom makes much of the success of his guides; how they have become companions for travellers to the towns along the line and the commercial opportunities which advertising will bring them. The descriptions of the towns are very good, as are the numerous wood-engravings and the often illustrated 110 pages of advertisements. Very scarce, we have handled only one example of this combination of guides before, but a later edition (1863). Ottley 7284. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 21052 ] £200

918. MEATES, LIEUT. COL. LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA Heinemann, London. 1955168 pp. with 47 b/w plates and 14 figures to the text. Original purple cloth, gilt. A very good copy in dustwrapper which is slightly chipped at head of spine with a small closed tear.The original account of the excavation, vividly described.***We have another copy lacking dustwrapper at£10*** [ref: 17397 ] £15

919. MEATES, LIEUT. COL. THE ROMAN VILLA AT LULLINGSTONE, KENT. VOL. I. THE SITE.

Kent Archæological Society. 19794to. 219 pp. with 30 b/w plates and 35 figures to the text, some folding. Blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dustwrapper.[ref: 13326 ] £12

920. MEDWAY - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19741134 pp. with the folding map. Original printed wrappers.[ref: 18169 ] £20

921. MEDWAY - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF THE MEDWAY TOWNS ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM, STROOD, RAINHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.

Kelly's Directories. 19741134 pp. with the folding map. Original printed boards[ref: 18171 ] £25

922. MEE, ARTHUR. THE KING'S ENGLAND. KENT. THE GATEWAY TO ENGLAND AND ITS GREAT POSSESSIONS

Hodder & Stoughton. Tenth impression, 1961 508 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A very good copy in a very good, price-clipped dust wrapper.Ever popular companion to the county, part of the King’s England series. [ref: 19613 ] £10

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923. MELLING, E.(Ed). KENTISH SOURCES. III ASPECTS OF AGRICULTURE AND INDUSTRY. A collection of examples from originalsources in the Kent Archives Office, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century.

K.C.C. 19618vo.150 pp. with illustrations. Original paper wrappers.One of Miss Melling’s useful handbooks. [ref: 17299 ] £12

924. MELLING, ELIZABETH. HISTORY OF KENT COUNTY COUNCIL,1889-1974. Prepared for the County Council by Elizabeth Melling, B.A. Assistant County Archivist. With a Foreword by Robert Leigh-Pemberton, D.l., J.P. Chairman of the Kent County Council, 1972-75.

Kent County Council, Maidstone. 19754to. 8.5 x 12 inches. [2] + vi + 182 pp. Illustrated with [56] black and white pages of plates, with 89 numbered images and county coat of arms on title page. Endpaper maps of

administrative areas, 1901, post 1965. Half-title. Bound in original red cloth, gilt, with pictorial dust wrapper. Very good copy.Expansive narrative history of the County Council, prior to local governmentreorganisation in 1974, now out of print. Six appendices on sources and bibliography, financial information, lists of chairmen, members and officers and table of dates. Kent Bibliography Supplement. [ref: 20742 ] £20

925. MELLING, ELIZABETH. (ED). CRIME AND PUNISHMENT. A collection of examples from original sources in the Kent Archives Office, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. KENTISH SOURCES. VI

Maidstone Kent County Council 1969.8vo, 8.5 x 5.5 inches, 294 pp. with illustrations. Specially bound in full calf in antique style, for presentation to Elizabeth Melling to mark 20 years working for the county archives. In fine condition.This volume was nicely bound in full leather for presentation to the author by her colleagues at the Kent Archives. Loosely inserted is a mock antique dedication from them. A example.

[ref: 21348 ] £60

926. MELLING, ELIZABETH (Editor) KENTISH SOURCES I. SOME ROADS AND BRIDGES . A collection of examples from original sources in the Kent Archives Office, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries.

Kent County Council 1959 8vo. viii + 63pp. with illustrations. Small neat bookplate inside front wrapper. Original paper wrappers.[ref: 21137 ] £10

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PRESENTATION COPY927. MELLING, ELIZABETH (Editor) KENTISH SOURCES I. SOME

ROADS AND BRIDGES bound with II. KENT AND THE CIVIL WAR. A collection of examples from original sources in the Kent Archives Office, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries.

Kent County Council 1959 and 19608vo. 5½ x 8½ inches. viii + 63pp. and xii + 61 pp. with illustrations. Calligraphic inscription on first blank prelim ‘ To Elizabeth Melling on the completion of ten years service in the Kent Archives Office, with the best wishes of all her colleagues.’ Specially bound in blue half-morocco over grey cloth and preserved in a grey cloth-covered slip-case. Spine slightly faded and cloth a little mottled but not unattractively so.Elizabeth Melling did much important work for Kent County Archives and published a series of books in the Kent Sources series as well as a History of Kent County Council, a Guide to the Kent County Archives Office, Studies in modern Kentish history and ‘Sir Garrard Tyrwhitt-Drake and the Cobtree Estate, Maidstone’. [ref: 21326 ] £50

928. MELLING, ELIZABETH (Editor). KENTISH SOURCES II. KENT AND THE CIVIL WAR. A collection of examples from original sources in the Kent Archives Office illustrating opinions and events in Kent in the mid-seventeenth century.

Kent County Council. 19608vo. xii + 61 pp. with illustrations. Small neat bookplate inside front wrapper. Original paper wrappers.A very useful work now long out of print. [ref: 18998 ] £12

929. MELLING, ELIZABETH (Editor) KENTISH SOURCES II. KENT AND THE CIVIL WAR. A collection of examples from original sources in the Kent Archives Office illustrating opinions and events in Kent in the mid-seventeenth century.

Maidstone K.C.C., 19608vo. 61 pp. with illustrations. Original paper wrappers.A very useful work now long out of print. [ref: 18057 ] £12

930. MELLING, ELIZABETH (Editor) SOME KENTISH HOUSES. A COLLECTION OF EXAMPLES FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES IN THE KENT ARCHIVES OFFICE, FROM THE FIFTEENTH TO THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. ILLUSTRATED BY A. M. OAKLEY. KENTISH SOURCES V.

Maidstone. K.C.C. 1965Oblong 8vo. 7.5 x 10 inches, vii + 80 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.

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'Presents the Timber-framed and early stone and brick houses in which yeoman, trader, parson and cottager dwelt.’ [ref: 19671 ] £20

931. MELVILLE, JOY and LEWIS-JOHNSON, ANGELA. (Compiledby). HYTHE. The Archive Photographs Series.

Chalford Publishing Co., Trowbridge. 1995128 pp. Illustrated throughout. Pictorial soft cover. A very good copy.[ref: 13115 ] £10

932. MILLER, BARBARA MACKAY. MORE PICTURES OF RAINHAM. Meresborough Books, Rainham, 198748 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers. Useful history now out of print. [ref: 19717 ] £10

933. MILLER, BARBARA MACKAY. A PICTURE BOOK OF OLD RAINHAM.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198248 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18638 ] £10

GRAVESEND IN 1870S

934. MILLER, WILLIAM. JOTTINGS OF KENT Being a Series of Historical, Ecclesiastical, Topographical, and Statistical Sketches by William Miller, of H.M. India Office. Second Edition.

Gravesend: Thomas Hall, 4a, Windmill Street, London. Whitaker and Co., Ave Maria Lane, Ludgate Hill. 1864Third edition. 8vo. 4.25 x 6.5 inches. viii + 176 pp. + [2] advertisements. [3]. Bound in original red cloth, with blind-stamped borders enclosing decoration and gilt-blockeddecorated title on front boards with gilt decorated spine title

with old library number faintly visible. Extremities a little worn. Front free endpaper has the stamp of St Augustine’s Abbey Library Ramsgate. A very good exampleThe author states in his preface that this edition has been ‘extensively revised’ - indeed this little book, first published in 1864, had originally appeared in the Gravesend Free Press (established 1855). The coverage of Gravesend itself, ‘our favourite summer resort,’ is much more extensive than any other entry. The surrounding settlements are dealt with in detail but there are chapters on many other towns of north and east Kent. An attractive and useful account of north and east Kent in the 1870s. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21053 ] £100

GREAT CIVIL ENGINEER IN BOTH UK AND USA

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935. MILLINGTON, JOHN. SEVENOAKS [TURNPIKE] TRUST - SPECIFICATION OF THE PARTICULARS OF EXCAVATION AND SUNDRY WORK TO BE PERFORMED NEAR SEVENOAKS KENT. John Millington Civil Engineer and Surveyor 6 Leigh Street, Burton Crescent, London. 4th. Febry 1822.

1822Manuscript, tied with tape. Folio. 16.25 x 13 inches. 5 leaves. The plans and sections mentioned in the text have not survived with this document. Originally folded in four, with some griming on title fold. Small tears on right hand edge, not affecting legibility. Some browning and extremities worn but otherwise in fine condition in dark legible scriptAn engineering specification, detailing the excavations and earthworks required to improve the turnpike road in the area of White Hart Hill, where the road from Sevenoaks Town crosses the common in the direction of Tonbridge. This was the southern extremity of the Farnborough to Sevenoaks (Riverhill) turnpike, originally established in 1749, following the passage of the 1748 Act. The Specification has been drawn up by John Millington of London, the engineer appointed by the Trustees, to instruct a contractor who is to commence work in the spring and complete it by 1st August 1822. The contractor is to give financial securities for the performance of the work and is to be paid in instalments, any disputes between the two parties to be resolved by arbitration. The greater part of the Specification is a detailed technical account of the works to be carried out. The works were contiguous to those being carried out at the same time by the Tonbridge Trust which was responsible for the the southwards continuation of the road and it is suggested that the two trusts co-operate on the disposal and reuse of excavated soil. The new line of the road required the lodges and gate of Milton Lombard to be removed and rebuilt, at the Trust’s expense, in a new location and his boundary to be planted with ‘a quickset hedge consisting of 2 rows of young healthy quicks and to fence the same on the inside with rough split oak posts and rails...’ The contractor is ‘to find and provide all Labour Carts, Horses, Barrows Planks Screens and Tools of every description’ He is also required to protect passing vehicles and cattle, by fencing the excavation and by stationing ‘2 careful watchmen’ at each end of it, to ‘be provided with Lanthorns and lights from dusk until day light to direct passengers into the proper track and prevent danger...’ Avaluable account of the engineering side of turnpike road construction. In spite of this new work in 1822, the line of the road to the south of Sevenoaks continued to cause concern to the Trust and, following two Acts passed in themid-1830s, it was again planned to realign the road, taking land from Whitehart Farm, in 1852. John Millington (1779-1868) was born at Hammersmith and practised law before turning to civil engineering and being associated with the road-maker, McAdam in his construction work. He was a fellow of the Society of Arts (later Royal) and lectured at the Royal Institution and was briefly appointed to teach engineering at the newly founded University College, London. A dispute over his salary led him to emigrate, firstly to Mexico, where he oversaw silver mining, and later to the USA, where he held the chair of chemistry and natural philosophy at the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, 1836-48 and was a professor at the new University of Mississippi, 1848-53. [ref: 20340 ] £350

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936. MINSTER - KENT, V. MINSTER IN THANET. No date but c.1965Unpublished typescript, 15 pp. + 18 b/w photographs, 7.5 x 10 inches, tipped-in, with 2 hand-drawn maps, and 11 ink illustrations tipped-in to the text. Neat amateur binding of blue cloth with title to upper board.The text deals largely with the church of St. Mary in Minster and is very well-illustrated with drawings and photographs, each of which is captioned. [ref: 18262 ] £45

937. MIRAMS, MICHAEL DAVID. OLD MARGATE. [In old postcards and photographs]

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198448 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18648 ] £10

938. MITCHELL, VIC AND KEITH SMITH. THE EAST KENT LIGHT RAILWAY. Country Railway Routes series.

Middleton Press, Midhurst. 1989First Edition 4to. 96 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original hardback illustratedand laminated boards. A very good copy.A very good photographic record of the line in its former glory. Now out of print. [ref: 19192 ] £25

939. MITCHELL, VIC. and SMITH, KEITH. ROMNEYRAIL. A very good photographic record of the famous miniature railway. [ref: 18449 ] £20

LORD NORTHCLIFFE’S COPY940. MOCKETT, JOHN. MOCKETT'S JOURNAL. A COLLECTION OF

INTERESTING MATTERS, RELATING TO REMARKABLE PERSONAGES, ANCIENT BUILDINGS, MANNERS AND CUSTOMS, ETC., BEGINNING FROM THE YEAR 50. ALSO, PARTICULARS OF VARIOUS CHURCHES; ORIGINOF THE RECULVERS; PAROCHIAL MATTERS RELATING TO ST. PETER’S, WITH OBSERVATIONS ON AGRICULTURE (THE RESULT OF FORTY YEARS EXPERIENCE); AND THE PRICES OF CORN, CATTLE, AND LABOUR, FOR MANY HUNDRED YEARS. Collected from manuscripts of the author’s ancestors, together with those of his own, during the last fifty years. Interspersed with Tours to Cambridge, Norfolk, Hampshire, Berkshire,

Devonshire, and France. Canterbury: Kentish Observer General Printing Office. Sold by G. Barnes, King’s Arms Library; and all booksellers. 1836

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First edition. 8vo.. 6 x 9 inches. xvi + 328 pp. Half-title. Bound in dark green cloth, with original paper label. Extremities worn with some staining and foxing. Most of the top of title page removed. Author’s signature pasted to half-title and inscription of William Sherwood Mockett St. Peter’s Isle of Thanet, the Author’s Great-Grandson, on front paste-down in addition to presentation inscription to The Viscount Northcliffe, from WSM. Loosely inserted a letter on Times headed paper, dated 19/10/1922, to Sir George Sutton, owner of Amalgamated Press Company, an old friend, and administrator of Northcliffe’s estate. This refers to the book and what was to

be done with it.John Mockett (1775-1848?) of Hopeville Farm, St Peter’s compiled this fascinating and compelling series of observations, stories and anecdotes on many Kentish towns and villages (especially on Broadstairs, Ramsgateand Margate). The coverage is vast, from murder and shipwreck, to the introduction of cabbages into England.It provides valuable information on farming conditions and prices, including an account of the 1830 Swing riots,which broke out in East Kent, with the burning of ricks and stacks and the destruction of threshing machines. Mockett also describes tours made to Norfolk,

Cambridge, Hants and Berks and two to Devon. In 1814 he embarked with a party from Dover on a ten day tour of Northern France - Calais, Boulogne and St Omer, after first celebrating the peace with a feast and entertainmentin his ‘new brick-built barn.’ As usual he makes detailed observations, frequently unfavourable, on life and farming in this region, and returned ‘Perfectly satisfied with the superior advantages England enjoys over France.’ Viscount Northcliffe (1865-1922), founder of the Daily Mail and owner of The Times, had a country home at Elmwood, in the parish of St Peter’s (it was shelled by a German warship in 1917 in an attempt to assassinate him) and hence, as the enclosed letter relates, ‘The Chief much liked Mockett’s Journal.’ When Northcliffe lost his own copy, W. S. Mockett sent him this volume as a replacement. [ref: 20851 ] £300

941. MORAN, JAMES. HENRY GEORGE . PRINTER, BOOKSELLER, STATIONER, AND BOOKBINDER, WESTERHAM 1830-c.1846

Westerham Press 1972First Edition. 12 mo. 55 pp. plus 12pp.of facsimiles of George’s publications including The Old Oak Chair illustrated by Cruikshank & the Westerham Journal. Black and white illustrations by Streatfield and Cruishank. Original binding, brown cloth with title label to upper cover.An interesting account of various aspects of the book trade including a chapter on George’s purchases at the Strawberry Hill sale of 1842. [ref: 19174 ] £25

KENT 1695942. MORDEN, ROBERT. KENT.

London, 1695Copper engraved map - uncoloured. A fine example.

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An uncoloured example of the first edition on thick paper, [ref: 18298 ] £250

943. MORDEN, ROBERT. KENT. London, 1708 Uncoloured copper engraved map.6.5 x 8 inches. A fine example with good margins.Commonly referred to as ‘Miniature Morden’s’ this map was published as part of ‘Fifty Six New and Accurate Maps of Great Britain’ published in conjunction with Herman Moll in 1708. [ref: 17996 ] £125

944. MORDEN, ROBERT. KENT. London, 1695, but c. [1753] Copper engraved map - coloured by hand. Traces of old folds. A fine example. Morden’s maps were issued in four editions of Gibson’s Camden without alteration and the thin paper of the late editions is the only way of distinguishing them, apart from the generally lighter impressions due to the plates becoming worn, which are not easy to see without direct comparison. [ref: 18297 ] £200

945. MORRIS, RICHARD, OBE MERCHANTS MEDICINE AND TRAFALGAR THE HISTORY OF THE HARVEY FAMILY

The Alderton Press, Loughton 2007First Edition. Large 8vo. 10 x 7 inches. 235 pp. With numerous illustrations throughout. Bound in original cloth, gilt, in dust jacket. Mint - as new. The only history of the Harvey family, with its many famous, and not so famous members. Much new research was undertaken by the author who discovered important new material. The book is now out of print, although we still have a few copies in stock at the original price. [ref: 20933 ] £18

VICTORIAN KENT946. MOULE, THOMAS. KENT.

London. n.d. but c.1845Steel engraved map, finely coloured by hand. Map 8 x 10.5 inches, frame 14.5 x 16.5 inches. Attractively mounted to conservation standard.

Certainly the last decorative engraved map of the county. After this period maps appeared as more functional objects, but here we have three charming inset views of Greenwich, Rochester, and Dover; and four Kentish coats of arms framed in wreaths of hops surrounding the detailed map of the county. [ref: 16425 ] £125

947. MOWLL, JOHN H. ROYAL VISITORS AT DOVER.

Dover. 193772 pp. with photo illustration. Original dark blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy.

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An account of every Royal visit from Henry VIII onward. [ref: 21316 ] £30

948. MUDGE, WILLIAM. A MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT DRAWN FROM THE TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY TAKEN BY ORDER OF THE HONOURABLE BOARD OF ORDNANCE, UNDER THE DIRECTION OFLT. COLONEL Wm. MUDGE, ROY’l. ART’y. F.R.S. REDUCED FROM THE LARGE MAP IN FOUR SHEETS, By a Scale of One Inch to two

Statute Miles. NEW EDITION.London. Published by Ja’s Wyld, Geographer to Her Majesty. 5 Charing Cross East. 1841Hand-coloured engraved map, 24 x 36 inches approximately, dissected and laid on to linen Preserved in original paper-covered slip case with leather title label, gilt. Some slight wear to folds but a fine example.Another issue, of the reduced scale Mudge Ordnance Survey map from the edition of 1801, which had established itself as the pre-eminent map of the county. The high price of the four-sheet map, and its size, called for smaller, less expensive issues. Rare. [ref: 20469 ] £300

MUGGLETONIAN TRACT949. MUGGLETON, LODOWICK. A TRUE INTERPRETATION OF THE

WITCH OF ENDOR Spoken of in 1 Sam. XXVII. begin. at the 11th Verse. Shewing, 1. How She and all other Witches do beget or produce that Familiar Spirit they deal with, and what a Familiar Spirit is, and how those Voices are procured, and Shapes appear unto them, whereby the Ignorant and Unbelieving People are deceived by them. 2. It is clearly made appear in this treatise, that no Spirit can be raised without its Body, neither can any Spirit assume any Body after Death; For if the Spirit doth walk, the Body must walk also. 3. An interpretation of all those Scriptures, that doth seem as if Spirits might go out of Men’s Bodies when they die, and subsist in some Place or other without Bodies. Lastly, Several other Things needful for the Mind of Man to know which whoever doth understand, it will be great Satisfaction. By Lodowick Muggleton, Penman hereof, and the last chosen Witness unto that Ever-Blessed Body of Christ Jesus Glorified, to be the only Wife, very True Godalone, Everlasting Father, and Creator of both Worlds, and al that were made in them. The Third Edition.

Printed by Subscription 1724, reprinted London: 17938vo. 4 x 6 inches. [iv] + 58 pp. A-G4, [H]-[H3]. Sewn without binding as issued, Some exterior griming but generally clean .Lodowick Muggleton (1609-1698), the religious thinker who gave his name to Muggletonianism, was a journeyman tailor of the City of London. At the time of the great surge of radical religious groups, including the Ranters, in the early years of the English republic in 1650-51, he and his cousin John Reeve proclaimed themselves to be the Two Witnesses of the Book of Revelation; their task was to fulfill the Third Commission of God, following those of the Old and New Testaments. After Reeve's death in 1658, Muggleton assumed the role of the sect's leader and began to publish and

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travel to meet other believers; one of these, a Kentish woman, became his third wife. Muggleton's anti-trinitarian views and vehement opposition to Quakers led to his trial for blasphemy during the term of office of a Quaker Lord Mayor. In 1676 he was fined and sentenced to the pillory and his books were ceremonially burnt by the common hangman. His autobiography, The Acts of the Witnesses, appeared in 1699. The Witch of Endor was first published in 1669. again in 1724 and was reprinted as the third edition in 1793 (with only three copies recorded by E.S.T.C.) ESTC T91030 DNB [ref: 19411 ] £150

950. MUNRO, A.G. and PRESCOTT ROW. ROCHESTER AND CHATHAM WITH PEN AND CAMERA. Containing a Chapter on the Architecture of the Cathedral by Rev. Greville M. Livett, M.A.

T. Oldroyd, Rochester and The St. Bride’s Press Ltd., London. 1901Second edition. xii (adverts) + frontis + 136 pp. + xxxii (adverts) with numerous b/w illustrations and folding map in rear pocket. Original olive cloth, gilt. One leaf has been (neatly) mutilated with some loss of text otherwise a very good copy.

Published under the auspices of the Homeland Association, this is Homelands Handbook No. 9. In addition to that in the text, there is abundantinformation to be gleaned from the delightful advertisements. [ref: 15669 ] £35

951. MURRAY, W.J.C. ROMNEY MARSH. Robert Hale Ltd. 1953228 pp. with map and illustrations. Original cloth, gilt in dustwrapper.The only easily available book on the Marsh. [ref: 18722 ] £10

952. MURRAY, W.J.C. ROMNEY MARSH. Robert Hale, 1973First Edition. 8vo. 220 pp. with map and illustrations. Original cloth, gilt in dustwrapper.The only easily available book on the Marsh. [ref: 13103 ] £10

953. NEALE, JOHNSON. THE MUTINY AT THE NORE, AND THE MUTINY AT SPITHEAD. By Johnson Neale, Esq., Author of ‘Cavendish.’ etc.

London William Tegg 1869Small 8vo. 4 x 6 inches. xii + 415 pp. + [1]. Half title. Illustrated by portrait frontispiece. Bound in original cloth, gilt with title vignette of naval weapons and anchor on front board within decorative borders, gilt. Extremities worn and lower half of front board rubbed, otherwise good condition. Early ink signature on first free endpaper.A detailed account of the Nore and Spithead mutinies of 1797, which reprints many original documents in the text. The author’s full name was William Johnstoun Nelson Neale (1812-93). He joined the navy in 1824 and was

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present at the battle of Navarino Bay in 1827 before entering the legal profession in 1833. He wrote a number of novels of naval life, including the Crimean War. The first edition of this title was published in 1842. Kent Bibliography. www.historicnavalfiction.com [ref: 21725 ] £80

954. NEAME, ALAN. THE HOLY MAID OF KENT. The life of Elizabeth Barton, 1506-1534

Hodder and Stoughton, 19718vo., 390 pp. with illustrations, maps and tables. Original gilt cloth, slight staining to boards and spine loose, lacks half title. Library stamps on back of title page. Dust wrapper slightly frayed and torn at edges. Small neat bookplate on front paste down. Generally a respectable copy.The only full length study of Elizabeth Barton executed in 1534 for opposing the royal will of King Henry VIII. Was she ‘a lunatic, a dupe, an imposter, ora saint?’ [ref: 19718 ] £20

ORIGINAL WATERCOLOUR COACHING SCENE955. NEWHOUSE, CHARLES B. THE COAST ROAD.

Unsigned and undated but c.1830Original watercolour, 16 x 11 inches approx., depicting a stagecoach crossing open heath and passing a crossroad with its signpost. The coach is well-loadedwith six outside passengers in addition to the driver and guard. In the far distance a hunt is in progress with the hounds hotly pursued by the huntsmen.The signpost cannot be read but atop the post is a rectangle containing the initials CBN. The door of the coach shows the route but only London is distinct enough to be readable; nonetheless, the title ‘The Coast Road’ appeared on the old backing, and it is highly likely that this is one of a numberof coaches that connected London and Dover. Additionally on the side of the coach can be made out Fetter Lane, London, and Hatchet[t’s], Piccad[illy]. There was likely a coaching inn in Fetter Lane, and certainly there was one in Piccadilly called Hatchett’s. Charles B. Newhouse, 1805-1877, was widely known for his coaching scenes and numerous prints were published based on his work.. [ref: 19976 ] £450

956. NEWMAN, JOHN. NORTH EAST AND EAST KENT. (The Buildings of England, BE 39).

Harmondsworth Penguin Books. 1969First edition. Small 8vo. 4.5 x 7.25 inches. 529 pp. + [3]. Half title. Illustrated with 105 black and white photographs, maps and drawings in text. Decorated with publisher’s device on half title. Bound in original black cloth, gilt in pictorial dust wrapper. Slight wear to edges of wrapper but otherwise a good copy.Part of Pevsner's famous survey.We have two other similar copies. Kent Bibliography [ref: 20100 ] £20

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957. NEWMAN, JOHN. WEST KENT AND THE WEALD. (The Buildings of England Series).

Penguin Books. 1969First Edition 645 pp. with 100 photo plates. Original cloth in dust wrapper.Pevsner's famous survey. [ref: 16668 ] £20

WITH A LETTER FROM THE AUTHOR958. NEWMAN, JOHN. WEST KENT AND THE WEALD. (The Buildings

of England).Harmondsworth Penguin Books. 1976Second Edition. Small 8vo., 7.5 x 4.5 inches. 671 pp. + [2] . Half title. with 100 photo plates. Illustrated with 100 black and white photographic plates, map and drawings in text Decorated with publisher’s device on half title. Bound in original black cloth, gilt, in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Loosely inserted in this copy is a manuscript letter from the author.Part of Pevsner's famous survey. First published 1969.We have another copy of this edition, Wrapper price clipped and worn, with some loss of image at base. Signature on front pastedown, £20. [ref: 20464 ] £45

959. NICOLSON, NIGEL. KENT PHOTOGRAPHS BY PATRICK SUTHERLAND.

Weidenfeld and Nicholson. 1988First Edition, 4to. 160 pp. colour illustrated throughout. Original cloth in dustwrapper. Signed copy.[ref: 19665 ] £30

960. NINETEENTH CENTURY CRANBROOK BILLHEAD. GEO. WATERS, PRINTER, BOOK-BINDER, STATIONER, AND LIBRARIAN, TO THE CRANBROOK DISTRICT COMMITTEE OF THE SOCIETY FORPROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE. Account Books of every description, Magazines, Reviews, and all other Publications procured on the shortest Notice. Westminster Life and British Fire Office.

Cranbrook, July 1st, 1839Printed billhead, 7.5 x 4.5 inches, on white paper, with a variety of styles of typeface (presumably to demonstrate the versatility of the printing side of the business). Illuminated with a woodcut illustration of books, quill pens, inkwell, etc. Completed in manuscript ink. Very clean. Signs of old folds and manuscript in ink has faded slightly, otherwise as given to customer.The receipt is made out to the ‘Committee of Millhouse School’ for the printing of a number of different circulars and handbills, etc., and is marked Settled and signed Geo. Waters. A deduction by way of discount has been made from the total ‘on account of Charity’, suggesting that the school was a worthy but impecunious establishment. [ref: 20202 ] £25

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961. NINETEENTH CENTURY CRANBROOK BILLHEAD. STAMP OFFICE & CIRCULATING LIBRARY. BOUGHT OF J.T. DENNETT, PRINTER, BOOK AND MUSIC SELLER, STATIONER, AND BINDER. New Music, Magazines, Reviews, and all other Publications procured Weekly at the London Prices. Copper plate printing and other Cards Engraved. - London Newspapers supplied. Agent to the Kent Fire and Life Office.

Cranbrook, 4th June 1835Printed billhead, 7 x 5.5 inches, on white paper, with a variety of styles of typeface (presumably to demonstrate the versatility of the printing side of the business). Completed in manuscript ink. Very clean with one tiny closed tear to top left corner. Signs of old folds and manuscript in ink has faded slightly, otherwise as given to customer.The receipt is made out to Mr. Munn for a copy of the West Kent Poll Book that cost six shillings, and is marked Pd [Paid], and signed J.T. Dennett. A further note seems to refer to something, perhaps a loan, due in January or February 1838, which is also inscribed on the reverse. Mr. Dennett went on to become a Director of the London & County Bank, Cranbrook branch in 1847. [ref: 20200 ] £25

962. NINETEENTH CENTURY CRANBROOK CHEQUES. LONDON & COUNTY BANK, CRANBROOK [KENT] BRANCH. Two cheques from the account of Cranbrook Gas Company.

Printed by Charles Skipper & East, London. 1873Two used cheques, 7 x 3 inches, printed in shades of lilac, without counterfoils. Signs of old folds and spike holes but otherwise very good.The cheques are made out to different payees; a Mr. George Dadson and Mr.and Mrs. Beken, and are countersigned on the reverse by Geo. Dadson and Wm. Beken. The cheques are signed by three directors of the Cranbrook Gas Company, J.T. Dennett (who was also a bookseller in Cranbrook), W.B. Sharpe, and Edwin Hills. [ref: 20199 ] £10

963. NINETEENTH CENTURY PERIODICAL. THE THANET FIGARO.Volume 1, Number 1, Saturday, June 2, 1877. One Penny.

Printed for the Proprietors by Messrs. Clement Smith & Company, at their Works, Cursiter Street, London, E.C., and publishedby them at their Temporary Offices, No. 26, Queen Street, Ramsgate. 1877Folio, 9.5 x 12 inches, 16 pp. with masthead design showing Ramsgate beach and railway station. The leaves are all separate with some slight wear to edges.According to the front page ‘The Thanet Figaro’ ...will be a paper of light reading, intended to interest equally Residents and Visitors in Thanet. Contains a full-page advertisement for The Granville, St Lawrence-on-Sea with a woodcut of the buildings seen from the cliff. and a number of other local advertisements. [ref: 20198 ] £45

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964. NORTH KENT. HORTON KIRBY AND SOUTH DARENTH : PICTURES AND MEMORIES OF 100 YEARS 1894 - 1994.

H.K.and S.D. Parish Council. 1994Oblong, 9.5 x 8.25 inches. 176 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations throughout. Original pictorial glossy card wrappers. Near mint.A thorough and interesting history of the parish over a century. Scarce. [ref: 18201 ] £25

GOODWIN SANDS965. NUNN, CAPT. W. A LARGE DRAUGHT OF THE DOWNES,

SHOWING THE SANDS, SHOALS, DEPTHS OF WATER AND ANCHORAGE, WITH ALL THE LEADING MARKS TO AVOID THE DANGERS THEREIN.

Sold by Wm. Mount and T. Page on Tower Hill. London. No date but c.1745Hand-coloured copper-engraved sea chart 17 x 22 inches. Mounted in conservation materials. A very good example with good margins.One of the definitive maps of the Goodwins, the plate shows the coast from Dover to Margate, showing the Stour estuary and the sand banks of the Downs and Goodwin Sands. A detailed map on both sea and land, with many points of coastal reference including a gallows on the cliff near Deal. Decorated with a cartouche and compass scale and a compass rose, rhumb lines, etc. [ref: 18292 ] £350

DOVER VIA SANDWICH AND DEAL 966. OGILBY, JOHN. THE ROAD FROM CHELMSFORD IN ESSEX TO

MALDON, RA[Y]LEIGH IN ESSEX AND GRAVESEND IN KENT With the branch from Canterbury, to Deal by Sandwich and thence to Dover.

(London ) n.d. but 1675Hand-coloured, copper-engraving, 12.5 x 16.5 inches, with decorative cartouche. Wide margins, a very good copy with attractive colouring.Published in ‘Britannia’, John Ogilby’s famous strip road maps were the firstengraved sheets to map England’s roads. They combine a decorative title cartouche with the detailed and practical arrangement of sections or strips, in this case six strips from Chelmsford in the lower left corner of the map, through Rayleigh and Billericay, Gravesend, and on to Canterbury and Dover. [ref: 20644 ] £275

LONDON TO HYTHE 967. OGILBY, JOHN. THE ROAD FROM LONDON TO HITH IN KENT

INCLUDING THE ROAD BY MAIDSTONE. (London ) n.d. but 1675Uncoloured copper-engraving, 12.5 x 16.5 inches, with decorative cartouche. Some old repairs in the wide margins, not effecting the map, otherwise a very good copy Published in ‘Britannia’, John Ogilby’s famous strip road maps were the firstengraved sheets to map England’s roads. They combine a decorative title cartouche with the detailed and practical arrangement of sections or strips,

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in this case six strips from London in the lower left corner of the map, through Rochester and Canterbury to Dover. [ref: 18299 ] £275

LONDON TO RYE968. OGILBY, JOHN. THE ROAD FROM LONDON TO RYE IN SUSSEX.

(London ) n.d. but 1675Hand-coloured, copper-engraving, 12.5 x 16.5 inches, with decorative cartouche. Wide margins, a very good copy with attractive colouring.Published in ‘Britannia’, John Ogilby’s famous strip road maps were the firstengraved sheets to map England’s roads. They combine a decorative title cartouche with the detailed and practical arrangement of sections or strips, in this case six strips from London in the lower left corner of the map, through Lewisham and Bromley, Sevenoaks, Tonbridge and on via Lamberhurst to Rye. [ref: 20643 ] £275

OGILBY’S COUNTY MAP 1672969. OGILBY, JOHN. ENGRAVED BY F[RANCIS] LAMB. A NEW

MAP OF KENT. ACTUALLY SURVEY’D AND DELENIATED BY HIS MAJESTIES COSMOGRAPHER JOHN OGILBY ESQ.

London. [1672]Large copper-engraved map, 16.75 x 21.5 inches to edge, in original hand-colour, within ruled inner and outer borders, between which the orientations, North, South, East and West, are found. Upper left oval dedication panel ‘To his Grace, the most Reverend Father in God, Gilbert, by divine Providence, Lord Archbishop of Canterbury; Primate of all England and Metropolitan, & one of His Majesties most Honourable Privy Council, his munificent Patron, &c. This new Map of the County of Kent ... ‘, with adjacent Mitre and coat of arms of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Lower left 'A Table of Explanation' and'A Scale of English Miles' [1-12] [Approx. scale 1 inch to 3 miles] with 'F.Lamb. Sculp at lower edge.' Lower right title cartouche 'A NEW MAP OF KENT Actually Survey'd and deleniated (sic) by His Majefties Cofmographer JOHN OGILBY Efq'. Trimmed tight to outer border and laid on to board . Some foxing along one fold and occasionally along lower edge. A little time-stained but intact and undamaged. A fine hand-coloured map of Kent, divided into the five lathes and further divided into hundreds. Symbols are used to indicate the sees, deaneries, shiretowns, corporations, market, fair and post towns, Cinque Ports, country houses, parish churches, etc. The City of London is shown at the top left and the estuary and lower reaches of the Thames are shown in some detail with the channels, shoals and banks indicated. The map is dedicated to Archbishop [1663-1677] Gilbert Sheldon, who financed the establishment of the Sheldonian Museum at Oxford, where he was Chancellor. Philip Lea’s map of 1693 was based on this map. Burgess 19. (BL 3055[37] /H Hall/Bart) [ref: 20606 ] £1650

970. OGLEY, BOB. IN THE WAKE OF THE HURRICANE, OCTOBER 16 1987. NATIONAL EDITION.

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Froglets Publications, Westerham. 1988Oblong 4to. 136 pp. Illustrated throughout with colour and black and white photos. Original black cloth in dust wrapper.The well-known memorial volume. [ref: 14947 ] £10

971. OGLEY, BOB. KENT - A CHRONICLE OF THE CENTURY VOLUME One: 1900-1924.

Froglets Publications 19974to. 200 pp. illustrated throughout with black and white photos. Original cloth gilt in original dust wrapper. Very good copy.The second volume of Ogley’s Chronicles traces the history of Kent through the Great Strike, the Depression, the rise of the Third Reich and its aftermath. Year by year, the chapters describe the news, scandals, dramas and the characters both famous and local who featured in them. [ref: 21160 ] £

972. OGLEY, BOB. THE KENT WEATHER BOOK. Froglets Publications, Westerham. 19914to. 160 pp. with b/w photo illustration throughout. Original pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy. Dealing predominantly with extremes of weather from the twentieth century, the author nonetheless commences with weather in 55 B.C., when Caesar’s fleet was swept back to the coast of Gaul by gales. A collection of remarkable and interesting photographs illustrates an informative text. [ref: 16675 ] £12

973. OLIVER, DAVID R. LATE MEDIEVAL THANET AND THE CINQUEPORTS.

David Oliver, Broadstairs. 1997Limited edition. 133 of 750. xii + 72 pp. with numerous illustrations to the text. Blue-green cloth, gilt. As new.With chapters on King and Country [Thanet’s military service to the monarch]; Undeclared War, [Piracy and Crime at sea]; Administration; TheChurch; The Land; Judicial Proceedings; and The People of Thanet, this book gives chronological outline of the relationship with the crown. An interesting resource. [ref: 21318 ] £30

974. OPPITZ, LESLIE. TRAMWAYS REMEMBERED SOUTH AND SOUTH EAST ENGLAND.

Countryside Books. 19884to. 144 pp. with line illustrations throughout. Original cloth, gilt in dustwrapper. A very good copy.An excellent survey of all the tramways of the region. [ref: 10879 ] £15

975. ORDNANCE SURVEY. THE OLD SERIES ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPS OF ENGLAND AND WALES. VOLUME 1. KENT, ESSEX, E. SUSSEX AND S. SUFFOLK. SCALE : 1 INCH TO 1 MILE.

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Introduction by J.B. Harley and Yolande O’Donoghue.Harry Margary, Lympne Castle, Kent. 1975Folio. xl + 48 double-page reproduction plates. Bound in original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. A little worn on extremities but a very good copy.A most useful reprint of the earliest states ofthe 4-sheet Mudge map of Kent (1801) and the 8 sheets of the first issue of the Ordnance

Survey map of 1819. The introduction explains how the first ‘modern map’ ofKent came about, and is also very useful in its listing of points of identification for the early issues of these maps, something of a bibliographical minefield. This book was the first part of a project aimed at reproducing the whole of the first O/S maps for England and Wales in 10 volumes. Long out of print and has become very hard to find. [ref: 21750 ] £95.00

DYMCHURCH TO FOLKESTONE976. ORDNANCE SURVEY. [ORDNANCE MAP OF DYMCHURCH TO

FOLKESTONE.] Scale six inches to one mile. Kent. Sheet. LXXIV. N.W. Third edition, 1908.

Southampton: Ordnance Survey Office. 190850 x 60 inches. Uncoloured engraved map, dissected and laid on to linen in 28 panels. Limp marbled paper covers with label of Edward Stanford, Geographer, to upper cover. A well-used map, rather scuffed and grubby and having suffered several punctures. None of this affects the readability and usefulness.Surveyed in 1871. Revised in 1906. Heliozincographed from 1/2500. Covers the coastal region from Dymchurch in the West to Folkestone in the East andinland from Sellindge across to Hawkinge and Crete Road East, showing themain SER line and the Sandling Branch. [ref: 19691 ] £125

ROMNEY MARSH WITH DUNGENESS977. ORDNANCE SURVEY. [ORDNANCE MAP OF PART OF ROMNEY

MARSH.] Scale six inches to one mile. Kent. Sheet. LXXXI. Second edition, 1899.

Southampton: Ordnance Survey Office. 189939 x 51 inches. Hand-coloured engraved map, dissected and laid on to linen. Bound in limp black boards. Slight wear and staining consistent with age, but generally fine condition.Surveyed in 1871. Revised in 1896-97. Heliozincographed from 1/2500. Covers the parishes of St Mary in the Marsh, Blackmanstone (part), Ivychurch, Hope Old and New Romney, St Martin’s New Romney, Brenzett (part), Midley and Lydd, including the whole of the Dungeness peninsula as far west as Lydd Camp. The edge of the coastline has been coloured blue andthe areas of the parishes of New Romney, St Martin’s New Romney and Hope, pink. Maps such as this were produced, usually to order, and centred

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around a point, selected by the client, who, in this case, may have been New Romney Municipal Borough Council. [ref: 19643 ] £135

MAIDSTONE978. ORDNANCE SURVEY. ORDNANCE MAP OF THE COUNTRY

AROUND MAIDSTONE. Scale one inch to one mile.Engraved at the Ordnance Survey Office, Southampton. Surveyed in 1865-69Revised in 1893 and Published by Colonel J.Farquharson, C.B., R.E., DirectorGeneral, 1896Hand-coloured engraved map, dissected and laid on to linen. Housed in a worn but complete cloth-covered slip-case, labelled Edward Stanford, Ordnance Map of the Country around Maidstone. The label and the cloth of the upper cover of the slip-case have been damp at some point and the original red cloth is faded but complete. The slip-case has proved its utility as the map is in fine condition within. Neat Victorian address stamp on reverse of map, not affecting map.Major roads, railways, wood and county boundaries are hand coloured. Maps such as this were produced, usually to order, centred around a point selected by the client and Stanford’s would use sheets from the appropriate O/S maps and provide extras like hand-colouring and linen quality, etc. [ref: 19158 ] £120

979. ORWIN, C.S. AND S. WILLIAMS. A HISTORY OF WYE CHURCH AND WYE COLLEGE. ILLUSTRATED BY C. WINCKWORTH ALLEN AND RALPH HOUGHTON

Kentish Express, Ashford, 1913First edition, 8vo., 235 pp. illustrated with photographs and plans. Original cloth, gilt spine slightly faded. Blind stamp of public library on upper board but this copy has not been used and is free from stamps etc. A very good example.Scarce history of Wye and the College. [ref: 19731 ] £65

980.OSLER, ANTHONY. WHE’RE YER FOR? The Recollections of Capt. Harold Smy, Sailing Bargemaster. Illustrated by Angus Stirling.

Chaffcutter Books, Ware. 200656 pp. with pencil sketch illustrations. Original pictorial laminated card wrappers. A very good copy[ref: 20801 ] £10

981. OSWALD, ARTHUR. COUNTRY HOUSES OF KENT. With 208 Illustrations from Photographs and a Map.

London Country Life Ltd. 19334to. 7.5 x 10 inches. xvi + 75 pp. + [1]. Half-title. Illustrated by folding map and 208 numbered black and white photographs and drawings on 60 plates, including frontispiece and additional drawings in text. Bound in original cloth, gilt, front boards and spine with borders and white horse. Extremities worn and upper spine joint starting to crack. Very good interior.

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Very well illustrated account of the principal castles and country houses in Kent. We have a second similar copy, with 1934 gift inscription on first free endpaper. Kent Bibliography Supplement [ref: 21244 ] £50

MARGATE IN 1820982. OULTON, W.C. A PICTURE OF MARGATE, AND ITS VICINITY. By

W.C. Oulton, Esq. Author of the Traveller’s Guide, Etc., Etc. Illustrated with a Map and Twenty Views, Engraved by J.J.Shury, from Drawings by Captain G. Varlo, R.M.

Baldwin, Cradock and Joy, Paternoster Row. 1820First Edition, half title + engraved map + engraved title-page + letterpress title-page + preface [ii] + 5-124 pp. + [1 pp. list of plates] , illustrated with 19 engraved views

(the engraved title-page has a plate of St Johns Church which forms the 20th plate). In this copy the unnumbered list of plates is bound at the end, instead of after the letterpress title-page, as in some copies, which accounts for the pagination of the prelims (vi), when only [iv] are present. This example is complete in every way. Bound in contemporary half calf, gilt, over marbled boards. Occasional foxing marks as usual, and a slight damp stain occasionallyaffecting the lower margin of the plates, though the images are unaffected. Anattractive copy of this, now very scarce, item.Fine early 19th century view book and descriptive guide of the town and harbour of Margate, here described in accurate detail, giving probably the best record of the town at this time. Steam boats with hordes of visitors are depicted, and the thoroughfares and bathing establishments of the town, as well as more prosaic edifices such Cobb’s Brewery and The Prevention Post, windmills, etc., etc. A charming guide which depicts the town in words and fine engraved views. [ref: 20302 ] £350

983. OGILBY IMPROVED OWEN, JOHN, and EMANUEL BOWEN. A MAP OF KENT. [Printed for Carington Bowles, in St. Paul’s Church Yard.] No date but c.1750Small engraved handcoloured County Map 5 x 7.5 inches. Framed and glazed in conservation materials, overall size 9.5 x 12 inches. A very good example.From, BRITANNIA DEPICTA, OR OGILBY IMPROV'D. OWEN AND OWEN’S FAMOUS ROAD-BOOK-CUM-ATLAS. [REF: 18325 ] £95

984. OYLER, THOMAS H. LYDD AND ITS CHURCH. KENTISH EXPRESS, ASHFORD. 189452 pp. with illustrations in the text including two brasses. Original cloth, gilt.

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This was F.W. Cock’s copy with his signature on the front paste-down endpaper and some marginal additions and corrections in his neat hand.***we have another unsigned copy at £40*** [REF: 15453 ] £50

985. OYLER, THOMAS H. LYDD AND ITS CHURCH. KENTISH EXPRESS, ASHFORD. 1894

52 pp. with illustrations in the text including two brasses. Original cloth, gilt.Fine copy of this scarce book. [REF: 14405 ] £40

986. PRESENTATION COPYPAIN, E.C. DEAL AND THE DOWNS IN THE WAR OF LIBERATION. 1939 - 1945. Deal T.F. Pain and Sons. [1945]8vo, 9 x 6 inches. 174 pp. with folding map and 28 photo illustrations. On thefront free endpaper there is a dedication from E. C. Pain. Original cloth, gilt,preserved in the original dustwrapper which is slightly chipped at the head of the spine, otherwise very well preserved.Scarce record of the town of Deal and of the Goodwin Sands during the second world war - well illustrated.

[Stock ID: 21308 ] £100

987. PAIN, EDWARD CHARLES. HISTORY OF DEAL (1914 - 1953). By E. C. Pain Author of ‘TheLast of Our Luggers’ and ‘Deal and the Downs in theWar of Liberation.’ Deal. Printed and Published by T.F.Pain and Sons, Ltd., Deal and Sandwich. 1953

8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. vii + [i] +148 pp. Illustrated by 42 plates and by photographs and drawings, etc. in text. Bound in original cloth, gilt. A near mint copy, preservedby the original dustwrapper, slightly chipped on rear panel.Scarce modern history of Deal encompassing the two World Wars - intended as an update to complete Laker's history, first published in 1917.

[Stock ID: 21312 ] £100

988. PAIN, EDWARD CHARLES. HISTORY OF DEAL (1914 - 1953). By E. C. Pain Author of ‘The Last of Our Luggers’ and ‘Deal and the Downs in the War of Liberation.’ Deal: Printed and Published by T.F.Pain and Sons, Ltd., Deal and Sandwich. 1953

8vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. vii + [i] +148 pp. Illustrated by [42] plates and by photographs and drawings, etc. in text. Bound in original cloth, gilt. Spine faded but a good copy.Scarce modern history of Deal encompassing the two World Wars - intended as an update to complete Laker's history, first published in 1917 (second enlarged edition, [Stock ID: 16113 ] £85

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989. PARISH, W.D. AND W.F. SHAW. A DICTIONARY OF THE KENTISH DIALECT AND PROVINCIALISMS IN USE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. W.E. Goulden. The Athenaeum Canterbury and Hamilton, Adams and Co. London 1887

First edition. 8vo.194 pp. Bound in the original publisher’s cloth, gilt. A very good example.Scarce Kentish dialect dictionary full of curiosities, viz. Bishop'sFinger, ‘A guide post; so called, because it shows the right way, but does not go therein.’[Stock ID: 18677 ] £100

990. PARISH, W.D. AND W.F. SHAW. A DICTIONARY OF THE KENTISH DIALECT AND PROVINCIALISMS IN USE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. Farncombe & Co., Lewes : 1888

xxvi + 194 pp. Contemporary cloth gilt, a little worn on spine but a clean sound copy.Scarce Kentish dialect dictionary full of curiosities, viz. Bishop'sFinger, A guide post; so called, because it shows the right way, but does not go therein.[Stock ID: 18678 ] £100

TURNPIKE ROADS. BILLS. 991. PARLIAMENTARY BILL. A BILL [WITH THE AMENDMENTS] TO

EXPLAIN, AMEND, AND REDUCE INTO ONE ACT OF PARLIAMENT, THE GENERAL LAWS NOW IN BEING, FOR REGULATING THE TURNPIKE ROADS OF THIS KINGDOM; AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES. [Title given by Elliston-Erwood]: Bill (part only) that became 13 Geo III c 84 and repealed by 3 Geo IV c 126 General Turnpike Act. 1773

Folio. 8.5 x 13.5 inches. pp.13 to 43 only. Title on verso of p.43. Disbound in paper wrappers, with hand-written title label. Tears and missing sections in margins, not affecting text; some staining, especially of title, but otherwise fine condition. Individual acts of Parliament were required to establish turnpike trusts for specific roads, but it was also found necessary to pass more general acts from time to time to regulate the powers and responsibilities of the trusts in the light of experience. This bill, which led to the 1773 General Turnpike Act, followed the first Turnpike Act of 1663 and another general act of 1766 (repealed by the 1773 Act). Perhaps the most significant of the financial provisions proposed here are the farming of tolls by auction and the enforcement of subscriptions by persons who have agreed to advance funds to allow a road to be constructed or repaired. This had already become the established method of financing turnpikes. The bill was passed into law as the General Turnpike Act of 1773 and remained in effect until the 1823 Act came into force. [Stock ID: 20890 ] £20

296

992. PARR, HENRY. NEW WHEELS IN OLD RUTS. . Illustrated by F.W.R. Adams. T. Fisher Unwin, London 1896

8vo.197 pp. with numerous line drawings to text. Original pictorial red cloth. Edges untrimmed. A little worn but a very good copy.A humorous account of a walking tour through Kent.[Stock ID: 18544 ] £25

993. PARRETT, W. J. SITTINGBOURNE, MILTON, AND DISTRICT DIRECTORY. Including the following Parishes:- Bapchild; Bobbing; Borden; Bredgar; Doddington; Elmley; Frinsted; Halstow (Lower); Hartlip; Iwade; Kingsdown; Lynsted; Milsted; Milton; Murston; Newington; Newnham; Norton; Rainham; Rodmersham; Sittingbourne; Stockbury; Teynham; Tong; Tunstall; Upchurch; Wormshill. 1908. Reprinted 1980. Sittingbourne Printed and published by W. J. Parrett, Ltd., at the East Kent Gazette Office, 17 and 19, High Street. 1980

8vo. 8.5 x 5.75 inches. xxiv + 376 pp. with advertisements in text. Illustrated by numerous black and white photographs. Bound in red cloth, printed in black, including advertisements on boards and endpapers. Fine condition.A facsimile version of the 1908 edition by the original printers. [Stock ID: 21666 ] £30

994. PAUL, S.F. FURTHER HISTORY OF THE GOSPEL STANDARD BAPTISTS VOLUME 5. SOME SURREY AND KENT CHURCHES.

Published by the author. 19668vo. 5 x 8 inches. 329 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations. Bound in the original pale blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy.[Stock ID: 20096 ] £20

995. PAYNE, FRANCINE. JOYCE GREEN AND THE RIVER HOSPITALS.

Francine Payne/DWS Print Services. 2001136 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations. Softback. Original pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.The story of Joyce Green, Orchard and Long Reach hospitals on the Dartfordmarshes, which were built as isolation hospitals dealing principally with smallpox cases.[Stock ID: 17218 ] £15

996. PEARSON, SARAH. THE MEDIEVAL HOUSES OF KENT: AN HISTORICAL ANALYSIS.

London Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England. HMSO. 19944to. 8.75 x 11 inches. x + 196 pp. Half-title. Illustrated throughout with black and white photographs, plans, sections and maps, with a folding map of parishes at end. Original laminated pictorial card wrappers as issued. Slight wear to extremities but otherwise a very good copy.One of three volumes resulting from a project to survey some 450 houses in sixty parishes. A useful reference work, now out of print.[Stock ID: 21167 ] £85

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997. PEARSON, SARAH, P.S. BARNWELL, and A.T. ADAMS. A GAZETTEER OF MEDIEVAL HOUSES IN KENT London Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England. HMSO. 1994

4to. 8.5 x 11 inches. xiii + 145 pp. + [1] With plans and diagrams throughout and a folding map. Half-title. Illustrated with plans and sections throughout, with a folding map of parishes at end. Original pictorial laminated card wrappers as issued. A very good copyOne of three volumes resulting from a project to survey some 450 houses in sixty parishes. A useful reference work, now out of print.[Stock ID: 21169 ] £35

998. PEDDIE, JOHN. CONQUEST : THE ROMAN INVASION OF BRITAIN. Bramley Books, Godalming. 1998

xvi + 214 pp. with 70 illustrations. Laminated pictorial boards. Fine in like, unclipped wrapper.An assemblage of written accounts and archaeological evidence which has been expertly combined into the story of the Claudian conquest of Britain[Stock ID: 17412 ] £20

999. PENN, ROGER. PORTRAIT OF THE RIVER MEDWAY. Robert Hale. 1981

192 pp. with map and illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper, a very good copy.A good modern account of the Medway.[Stock ID: 15495 ] £15

1000. PERKINS, D.R.J. RAMSGATE AND THANET LIFE IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS Alan Sutton, Gloucester 1989

8vo.159 pp. Card covers fine copy. Photographic histoy of Ramsgate and Thanet from the advent of the camera into the 1970s.[Stock ID: 18029 ] £10

1001. PERKINS, W. TURNER. POPULAR ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO SOUTH EASTERN AND CHATHAM COAST RESORTS. London McCorquodale and Co. Limited, 41Coleman Street, E.C. 1903

8vo. 5.5 x 7.75 inches. [6] + 305 pp. + [1], includes [5] pp. advertisements at beginning and end (with other advertisements in text). This guide does not appear to havebeen issued with a title page as the pictorial cover has the title and price (see also Cambridge copy in COPAC). The introduction is signed and dated by W. T. Perkins on behalf of the Managing Committee. Illustrated by coloured folding

map serving as frontispiece, numerous black and white and sepia tinted photographs, sketches, maps and plans in text and by decorative whole page chapter headings and tailpiece vignettes. Bound in coloured pictorial paper boards with linen spine containing advertisement. Front and rear hinges later reinforced. Extremities worn and boards creased and faded. Small tape repair

298

to lower edge of one fold of map, tape now removed, small tear at top of p.27-8 and stain at foot of p.117-8; otherwise a fine clean interior. An attractively illustrated guide to all the the coastal resorts served by the recently merged South Eastern and Chatham Railway from Hastings and St.Leonards via Rye and Winchelsea, Hythe, Folkestone, Dover and the Thanet towns to Herne Bay, Whitstable and Sheppey, etc. Boulogne, Calais and Ostend are also included. Among the numerous topics of illustration are the Whitstable oyster industry, a bird’s eye view and plan of Dover Harbour, and maps of the Channel routes. The Railway also describes and promotes its services from Folkestone, with its new pier and first turbine steamer, ‘Queen,’ due in service that year. A very scarce item; COPAC lists only the Cambridge copy and there are two in Kent libraries (with one copy apiece of the later, 1905 and 1907, editions). Not traced in Ottley.[Stock ID: 21051 ] £80

PHILIP, ALEX. J. A HISTORY OF GRAVESEND & ITS SURROUNDINGS FROM PREHISTORIC TIMES Published by the Author, Wraysbury, Bucks. 19544to. i-x + 214 pp. with numerous illustrations. Green cloth with gilt spine. A very good copy. Published by subscription, (143 subscribers are listed) it is unlikely that morethan 200 were printed and, given the number of libraries listed, it is easy to understand why it has become difficult to find. [Stock ID: 16766 ] £60

KENT MARRIAGE REGISTER TRANSCRIPTS1002. PHILLIMORE, W.P.W. and RICHARD JOHN

FYNMORE. KENT PARISH REGISTERS. MARRIAGES. Two volumes. Edited by W.P.W. Phillimore, M.A., B.C.L. and Richard John Fynmore of Sandgate. London: Issued to the Subscribers by Phillimore & Co., 124 Chancery Lane 1910

8vo. Vol.1. [viii] + 152 pp. [4], B-L4; Vol.2. [viii] + 152 pp. [4], B-K4, L-L8. Original cloth, gilt. Some foxing, especially Vol.I, and one lower edge tear. Ink inscription on half-title of Vol.I. Vol.I. Marriages at Lamberhurst section, has been extensively annotated and corrected at various dates, in pencil, black andred ink and white correcting fluid with further corrections appearing on a three page ink manuscript insertion. Occasional light pencil notes appear elsewhere in the volume.Phillimore’s Parish Register series, Vol.110 and Vol. 151. Limited edition of 150, initialled by editor on reverse of title page. The parishes included are Vol.1, Penshurst, Eynsford, Charlton in Dover, Westerham and Lamberhurst; Vol. 2, Halstead, West Farleigh, Willesborough, Newington, Staplehurst and Wichling.[Stock ID: 19474 ] £175

1003. PHILLIPS, CHARLES J. KENTISH HOMES VISITED BY THE STAFF AND NURSES OF THE ONTARIO MILITARY HOSPITAL ORPINGTON, KENT, IN 1916. Privately Printed, 1917.

4to. 88 pp. with 18 plates. Original. cloth, gilt. A very good copy.

299

Rare account of some fourteen visits to country homes in Kent during the First World War by this Canadian Hospital. The houses included Knole, Penshurst, Montreal and Mereworth.[Stock ID: 19389 ] £90

1004. PHILP, BRIAN. EXCAVATIONS AT FAVERSHAM, 1965. THEROYAL ABBEY, ROMAN VILLA, AND BELGIAC FARMSTEAD. K.A.S. 1968

4to. 92 pp. with folding plates and illus. Original cloth . A good copy, dust wrapper worn at extremities.First report on the excavations. [Stock ID: 19722 ] £25

1005. PHILP, BRIAN. EXCAVATIONS IN THE DARENTH VALLEY,KENT. THE DETAILED REPORTS ON THE DISCOVERY AND EXCAVATION OF A COMPLETE IRON AGE FARMSTEAD SITE AT FARNINGHAM HILL ....SITES AT DARENTH .... OTFORD.

Alan Sutton, Stroud. 19844to. 225 pp. with folding plates and illustrations and microfiche in rear pocket. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A mint copy.[Stock ID: 17501 ] £20

1006. PHILP, BRIAN. EXCAVATIONS IN WEST KENT. 1960 - 1970. THE DISCOVERY AND EXCAVATION OF PREHISTORIC ROMAN, SAXON, AND MEDIEVAL SITES MAINLY IN THE BROMLEY AREA AND IN THE DARENTH VALLEY. Headley Bros. 1973

4to. 242 pp. with folding plates and illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.

[Stock ID: 15532 ] £20

HUMOROUS SKETCHES BY PHIZ1007. PHIZ. SKETCHES OF THE SEASIDE AND THE COUNTRY.

Hablot Knight Browne (1815-1882), the famous Victorian illustrator, adopted the pseudonym of Phiz soon after he began collaborating with Charles Dickens in illustrating the serial publication of Pickwick Papers from1836. It may have been chosen to harmonize with Boz, already selected by Dickens for himself, but there is also a possible reference to physiognomy, because of his ability in drawing faces. Phiz went on to illustrate another tennovels by Dickens before their working relationship ended. In his long career, he produced illustrations for many other writer’s works and for periodicals, including Punch and The Illustrated London News from 1844-61.[Stock ID: 19408 ] £60

300

1008. PIGOT & Co. PIGOT AND CO.’S ROYAL NATIONAL AND COMMERCIAL DIRECTORY AND TOPOGRAPHY OF THE COUNTIES OF KENT, SURREY AND SUSSEX . Pigot, (1839), but reprinted 1993

Roy. 8vo. 282 pp. with three folding maps. Bound in paper wrappers a very good copy.Facsimile reprint of one of the most sought after directories of the county. Each town is listed alphabetically, introduced by a short description with population and statistical information, and then follows a list of Gentry, Clergy, Traders, Shops &c. Invaluable as a guide to the economic growth of the County at the time of the Industrial Revolution. This edition, now out of print, was limited to 1500 copies and is become quite scarce.[Stock ID: 18535 ] £35

DIRECTORY OF KENT AND 10 HOME COUNTIES 1009. PIGOT & Co. ROYAL NATIONAL AND COMMERCIAL

DIRECTORY AND TOPOGRAPHY OF THE COUNTIES OF BEDFORD, CAMBRIDGE, ESSEX, HERTS, HUNTINGDON, KENT, MIDDLESEX, NORFOLK, SUFFOLK, SURREY AND SUSSEX. COMPRISING CLASSIFIED LISTS OF ALL PERSONS IN TRADE, AND OF THE NOBILITY, GENTRY AND CLERGY, RESIDENT IN THE TOWNS AND PRINCIPAL VILLAGES IN THE ABOVE COUNTYS. AN ACCOUNT OF EVERY MODE OF CONVEYANCE BY RAILWAY, ROAD AND WATER; POST-OFFICE REGULATIONS Etc. TO WHICH IS ADDED A CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY OF LONDON AND ITS SUBURBS; WITH ANEXTENSIVE CONVEYANCE GUIDE, INCLUDING VALUABLE INFORMATION CONNECTED WITH RAILWAYS. LISTS AND LOCALITIES OF ALL PUBLICK BUILDINGS, INSTITUTIONS, SOCIETIES, Etc; LONDON AND PROVINCIAL BANKERS AND NEWSPAPERS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. Pigot and Co. 59, Fleet Street. London. 1839

Royal 8vo. viii + pp.9-719 of the counties, and London 266 pp. + [84] + [32] +102 pp. adverts. LACKING THE MAPS AS USUAL. Bound in original diced roan, rubbed and worn, but strong and sturdy. A very good copy. Lacking the maps of the counties.One of the most sought-after directories of South East England and London. Each town is listed alphabetically, introduced by a short description with population and statistical information, and then followed by a list of Gentry, Clergy, Traders, Shops &c. Invaluable as a guide to the economic growth of the County at the time of the Industrial Revolution. The lists of Railways and other conveyances are very interesting, as are the details of financial and other institutions. The 100 pages of advertisements are a joy, many with illustrations of shops, products and other fascinating information. The text iscomplete but the maps are missing as usual. A fine and rare directory.[Stock ID: 17250 ] £550

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1010. PINNOCK, WILLIAM. THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHY OF KENT WITH BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, ETC AND A NEAT MAP OF THE COUNTY. Printed for Pinnock and Maunder by Davidson, London. [c.1822]

12mo. 3.5 x 5.75 inches. pp.3-90 Illustrated folding map of Kent, engraved by Neele and Son., 352 Strand. (Published by G. and W. B. Whittaker, Ave Maria Lane, 1821), serving as frontispiece. Lacks title page. Rebound in quarter cloth, gilt over marbled boards. Stain on inner margin of map and tear at top of p 85-6, not affecting legibility of text. Recent ink inscription on inner margin, p.45. Otherwise fine condition.

A scarce account of Kent, arranged in the format of a catechism. After two preliminary sections on the county in general there are chapters on Dover and Canterbury, with the other towns being described along the principal routes. Rochester and Maidstone are given their own headings. Following a final, biographical chapter, is a statistical table of the principal towns, and lists of fairs and of gentlemen’s seats. It was published soon after 1821 in Pinnock’s County Catechism series(William Pinnock, 1782-1843).Although lacking a title page, thiscopy does include the engraved map,which is frequently missing. [Stock ID: 20712 ] £85

1011. PIPER, JOHN. ROMNEY MARSH. Penguin Books, 1950.First Edition, 35 pp. and 16 colour plates and other illustrations by John Piper. Original patterned boards in similar unclipped dust wrapper. A fine copy.Typical Piper style. A minor classic issued in the King Penguin series.[Stock ID: 21104 ] £30

1012. PITBLADO, LAURENCE O. THE ROMAN INVASIONS. A Saga of the Caledonian Race. The Britain into which Caesar adventured in 55 B.C. Allen and Unwin. 1935

160 pp. + 4 folding maps and 8 illustrations and maps in the text. Original blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.The landscape into which the Romans came in the first century B.C. was a different one to that we see today. The North Sea then extended far into the eastern midlands and Scotland was an island. This work deals with how thisaffected the way in which the Romans subdued and occupied most of Britain.[Stock ID: 17209 ] £25

1013. PLANCHÉ, J.R. A CORNER OF KENT; OR SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF ASH-NEXT-SANDWICH, ITS HISTORICAL SITES AND EXISTING ANTIQUITIES. Robert Hardwicke, London. 1864

302

xxiii + 413 pp. with 13 lithographic plates, and wood engravings in text. Recent quarter-calf over marbled boards with raised bands and contrasting title label, gilt embellishment and date to spine.A scarce item. A fine copy of this definitive account of the history of Ash. James Robinson Planché (27 February 1796 – 30 May 1880) was a British dramatist, antiquary and officer of arms. Over a period of approximately 60years he wrote, adapted, or collaborated on 176 plays in a wide range of genres. Planché was responsible for introducing historically accurate costume into nineteenth century British theatre, and subsequently became an acknowledged expert on historical costume, publishing a number of works on the topic. Planché's interest in historical costume led to other antiquarian research, including heraldry and genealogy In both fields he became an acknowledged expert. Ash was lucky to have such a distinguished author with an interest in the Village.[Stock ID: 17155 ] £175

1014. PLANCHÉ, J.R. A CORNER OF KENT; OR SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF ASH-NEXT-SANDWICH, ITS HISTORICAL SITES AND EXISTING ANTIQUITIES. Robert Hardwicke, London. 1864

xxiii + 413 pp. with 13 lithographic plates, and wood engravings in text. Bound in the original green cloth, gilt; which has been neatly re-cased and theendpapers have been renewed. A very good example, occasional foxing on the litho plates as usual, but a cleaner than average.A scarce item. A fine copy of this definitive account of the history of Ash.James Robinson Planché (27 February 1796 – 30 May 1880) was a British dramatist, antiquary and officer of arms. Over a period of approximately 60years he wrote, adapted, or collaborated on 176 plays in a wide range of genres. Planché was responsible for introducing historically accurate costume into nineteenth century British theatre, and subsequently became an acknowledged expert on historical costume, publishing a number of works on the topic. Planché's interest in historical costume led to other antiquarian research, including heraldry and genealogy. In both fields he became an acknowledged expert. Ash was lucky to have such a distinguished author with an interest in the Village.[Stock ID: 20436 ] £150

1015. PLATTS, BERYL. A HISTORY OF GREENWICH. David and Charles, Newton Abbot. 1973

First Edition. 8vo. 5.75 x 9 inches. 231 pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs. Original pale blue cloth, gilt in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. A very good copy.The first modern one volume history of Greenwich.[Stock ID: 20205 ] £20

1016. POLICE CONSTABULARY FORCE. [CHADWICK, EDWIN AND CHARLES ROWAN], AND POSTS BETWEEN LONDON AND PARIS. [WILLIAM F. COWPER] FIRST REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS APPOINTED TO INQUIRE AS TO THE BEST MEANS OF ESTABLISHING AN EFFICIENT CONSTABULARY FORCE, IN THE COUNTIES OF ENGLAND AND WALES.

303

TOGETHER WITH REPORT FROM THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON POSTAL COMMUNICATION BETWEEN LONDON AND PARIS.W. Clowes, London: 1839 and 1850Folio. vi + 255 pp. and xxii + 299 pp. Bound in contemporary half-calf over marbled boards. Contrasting title label, lettered gilt. A trifle worn at extremities but a very good copy.POLICE :-Edwin Chadwick (1800-1890), one of the nineteenth century's great reformers, and Charles Rowan, chief commissioner of the new Metropolitan Police, conducted this inquiry into the means of improving police protection and getting at the ‘removable antecedents of crime.’ It was Chadwick who also conducted the groundbreaking inquiry (PMM 313) into sanitary conditions in 1842 which led to tremendous advances in public health reform.POST :-‘Select Committee appointed to ascertain the most expeditious and least expensive mode of postal communication between London and Paris and the Northern parts of Europe’... (p.iii).The report comments on the lateness of mails between London and Boulognevia Folkestone, this route having temporarily replaced the Dover to Calais route. The two routes and respective harbour facilities are then compared. The Committee concluded that the Boulogne route remained the most expensive and stated that ‘risk of serious accident to the packets is greater ....[and] that Calais could not well be superceded’ (p.v). The Committee recommended that trains from Dover to London be accelerated and noted delays in day mails from Paris. Proceedings include a fuller draft report. 36 witnesses appeared before the Committee on 10 days of evidence session heldbetween March and May 1850. 1,861 questions related to the mails, their organisation, times and procedures involved and overall efficiency (of railways and steam packets). These questions were put to British and Frenchpostal officials, railway and ship workers associated with the mail service. Afurther 275 questions were put to Parliamentary clerks, newspaper proprietors and officials connected with the printing of Parliamentary papers (including Henry Hansard). These largely related to the procedures linked to the aforementioned breach of privilege. Appendices (110 pages) include correspondence, documents and statistics relating to the Paris to London mail service. [ref: 16055 ] £300

1017. PORTEUS, GEOFF. THE BOOK OF DARTFORD. Barracuda Books Ltd., Buckingham. 19794to. 148 pp. with photographic illustration throughout. Original cloth, gilt, in price-clipped dust wrapper. A very good copy.A historical account from earliest times to late 20th century, with some 200 illustrations. This volume was produced as a limited and a general edition, this being an example of the latter. [ref: 16768 ] £15

304

1018. PORTEUS, GEOFF. DARTFORD COUNTRY. THE STORY OF THE HUNDRED OF AXSTANE.

Baron. 19924to. 132pp. with photo illustration throughout. Laminated illustrated boards. Small dent to front cover, otherwise as new.A reprint of the book published in 1985 by Barracuda Books. This reprint seems to be identical to the first edition, apart from the binding. [ref: 16770 ] £15

1019. PRATT, ANNE. THE FLOWERING PLANTS, GRASSES, SEDGES & FERNS OF GREAT BRITAIN, AND THEIR ALLIES THE CLUB MOSSES, PEPPERWORTS AND HORSETAILS. A NEW EDITIONREVISED BY EDWARD STEP, F.L.S. ILLUSTRATED WITH THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN COLOURED PLATES FIGURING UPWARDS OF 1500 SPECIES.

Frederick Warne and Co. London 1899Large 8vo. Four volumes, illustrated with 315 superb coloured plates. This edition was thoroughly revised upon scientific lines by Edward Step, bringing it into line with the science of the day, forty years after it was first issued. Bound in publisher’s original green half-morocco over cloth, spine with raised bands and contrasting title lables. A little worn at extremities but sound and quite a smart-looking set. The endpapers of each volume are slightly foxed andthis sometimes affects the title pages but is nowhere serious. Internally clean and crisp.Although not solely devoted to Kent flora, Anne Pratt lived in Dover for muchof the time she was working on these volumes and the descriptions often use Kentish examples of local names for wildflowers and traditional use for herbs and medicinal properties as used in Kent. All the descriptions are interesting giving locations and much folklore and an abundance of local names and traditions associated with each plant, and even its appearances in literature. All of Anne Pratt’s books are well-composed, with handsome, accurate, coloured illustrations. The reason for the success of her works must be shared with the printers William Dickes & Company, who produced the thousands of blocks required for colour printing using the Baxter process(combining a lithographic key plate that printed the main features of the design, followed by colour applied through a succession of wood blocks). Thequality of the colour printing is not quite as good in this edition as it was in the 1860s, as this popular work was often reprinted and the plates became worn. Hoever, without actually having an original edition to hand for comparison, one would not be immediately aware of this. This edition represents the most complete and reasonably priced of all the issues. [ref: 18714 ] £350

STANDARD HISTORY OF CHATHAM1020. PRESNAIL, JAMES. CHATHAM: THE STORY OF A

DOCKYARD TOWN AND THE BIRTHPLACE OF THE BRITISH NAVY. Medway Borough Council. 19768vo. 5.5 x 8.75 inches. Frontis. + 283 pp. Illustrated with 20 black and white plates, including 5 maps. Original blue cloth, gilt, with arms on front boards. Lacks dust wrapper but otherwise a fine copy.

305

Note on verso of title page: This volume is a verbatim reprint of the first edition which was published in 1952. It should be borne in mind that subsequent research into local history has rendered a small number of J. Presnail’s statements invalid.An excellent and readable history. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19637 ] £30

1021. PRESTON, J.M. INDUSTRIAL MEDWAY : AN HISTORICAL SURVEY. THE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE LOWER MEDWAY VALLEY WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURIES.

J.M. Preston, Borstal Road, Rochester. 19778vo. [9] + 218 pp. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper. A very good copy.Thorough survey of things as they were 30 years ago. [ref: 17317 ] £18

1022. PRICE, ANN V. THAMES SAILING BARGES AT LEIGH. Privately printed [1984]Folio. Reproduced from typescript, 59 pp. + [3] appendix with a number of b/w illustrations. Bound in original comb-bound pictorial card wrappers, which are protected by self-adhesive transparent film. A very good copy.Leigh-on-sea, on the Essex side of the Thames estuary, was a busy port for sailing barges and this little book gives a good idea of the comings and goings. [ref: 20825 ] £12

1023. PUGH, CHRISTINE and GEOFFREY E. HUTCHINGS. STOCKBURY: A REGIONAL STUDY IN NORTH-EAST KENT.

The Hill Farm, Stockbury, Kent. 19284to. 72 pp. with 2 folding maps and 3 other plates or tables. Original green cloth, gilt. An ex-library copy with evidence of labels, otherwise very good.Stockbury lies between Maidstone and Sittingbourne and this work looks at the Geography, Geology, Vegetation and Fauna of the village and district. [ref: 18089 ] £28

1024. PUTNAM, BERTHA HAYES. KENT RECORDS - KENT KEEPERS OF THE PEACE, 1316-17. Edited by Bertha Hayes Putnam, Ph.D., Professor of History at Mount Holyoke College. Issued to Subscribers to the Records Branch.

(Kent Records. Volume XIII).Ashford Kent Archaeological Society. Records Branch. 19338vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. lvii + 146 pp. Series half-title. Main text in Latin. Illustrated with two plates. Original blue cloth, gilt., with Society’s device on front boards. Some foxing, especially on edges, otherwise a fine copy.This collection prints the Kent Sessions of the Peace, 1316-17 from the Assize Rolls and the Gaol Delivery Roll of 1317. The lack of order and violence in the county, reflects a more general lawlessness throughout the country, following Edward II’s defeat at Bannockburn in 1314 and the severe harvest failures of 1315-17 in northern Europe. The consequent Great Famine ended

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the almost continuous period of early medieval population growth from about 1050 and was accompanied by a marked increase in popular disorder and criminal activity. [ref: 21175 ] £30

1025. PYATT, EDWARD C. CHALKWAYS OF SOUTH AND SOUTH-EAST ENGLAND.

David and Charles. n.d. but [1973]First Edition 8vo. 190 pp. with maps and photo illustration. Original cloth in dustwrapper.Walking guide to the long distance footpaths from Salisbury Plain to the North Downs Way. [ref: 15040 ] £15

THE WEST KENT’S NEWSPAPER1026. THE QUEEN’S OWN ROYAL WEST KENT REGIMENT.

THE QUEEN’S OWN GAZETTE. A monthly record of regimental doings of The Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment, nos 572-583, January-December 1923.

[The Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment] The Barracks, Maidstone 19234to. 8.5 x 11 inches. pp. 4557-4790 [233 pp]. Illustrated with one plate and black and white photographs, cartoons, etc. in text and by regimental badges at head of titles. Bound in recent black half morocco, gilt, old boards stained and worn. Fine inside.A bound set of The Queen’s Own Gazette for 1923 which provides a fascinating record of an era when Kent had two county regiments. It has news of the regiment’s five battalions, and their respective companies, sergeants and corporals messes, etc. (the 1st Battalion being then based at Poona). There are lists of officers, reports of sporting activities and accounts of visits made to the recent battlefields and their war cemeteries in France and Flanders. Occasional articles deal with the question of amputations (‘The end of the wooden leg’) and provide interesting statistics (i.e. the numbers of war medals issued). There is an obituary, illustrated by a plate, for the regiment’s former colonel, Major-General Sir Edmund Leach (1836-1922), who first saw service in the Crimea. The Regiment was formed in 1881 from a union of two units, from one of which, the 50th (Queen’s Own) Regiment of Foot, it took part of its title. In 1961 it amalgamated with The Buffs (The Royal East Kent Regiment) to form The Queen’s Own Buffs, the Royal Kent Regiment. Copies of this newspaper (published with its predecessors, 1876-1961) outside the British Library set, are now very scarce. Because it includes so many names it is a valuable source for those researching the history of the Regiment. [ref: 20285 ] £200

1027. QUINEY, ANTHONY. KENT HOUSES. English Domestic Architecture.

Woodbridge Antique Collectors’ Club. 1993

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4to. 8.75 x 11 inches. 288 pp. Half-title. Illustrated by colour and black and white photographs and by drawings and diagrams throughout. Original cloth gilt in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Good condition.A well-produced and well-written account of the greater and lesser Kentish houses, succeeds in being attractive as well as academic. Includes a gazetteerat the end. Out of Print. [ref: 21170 ] £60

1028. RAINBIRD, G.M. THE INNS OF KENT. London Whitbread & Co. Ltd., EC1. 1948Tall 8vo. 6.25 x 9.75 inches. 66 pp. Half title. with sketch maps, 7 colour platesand other illustrations in the text. Illustrated by 7 colour plates, sketch maps and black and white illustrations in text. Bound in original pictorial paper-covered boards. Some wear to extremities and wrapper chipped at top but otherwise a good copy.Part of the attractive and well-produced Whitbread Library, issued by the brewer, whose beers, once widespread in the county, have now vanished from the inns of Kent as well as the rest of the country. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21718 ] £12

1029. RAINHAM. THE PARISH MAGAZINE, 1867-1870. Edited by J. Erskine Clarke, MA. St Andrew’s, Litchurch, Derby.

London: Bell & Daldy, York Street, Covent Garden. 1867-1868Three volumes. 8vo. 5.5 x 8.4 inches. First Volume contains Vol.IX. [parts] 4- 12, 1867. Vol.X. [parts] 1-12, 1868. + [84] pp. Second Volume contains, another Vol.X complete, bound with Vol.XI [parts] 1-12, 1869. + [98] pp. Third Volume contains Vol.XII, [parts] 1-12, 1870. + [48] pp. Each part of 24 pp. separately paginated, except parts 12 of 20 pp. Rainham and Newington Parish Notes section at end of each volume unpaginated. Illustrated throughout with wood-engravings, decorated borders to title page and decorated initials. First two volumes bound in uniform dark blue cloth, gilt. Spines faded otherwise very good. Third volume bound in half-leather over marbled boards. A little worn at extremities otherwise very good.The Parish Magazine was nationally distributed, issued in twelve monthly parts (n.b.1867 lacks parts 1-4), with a contents list for each year, and here bound with the parish magazine for Rainham.The national magazine includes several articles in series such as Godly Laymen of the English Church, Glimpses at Early Church History, Plain Words about the Communion Service, Grey’s Old Court, Placida, the Christian Martyr, Sketches of the Holy Apostles and Life among the Esquimaux as well as a series of short sermons, several stories in parts, poetry and articles on contemporary subjects of interest. There are superb engravings of trades, among them a milkman, water-cress girl, baked potato sellers, omnibus conductor, postman, fireman and parcels delivery man.The Rainham magazine also includes the parish register entries for other parishes of the North Kent Marshes, Halstow and Newington. There are reports and accounts for the National School, the Blanket Society, the

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Clothing and Coal Club, the Sunday School Treat and the Church MissionarySociety, etc., along with letters, poetry, obituaries and newsworthy local happenings of a more secular nature; also a series of articles on church bells and the church calendar. [ref: 19421 ] £135

1030. RAMSGATE. 32 VIEWS OF RAMSGATE AND DISTRICT. Callcut and Beavis, 77 Great Eastern Street, London. No date but c.1900Oblong view-book with 24 plates of photographs. A near fine copyThe views are Ramsgate Harbour, New Road, Royal Crescent, The Waterfall, Granville Gardens, St. Georges Church, Inner Harbour, The Beach, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury Cathedral

(interior), Herne Bay, The Clock Tower - Herne Bay, Old Herne Church, The Reculvers, Margate, The Parade - Margate, Victoria Clock Tower - Margate,Margate Harbour from the Pier, The Jetty - Margate, St. John’s Church - Margate, St. John’s Church (interior) - Margate, The Fort - Margate, The Jetty (another view) - Margate, Newgate Gap - Margate, The Fort - Margate, Cliftonville, The College - Margate, Kingsgate, North Foreland, Broadstairs, York Gate - Broadstairs, and Westgate-on-Sea. [ref: 16314 ] £35

1031. RAMSGATE - CLAYSON, ALLAN. WISH YOU WERE HERE. Coleridge’s Holidays at Ramsgate.

A. and C. Clayson. 2001xiv + 121 pp., including 6 full-page coloured plates and numerous b/w illustrations to the text. Red cloth, gilt to spine, in dust wrapper. New.Samuel Taylor Coleridge, famed author of ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’,spent many weeks in Ramsgate during the later part of his life. This book, based on his notes and letters written whilst there, gives an insight into his life and the resort. [ref: 15282 ] £20

1032. RAMSGATE HARBOUR. RETURN TO AN ORDER OF THE HONOURABLE THE HOUSE OF COMMONS, DATED 12 MARCH 1877; - FOR, COPY ‘OF REPORT OF A COMMITTEE REQUESTED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF TRADE TO ENQUIRE INTO THE MANAGEMENT OF RAMSGATE HARBOUR AND ITS PROPERTY; TOGETHER WITH CORRESPONDENCE THEREON, AND ON THE PRESENT INCOME AND EXPENDITURE OF THE HARBOUR.’ Board of Trade, 12 March 1877. Edward Stanhope. (Sir Charles Adderley). (97).

Ordered by the House of Commons, to be Printed, 1877Folio. 8.5 x 13 inches. 14 pp. Disbound pamphlet. Some light spotting; otherwise fine condition. Library stamps of Vredespalais and 2e Kamer der Staten-General, Den Haag, on title page. This report on the management of Ramsgate Harbour includes a copy of the 1877-78 accounts and a list of its house property, stores, warehouses, etc., and their annual rentals. There is some interesting discussion over the

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provision of a harbour police force and the employment and crewing of the Harbour steam tugs. [ref: 20775 ] £85

1033. RAMSGATE HARBOUR. CUBITT, SIR WILLIAM. RETURN TO AN ORDER OF THE HONOURABLE THE HOUSE OF COMMONS, DATED 2 MAY 1856; - FOR, COPY ‘OF THE LAST REPORTOF SIR WILLIAM CUBITT, ON RAMSGATE HARBOUR, RECENTLY SUBMITTED TO THE BOARD OF TRADE.’ Board of Trade, 5 May 1856. Edgar S. Bowring, Registrar. (Mr. Deedes) (203). [Running title:] Report of Sir W. Cubitt on Ramsgate Harbour.

Ordered, by The House of Commons, to be Printed. 1856Folio. 8.5 x 13.5 inches. 6 pp. Illustrated by two folding lithographic plates, including coloured plan. Disbound pamphlet. Extremities a little worn, otherwise fine condition. Library stamps of Palais de la Paix, La Hay, on title page.A report on the work in progress since 1853 and further remedial work required on the decaying eastern Pier and Pier Head of Ramsgate Harbour. Appendix B is a fine lithograph of the existing pier and the work so far carried out. Two further appendices, C and D, set out the costs of wages and material expended 1850-55. Sir William Cubitt (1785-1861), civil engineer, began his career as a millwright in Norfolk and, as chief engineer to the South Eastern Railway, was responsible for constructing the difficult stretch along the foot of the cliffs between Folkestone and Dover. The construction of Ramsgate Harbour began in 1749, under an act of Parliament, following the destruction of the previous harbour in the storm of 1748. DNB. [ref: 20774 ] £145

1034. RAVENSDALE, JACK IN THE STEPS OF CHAUCER’S PILGRIMS From Southwark to Canterbury from the air and on foot.

Aerial photography by Aerfoto.London: Guild Publishing 1989Small 4to. 144 pp. illustrated with 31 colour photographs in plates and black and white photographs and maps in text. Bound in cloth gilt in coloured dust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste-down.First published by Souvenir Press Ltd. A guide to the landscape traversed by the pilgrims of The Canterbury Tales from Southwark to Canterbury by a medieval landscape historian. [ref: 19219 ] £15

1035. REDMANS RURAL DIRECTORY OF SOUTH EAST KENT. Comprising Alphabetical Directories of Householders and Commercial Establishments ..... and also Advertisers Index, Advertisers Trade and Professional Directory, Postal, Borough and Rural District Councils Information, and a Map of the Area.

Redmans, Ashford. 1966First edition. 224 pp. + folding map + lxxxiii adverts. Complete with original bookmark. Original laminated printed yellow card wrappers. A fine copy of a scarce item.

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This directory covers the rural towns and villages but excludes Ashford, Folkestone and Hythe, presumably because they were already catered for byKelly’s. [ref: 19544 ] £65

1036. REDSHAW, C. J. (Ed). THE INVICTA MAGAZINE FOR THE HOMES AND PEOPLE OF KENT.

Dartford; Snowden Brothers. 1908-19133 volumes (All Published). Royal 8vo., 384 + 256 + 256 pp. Original cloth gilt.A well-bound, clean set only slightly rubbed.A complete set of this fascinating, well-illustrated and invaluable work of reference, covering almost every aspect of Kentish life and history. Sets are now scarce. [ref: 15195 ] £125

1037. RICHARD-HUGH PERKS. SPRITS’L. A PORTRAIT OF SAILING BARGES AND SAILORMEN. Written in collaboration with Patricia O’Driscoll and Alan Cordell.

Greenwich: Conway Maritime Press, 19754to. 167 pp. illustrated throughout. Original brown cloth, gilt. A very good copy in a clipped dust wrapper.Very well illustrated account. [ref: 20811 ] £15

1038. RICHARDS, F. OLD SEVENOAKS. ILLUSTRATED BY C. ESSENHIGH CORKE, F.R.P.S. Price 2/6 Net.

J. Salmon, 85 High Street, Sevenoaks. 1901Small 8vo. 132 pp. with frontispiece and 6 half-tone plates and pen illustrations in the text throughout. Original red cloth with black title lettering. Spine faded and slight wear to extremities, but a very good copy.Attractive turn of the century guide to Sevenoaks. Scarce. [ref: 15623 ] £80

1039. RICHARDSON, CHRISTOPHER T. FRAGMENTS OF HISTORY PERTAINING TO THE VILL, OR WILLE, OR LIBERTY, OF RAMSGATE.

Ramsgate: Published for the Author by Messrs Fuller. 1885.First Issue. 212 pp. + iii list of subscribers,with large folding lithograph view of Ramsgate in 1791. Bound in publisher’s cloth, gilt.. Very minor wear at head and tail of spine and extremities, otherwise a very good copy.A useful work, the subscribers list notes 93 copies. Includes Notes on the Streets and Inns, the Harbour, a Chronology of

Events and Names of Ships’ Masters etc. [ref: 17227 ] £120

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1040. ROAKE, MARGARET and JOHN WHYMAN. (Editors). ESSAYS IN KENTISH HISTORY.

Frank Cass. 19738vo. x + 301 pp. with illustrations, maps, diagrams and tables. Original cloth gilt in dustwrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.Contains twenty three articles reprinted from Archaeologia Cantiana. [ref: 19031 ] £25

1041. ROAKE, MARGARET, Editor. RELIGIOUS WORSHIP IN KENT. The Census of 1851. Edited by Margaret Roake.

(Kent Records. Volume XXVII).Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19998vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. lii + 460 pp. Series title. Illustrated by frontispiece and8 plates and 7 maps in text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with the Society’s device on front board, in pictorial dust wrapper. Fine condition. Inserted are a Review from Southern History, 2000 and an article on the Census from Daily Telegraph, 2001.The 1851 Religious Census into the resources available for religious worship was a landmark survey, with no comparable enquiry on a national scale ever carried out again. This reprint of the Home Office papers records the results for 1,003 places of worship in Kent (including a few just over the Sussex border), from over 440 parishes, arranged according to Census registration districts. Just under half are Church of England institutions, and the rest the various nonconformist congregations. Appendices include the summary totals from the parliamentary papers and a Daily News Survey of religious attendance covering Kentish London, 1902-03. An impressive survey of religious worship in the middle of the nineteenth century. [ref: 21203 ] £40

1042. ROBERTS, A.W. COASTING BARGE MASTER. Edward Arnold and Co., London. 1949192 pp. with illustrations by Archie White. Original blue cloth in a dust wrapper. A good copy.[ref: 20794 ] £20

1043. ROBERTS, BOB. BREEZE FOR A BARGEMAN. Second edition.

Lavenham Terence Dalton Limited. 19904to. 6.75 x 8.75 inches. vii +[1] + 136 pp. Half-title. Illustrated with black and white photographs in text. In coloured pictorial card wrappers. Very slight wear to extremities and ink inscription inside front cover; otherwise in fine condition.An account of a sailing life, both in distant waters and in trawling and sailing barges off the eastern counties and in the Thames estuary, including the Kent coast. First edition published 1981. [ref: 21132 ] £12

1044. ROBERTS, BOB. LAST OF THE SAILORMEN.

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Routledge and Kegan Paul, London. 1973Reprint of 1960 edition. 137 pp. with photographic and drawn illustrations. Bound in the original blue cloth. Some spotting to prelims and title otherwise a very good copy in a like dust wrapper.[ref: 20792 ] £12

1045. ROBERTS, GEORGE. THE SOCIAL HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE OF THE SOUTHERN COUNTIES OF ENGLAND IN PAST CENTURIES; ILLUSTRATED IN REGARD TO THEIR HABITS, MUNICIPAL BYE-LAWS, CIVIL PROGRESS, ETC., FROM THE RESEARCHES OF GEORGE ROBERTS.

Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, and Roberts. London. 1856First Edition, 8vo. xvi + 572 illustrated with wood engravings in the text. Bound in the original brown cloth as issued, a little rubbed on extremities but a good copy.A mass of useful information, chapters on Witchcraft, Victualling of Ships, Pirates and Turks

in the Channel, Beacons, Prices of Food, Value of Timber, Election Trickery, Gypsies, Crime and Punishments, Smuggling, and much else to do with the organisation of society and modes and manners. Scarce ‘Social History’ was a new science at this time and we have only handled one copy of this work before. [ref: 19135 ] £200

RAILWAY POSTER1046. ROBERTS, N. CRAMER. DUNGENESS BY THE ROMNEY,

HYTHE AND DYMCHURCH RAILWAY. THE WORLD’S SMALLEST PUBLIC RAILWAY.

Vincent Brooks, Day and Sons Ltd. Lith. London WC2. No date but 1928Large railway advertising poster, 26.5 x 41 inches, original colour-printed lithograph. Conservation mounted on to linen and expertly framed in a 2-inch solid oak frame usingconservation backing etc.This charming period piece of railway poster art is a romantic depiction of the sun setting behind the old Dungeness lighthouse at the end of the peninsula, whilst an elegant liner passes by on a becalmed sea. The image is depicted in bold primary colours with exciting modern typography - a classic of its era.

The Romney, Hythe & Dymchurch Railway line was opened to Dungeness in the first weekend of August 1928 and this poster wasprinted to encourage travellers to venture out to this barren and sparsely inhabited wasteland! [ref: 21709 ] £1000

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SIGNED COPY.1047. ROBERTSON, BRUCE. Compiled and edited by EPICS

OF AVIATION ARCHAEOLOGY. Patrick Stephens, Cambridge. 19788vo. 156 pp. with b/w illustration. Original pale blue cloth, gilt. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.This copy was presented to the Kent Aviation Historical Research Society and bears the bookplate of historian David Collyer. Inscribed ‘To Kent Aviation Historical Research Society with compliments and thanks’, it is signed by a number of people including Bruce Robertson, Kent authors Roy Humphreys, Philip MacDougall, Geoffrey Williams and R.S. Brooks and RayMunday. [ref: 18417 ] £18

1048. ROBINSON, THOMAS. THE COMMON LAW OF KENT: OR,THE CUSTOMS OF GAVELKIND. WITH AN APPENDIX CONCERNING BOROUGH-ENGLISH.

London Printed by His Majesty’s Law Printers For P. Uriel, Inner Temple Lane. 1788Second Edition, 8vo. 6 x 9.5 inches, xx + 300 pp. + [15] Recent quarter calf over marbled boards, spine with raised bands and contrasting leather title label, gilt. An extremely fresh, crisp copy.Perhaps the most lucid of the books on Gavelkind, it becamethe standard work on the subject, passing through three

editions by 1822. First published 1744. [ref: 21067 ] £200

1049. ROBINSON, THOMAS. THE COMMON LAW OF KENT: OR,THE CUSTOMS OF GAVELKIND. WITH AN APPENDIX CONCERNINGBOROUGH-ENGLISH.

London Printed by His Majesty’s Law Printers For P. Uriel, Inner Temple Lane. 1788Second Edition, 8vo. 6 x 9.5 inches, xx + 300 pp. + [15] + [1] errata Original full calf, re-spined with original spine laid on in a workmanlike fashion. Internally a very clean copy.Perhaps the most lucid of the books on Gavelkind, it became the standard work on the subject, passing through three editions by 1822. First published 1744.

[ref: 21622 ] £175

1050. ROCHESTER - BUCKLAND, W.E. KENT RECORDS. THE PARISH REGISTER AND RECORDS IN THE DIOCESE OF ROCHESTER: A SUMMARY OF INFORMATION COLLECTED BY THE ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS COMMITTEE OF THE ROCHESTER DIOCESAN CONFERENCE.

Mitchell Hughes & Clarke, London. 1912125 pp. Original cloth, gilt.An extremely useful reprint of the parish registers of Rochester diocese. Difficult to find.

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[ref: 18155 ] £45

1051. ROCHESTER - BUCKLAND, W.E. KENT RECORDS. THE PARISH REGISTER AND RECORDS IN THE DIOCESE OF ROCHESTER: A SUMMARY OF INFORMATION COLLECTED BY THE ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS COMMITTEE OF THE ROCHESTER DIOCESAN CONFERENCE. With an introduction by W. E. Buckland, M.A., Vicar of East Malling, Hon. Secretary for Parochial Records.

(Kent Records. Volume I).Ashford Kent Archaeological Society. 19128vo. 6 x 9 inches. xii + [i] + 125 pp.+ [1]. Title page in black and red. Illustrated by portrait frontispiece. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with the Society’s device on the front board. Extremities a little worn and slight foxing,otherwise fine condition.An extremely useful inventory of the parish registers of Rochester diocese, with an introduction on the registers and other parish records of the diocese.The first published volume of Kent Records, retrospectively numbered Volume I, after the regular publication of records began. Difficult to find. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21177 ] £45

SIGNED COPY.1052. ROCHESTER - HARRIS, EDWIN. RESTORATION HOUSE;

OR, ROCHESTER IN THE TIME OF THE COMMONWEALTH. Edwin Harris, Rochester. 1904

224 pp. + [7] pp. catalogue + 10 b/w plates. Original red quarter morocco with gilt titles to spine and upper board. Cloth damp-stained and rubbed and a small chip from spine but a good copy of a scarce title..

The Restoration House is an Elizabethan Mansion situated in Crow Lane, Rochester and one of the finest such houses in the country. Harris’ account is fictionalised but

based on local history during the time of Cromwell. Copious notes at the end give further detail on each chapter. The list of subscribers at the rear gives 216 names so perhaps 500 would have been published. This copy is inscribedon a blank prelim ‘Presented to my old friend M. Ashdown. With the Compliments of The Author Edwin Harris 151 Eastgate Rochester June 4th1927.’ Scarce. [ref: 18257 ] £80

1053. ROCHESTER - KELLY'S. bDIRECTORY OF ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD 1953.

Kelly's Directories. 19538vo. xvi + 22 + 802 pp. + [2] pp. Lacking folding map. Original printed boards. Ex-library (reference), but a good copy. [ref: 18163 ] £30

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1054. ROCHESTER - KELLY'S. cDIRECTORY OF ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD 1963.

Kelly's Directories. 19638vo. xvi + 8 + 1004 pp. + [2]. Original printed boards. Spine repaired and complete.[ref: 18162 ] £30

1055. ROCHESTER - KELLY'S. cDIRECTORY OF ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD 1963.

Kelly's Directories. 19638vo. xvi + 8 + 1004pp. + [2] Lacking the folding map. Original printed boards. [ref: 18165 ] £25

1056. ROCHESTER - KELLY'S. dDIRECTORY OF ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 1967.

Kelly's Directories. 19678vo. xvi + 8 + 1064 pp. + [2] pp. Original printed boards. Lacking the folding map.[ref: 18161 ] £25

1057. ROCHESTER - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF ROCHESTER, CHATHAM, GILLINGHAM AND NEIGHBOURHOOD 1951.

Kelly's Directories. 19518vo. xvi + 22 + 852 pp. + [2] pp. Original printed boards. Ex-library (reference), a good copy. [ref: 18164 ] £30

1058. ROCHESTER AND CHATHAM. A BOUND VOLUME OF ACTS OF PARLIAMENT RELATING TO ROCHESTER AND CHATHAM.

1. An Act for....providing an additional Workhouse for...Chatham...Relief, Government, and Employment of the Poor. 1802.2. An Act for Paving, Cleansing, Lighting and Watching the Streets and Lanes of Chatham. 1772.3. An Act to expand an Act for Paving, Cleansing, Lighting and Watching the Streets and Lanes of Chatham, and to extend the Provisions....to parts of the High Street situated in St. Margarets and Gillingham 1776.4. An Act for the recovery of Small Debts within Rochester, Strood, Findsbury, Cobham, Shorne, Higham, Cliffe, Cooling, High Halstow, Chalk, Hoo, Burham, Wouldham, Halling, Cuxstone, Chatham and Gillingham and the Ville of Sheerness, 1817.

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5. An Act for enlarging the Powers for the recovery of Small Debts within Rochester, Strood, an d several other places in Kent. 1808.6. An Act for Paving, Cleansing, Lighting and Watching the Streets and Lanes of St. Nicholas within the City of Rochester and the parish of Strood and for making a road through Star Lane to Chatham Hill, 1769.8. An Act to incorporate a Company for lighting with Gas the City of Rochester and the Town of Chatham and Strood...1825.9. An Act for....providing a new Workhouse for...Strood, Government, and Employment of the Poor. 1812.10. An Act for better assessing the Poor of St. Nicholas in the City of Rochester 1809. Various publishers... 1769-1825Folio. Approximately 300 pages, printed and manuscript. Bound in contemporary half-calf over marbled boards, skilfully re-backed, red morocco label on the upper board, with the contents lettered in gilt.With an extensive manuscript index bound in at the front with interleaving after each act for manuscript summaries of cases and opinions, some of which amount to several pages, others remaining blank. The text is also littered with manuscript notes in a clear, neat hand. [ref: 16066 ] £300

1059. ROCHESTER POLL BOOK. THE POLL FOR TWO MEMBERS TO REPRESENT THE CITY OF ROCHESTER, IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. IN THE SIXTH PARLIAMENT OF THE REIGN OF QUEEN VICTORIA, TAKEN ON SATURDAY, THE 30TH APRIL, 1859, INCLUDING THE WHOLE OF THE REGISTERED ELECTORS, WITH

AN INDEX SHEWING FREEMEN AND ELECTORS. Compiled from Messrs. Martin & Kinglake’s Private Poll Book, by George Colvill, Secretary to the Rochester Liberal Association.

Candidates: Philip Wykeham Martin, Esq. John Alexander Kinglake, Serjeant-at-Law. George Henry Money, Esq., George Mitchell.Caddel and Son, Gazette Office, Rochester. 18598vo. 46 pp. interleaved throughout with blanks. Contemporary white buckram, gilt. A trifle dusty with some old ink stains, bumped at corners with an unobtrusive blind stamp o n the margin of the title page, otherwise a very good, clean copy.This example was at some time part of Rochester Public Library’s reserve stock, remaining there un-

used.Comprising half-title, title page with nomination, polling and declaration information to verso; lists of the voters with name, occupation and place of residence, for each of the polling stations; a complete alphabetical list of the voters, 1164 in all; a list of the unpolled Freemen and Electors of the City of Rochester; a Statement of the Poll at each Polling place, Cross and Single votes, the State of the Poll during the day and the Grand Total of votes cast; a list of the Members of Parliament for the City of Rochester from the revolution in the year 1688, with the names of candidates and number of votes cast at each election. Very scarce. [ref: 15961 ] £175

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1060. ROCHESTER POLL BOOK. THE POLL OF THE ELECTORS FOR MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT, TO REPRESENT THE CITY OF ROCHESTER. TAKEN ON MONDAY, THE FIFTH DAY OF JULY, 1802,BEFORE SAMUEL BAKER, ESQ. MAYOR. CANDIDATES. SIR W. SIDNEY SMITH, Kt., GEORGE SMITH ESQ., JAMES HULKES, ESQ.,

JAMES ROPER HEAD, ESQ. To Which is Added An Index and an Alphabetical List of the Voters, Arranged Under the Places, or Parishes, Where They Reside: .......

From the Press of W. Epps. Rochester. 18028vo. 38 + [1] pp. with blank interleaving throughout and several blank leaves to front and rear. Bound in contemporary full calf, gilt, skilfullyrebacked, with the City of Rochester’s coat of arms stamped in gilt on the upper board and another coat of arms on the rear board. An unobtrusive blind stamp on the margin of the title page, two or three pages lightly browned and the extremities a trifle bumped and worn otherwise a very good, clean copy in an attractive armorial binding.

Comprising title page; lists of the voters with name, occupation and place of residence; a Statement of the Poll; a complete alphabetical list of the voters, 594 in all; a List of the Electors of Rochester, who voted at this Election, ... showing for whom each person voted; a General Abstract of the Whole Poll; a list of the Freemen of Rochester who did not vote at the Election; a list of the Members of Parliament for the City of Rochester from the accession of George the Third, with the names of candidates and number of votes taken at each election. A useful and fascinating reference and historical document. Very scarce. [ref: 15962 ] £285

1061. ROCHESTER POLL BOOK. THE POLL OF THE ELECTORS FOR MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT, TO REPRESENT THE CITY OF ROCHESTER. TAKEN ON TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1807, AND THE THREE FOLLOWING DAYS, BEFORE RICHARD THOMPSON, ESQ. MAYOR. CANDIDATES. SIR T.B. THOMPSOM, Bart., JOHN CALCRAFT ESQ., SIR THOMAS TRIGGE K.B. To Which is Added An Index and an Alphabetical List of the Voters, Arranged Under the Places, or Parishes, Where They Reside: .......

From the Press of W. Epps. 18078vo. 40 pp. with blank interleaving throughout. Preserved in nineteenth century blue sugar-paper wrappers, on which we have printed a copy of the title page. This example was at some time part of Rochester Public Library’s reserve stock, remaining there un-used. Without any stamps. Only very occasional foxing,otherwise a very good, clean copy.Comprising title page; lists of the voters with name, occupation and place of residence, for each of the four

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days of voting; a Statement of each day’s poll; a complete alphabetical list ofthe voters, 640 in all; a List of the Electors of Rochester, who voted at this Election, ... showing for whom each person voted; a General Abstract of the Whole Poll; a list of the unpolled Freemen of the City of Rochester; a list of the Members of Parliament for the City of Rochester from the revolution in the year 1688, with the names of candidates and number of votes cast at each election. A useful and fascinating reference and historical document. One printed footnote refers to an individual having been ‘Expunged by orderof the Mayor, having received relief within three months’. Very scarce. [ref: 15959 ] £175

1062. ROCHESTER POLL BOOK. THE POLL OF THE ELECTORS FOR MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT, TO REPRESENT THE CITY OF ROCHESTER. TAKEN BEFORE SAMUEL SIDDEN, ESQ. MAYOR, ON MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1826, AND FIVE FOLLOWING DAYS.

CANDIDATES. The Hon. Henry Dundas, Ralph Bernal, Esq. and Major General William Armstrong. To Which is Added An Alphabetical List of the Voters, Their Profession, &c.

From the Press of Wm. Epps., Rochester. 1826Small square 8vo. 39 pp . with blank interleaving throughout and several blank leaves at front and back.

Original half-calf, gilt, worn on extremities, skillfully rebacked, some foxing marks and the odd ink blot, but a very good copy. This copy has a neat, nearly invisible, embossed stamp of Rochester Library to title page.A useful and fascinating reference and historical

document. Comprising title page; lists of the voters with name, occupation and place of residence, for each of the six days of voting; a complete alphabetical list of the voters, 840 in all; a Statement of each day’s poll; a list of the unpolled Freemen of the City of Rochester; a list of the Members of Parliament for the City of Rochester from the revolution in the year 1688, with the names of candidates and number of votes cast at each election. Marginal notes and observations throughout including the occasional ‘dead’ marked against an individual’s name. One printed footnote refers to an individual having been objected to as a voter ‘on account of having received parochial Relief’. Scarce. [ref: 15953 ] £175

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1063. ROCHESTER POLL BOOK. THE POLL OF THE ELECTORS FOR MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT, TO REPRESENT THE CITY OF ROCHESTER. ON THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1835, AND THE FOLLOWING DAY. JOHN BATTEN, ESQUIRE, MAYOR, RETURNING OFFICER. CANDIDATES, RALPH BERNAL AND THOMAS TWISDEN HODGES, ESQUIRES; AND LORD CHARLES WELLESLEY. To Which is Added An Index and an Alphabetical List of the Voters, and a List of the Unpolled Freemen and Electors...

Rochester: Printed and Sold by S. Caddel, and G.H. Vidion; and J. and W.H. Sweet, Strood. 1835 8vo. 33 + [5] pp. Preserved in nineteenth century blue sugar-paper wrappers,on which we have printed a copy of the title page. This example was at some time part of Rochester Public Library’s reserve stock, remaining there un-used. Apart from an unobtrusive blind stamp on the margin of the title page it is a very good, clean copy.Comprising title page; lists of the voters with name, occupation and place of residence, for each of the four days of voting at each of the polling places; a complete alphabetical list of the voters, 870 in all; a Statement of each day’s poll; a List of the unpolled Freemen and Electors; a list of Persons Disqualified from Voting,...; a list of Voters who have died since the Election;a list of the Members of Parliament for the City of Rochester from the revolution in the year 1688, with the names of candidates and number of votes taken at each contested election. A useful and fascinating reference and historical document, scarce. [ref: 15960 ] £145

SIGNED COPY1064. ROCKETT, SAM. IT'S COLD IN THE CHANNEL.

Hutchinson, 1956First Edition, 8vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. 191 pp. with photo illustration. Original turquoise cloth, gilt. A very good copyin a dust wrapper.Presentation copy from the author to Ted Huntley, dated August 13th 1956 on front paste-down endpaper. Very

good account of channel swimming by the famous Folkestone swimmer. It remains one of the best works on the subject. [ref: 20836 ] £45

1065. ROCQUE, JOHN. KENT. Rocque and Sayer 1753Hand-coloured engraved map. 6.5 x 8 inches A very good example.This map with its inset view of Dover castle was published in 1753, in English and French, by John Rocque and Robert Sayer in ‘The Small British Atlas’, which contained fifty four maps. Although unsigned the maps are

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distinguished by the shading round the county borders giving the counties the appearance of islands. [ref: 17997 ] £85

1066. RODGER, JENNI. CRANBROOK A PICTORIAL HISTORY. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198348 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18654 ] £10

1067. RODGER, JENNI. SMARDEN A PICTORIAL HISTORY. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198248 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18653 ] £10

1068. ROGERS, P.G. THE SIXTH TRUMPETER. THE STORY OF JEZREEL AND HIS TOWER.

O.U.P. 1963First Edition. 154 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper. a very good copy.The story of the strange religious sect which set up in Chatham and Gillingham in the late 1880s, and its ill-fated building project.*A signed presentation copy. [ref: 19535 ] £25

DEAL AND WALMER IN FINE WATERCOLOURS1069. ROGET, JOHN. SKETCHES OF DEAL, WALMER, AND

SANDWICH. Longmans, Green and Co., 39 Paternoster Row, London, New York, Bombay and Calcutta 1911First Edition, 4to. 63 pp. with 32 coloured plates and 8 black and white illustrations after original watercolours by the author. Original cloth gilt, a clean fresh copy.A very good copy of this rare and beautifully illustrated book - certainly the finest pictorial

record of turn-of-the-century Deal and Walmer. The artist has a world-wide reputation for his famous Thesaurus but his work as a watercolourist is known of solely through this book. [ref: 21284 ] £275

1070. ROLLASON, D.W. THE MILDRITH LEGEND. A STUDY IN EARLY MEDIEVAL HAGIOGRAPH.Y

(Studies in the early history of Britain).Leicester University Press 19828vo. xii + 171 pp. two illustrations and map. Original cloth. Fine condition in dust wrapper. Small bookplate on front paste down.An account of the legend of St. Mildrith, abbess of Minster-in-Thanet, as it developed in the independent Kingdom of Kent and later in tenth and eleventh century England as a preoccupation with the nature and sanctity of

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kingship. Three appendices summarise extant texts of the Legend and print full versions of two Latin texts with detailed notes. [ref: 18980 ] £35

1071. ROMNEY MARSH - BRADLEY, A.G. AN OLD GATE OF ENGLAND. RYE, ROMNEY MARSH, AND THE WESTERN CINQUE PORTS.

Robert Scott. 19258vo. ix + 374 pp. with original illustrations by Marian E.G. Bradley. Original cloth, gilt. Slight erosion of paper on inside edge of front paste down which has small neat bookplate otherwise a very good, clean copy. Third impression of first edition of 1917. Contains a wealth of anecdotal and factual information on Romney Marsh as well as Rye and Hastings and their hinterlands. [ref: 19025 ] £20

1072. ROMNEY MARSH - FIRTH, DR. F.M. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF ROMNEY MARSH.

Meresborough Books. 1984.8vo. 127 pp. with maps and photo illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper.Well-written and comprehensive modern natural history of the Marsh. [ref: 17318 ] £20

ROMNEY MARSH - FORBES, DUNCAN. THE FIFTH CONTINENT. THE STORY OF ROMNEY MARSH AND ITS SURROUNDINGS.Hythe, Shearwater Press. 1984192 pp. with maps and photo illustration. Original cloth. A very good copy in aspine faded dust wrapper.Good account of Romney Marsh, its towns and villages and its history. [ref: 12651 ] £20

1073. ROMNEY MARSH - HADDEN-PARKES, MRS. ERMENGARDE. A STORY OF ROMNEY MARSH IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY

London: Eliot Stock, 62 Paternoster Row, E.C. 18938vo. 247 pp. + 8 monochrome plates. Decorative head- and tailpieces. Bound in the original stone-grey printed cloth with gilt titles to spine, and title, author and design to upper board in brown. Spine worn at head and tail and small split to front hinge. Some wear to extremities. A good copy.[ref: 20382 ] £75

1074. ROMNEY MARSH - INGRAMS, RICHARD AND FAY GODWIN. ROMNEY MARSH AND THE ROYAL MILITARY CANAL.

Wildwood House. 1980First Edition, 192 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth in dust wrapper. A very good copy.

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This copy signed on the half-title by Godwin and Ingrams. Fay Godwin's fine evocative photographs combine with Richard Ingrams’ interesting text to make this a much sought-after volume. [ref: 17396 ] £30

ROMNEY MARSH 17191075. ROMNEY MARSH. (S. PARKER AFTER WILLIAM

DUGDALE). THE DESCRIPTION OF ROMNEY MARSH, WALLAND MARSH, DENGE MARSH, AND GUILFORD MARSH, WITH THE DIVISIONS OF THEIR WATERINGS, THEIR HEADS, ARMES, PRINCIPAL SEWERS AND THEIR GUTTS...AND ALSO THE LEVELS OF WITTERSHAM..APPLEDOURE CHANELL LYING TO THE LEVEL OF ROTHERBRIDGE, UP TO NEWENDEN, SANDHURST, AND BODIAM;TOGETHER WITH THE HARBOURS OF RYE AND WINCHELSEA, WITH THE MARSHES ADIOYNING.

J. Harris. London. 1719Uncoloured copper engraving 13 x 25 ins. Mounted in acid free cut-out mountto museum standard, a very good example.The second issue of the first printed map of Romney Marsh which appeared in Dugdale's "History of Embanking and Draining" and was reissued in Dr Harris’s “History of Kent” published in 1719. At a scale of one inch to the mile the appearance of the complicated pattern of dykes, drains, and walls serves to show why Romney Marsh was seldom visited by outsiders up until the 19th century. [ref: 20672 ] £250

1076. ROPER, ANNE. THE GIFT OF THE SEA- ROMNEY MARSH.Birlings, Ashford, 1984First Edition. 208 pp. with colour and other illustration throughout. Original cloth in dustwrapper.Now out of print. [ref: 17932 ] £15

1077. ROWLANDSON, THOMAS. AFTER SWEET MEAT COMES SOUR SAUCE or CORPORAL CASEY GOT INTO THE WRONG BOX.

Nov. 30th by Thomas Tegg, No 111 Cheapside. 1810Plate measures 12.5 x 9 inches, preserved within a conservation mount, narrowly trimmed with loss of heading ‘Tegg’s caricatures No 24’ above the image, but imprint intact. Original hand-coloured etched caricature.Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827) is perhaps the most well-known of the

Georgian caricaturists. In this scene, a comely wench kneels at the foot of a bed, one hand holding the lid of a strong box containing her lover, the corporal, on whom she bestows a kiss before closing the lid. At the window,

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the head of an enraged older man, presumably her cuckolded husband, peers, scowling, over the window sill. [ref: 20297 ] £400

1078. ROWLANDSON, THOMAS. PROGRESS OF GALLANTRY OR STOLEN KISSES SWEETEST.

Thos. Tegg. No 111. Cheapside. No date but c.1814Folio, 14 inches by 10 inches to edge of plate, with ample margins. Original hand-coloured etched caricature.Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827) is perhaps the most widely known of the Georgian caricaturists. His ability to produce highly entertaining and often bawdy satires on the modes and manners of his day has made him world famous. Marked number 279, this print comes from the early years of a fruitful relationship with the publisher Thomas Tegg, which lasted 12 years between 1807 and 1819. During this time Rowlandson produced many images which were designed to be funny on the day, pinned up on the tavernwall and then discarded. This accounts for the rarity of these large etchings. The subject of Progress of Gallantry is loaded with sexual innuendo leaving little to the imagination but a great deal to interpretation. Five figures stand on the quayside. In the forefront stands an old seaman with a telescope to his eye, a leering expression on his face as he looks out to sea at whatever has captured his interest. Meanwhile, the old tar's wife, with a parasol, kisses a young officer, while a toothless old man, dressed in black, shivers in the wind as he gazes out to sea. Behind him stands a soldier with his bayonetpointing skywards. A pile of cannonballs lies behind this diverse group and there is, seated on the edge of the quay, a girl into whose eyes a black sailor gazes. Here we have youth and age engaged in amorous activities. The old men are transfixed by what they can see offshore, as is the soldier with the bayonet, the couples are engrossed in each other. Love is not the theme however, phallic symbols abound in the shape of cannon barrels and telescopes, vying with each other in size as they point out to sea, and in the case of the cannon, from decidedly ambiguous vantage points. Rowlandson at his best, poking fun at love and sexual desire. [ref: 20295 ] £600

1079. ROWLANDSON, THOMAS. SUMMER AMUSEMENT AT MARGATE, OR A PEEP AT THE MERMAIDS Price one shilling coloured.

London Thos. Tegg. No 111. Cheapside. No date but, 1st September 1813Folio, approximately 14 by 10 inches to edge of plate, with ample margins. Original hand-coloured etched caricature.Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827) is perhaps the most widely known of the Georgian caricaturists. His ability to produce highly

entertaining and often bawdy satires on the modes and manners of his day

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has made him world famous. Marked number 211, this print comes from the early years of his fruitful relationship with the publisher Thomas Tegg, which lasted 12 years between 1807 and 1819. During this time Rowlandson produced many images which were designed to be funny on the day, pinned up on the tavern wall and then discarded. This accounts for the rarity of these large etchings. The subject of ‘Summer Amusement at Margate’ is loaded with sexual innuendo leaving little to the imagination but a great deal to interpretation. In the forefront stand five old men on the Cliffside before the Circulating Library, each with a telescope to his eye, and a leeringand lecherous expression as they looks out to a sea filled with naked ladies bathing. Meanwhile, one of the viewers’ wives has discovered her husband and sets about him with a parasol. Rowlandson at his best, poking fun at love and sexual desire. BM12144 [ref: 21383 ] £650

1080. RUSSELL, WILLIAM. THE HISTORY OF MAIDSTONE. John Hallewell Publications, Rochester 19788vo. 9 x 5.5 inches, 423 pp. with 22 plates. Original cloth, gilt in dust wrapper. A very good copy.Reprint, in a limited edition of 1000 copies, of the standard 19th century history of the County town, first published in 1881. [ref: 21143 ] £20

1081. RUSSELL, WILLIAM CLARK. BETWIXT THE FORELANDS. New and cheaper edition [second edition].

London Sampson, Low, Marston and Company Limited, St Dunstan’s House,Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C. [c.1890].8vo. 5 x 7 inches. xi + [i] + + 330 pp. with 25 wood-engraved illustrations. Half title. Illustrated with 14 wood engraved plates, including frontispiece and 11 woodcuts in text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. Endpapers a little mottled but otherwise a fine clean copy.Scarce history of the coast from Ramsgate to Dover and the Goodwin Sands in the form of historical essays from the earliest times to the author’s own day. They include, naval battles, smuggling, lifeboats, wrecks, shipping and craft and a host of other events which have happend 'Twixt the Forelands'. From the pen of one of the greatest of Victorian sea story writers, and a champion of reform in the merchant service (1844-1911). We have only seen one copy of the first issue which appeard in pictorial cloth in 1889, it was seldom reprinted unlike his sea yarns. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21298 ] £85

1082. RYE - COLLARD, JOHN A. A MARITIME HISTORY OF RYE.

John A. Collard, Rye 19784to. Fronts + ix + 153 pp. Numerous monochrome photographic illustrations, sixteen maps, three of which are folding. Original pictorial card wrappers. a very good copy.

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Contains: Origin and Early growth. A Century of Turbulence, 1200 to 1300. Supporting the Angevin Empire, 1300 to 1453. Decline in the Expanding World, 1453 to 1588. Survival Problems and a New Harbour, 1720 to 1788. Defence in the Napoleonic War, 1788 to 1815. Conflicts of Interest, 1800 to 1845. Aftermath of the Industrial Revolution, 1845 to 1875. Pre-war Tranquility, 1875 to 1914. Dark Days, 1914 to 1939. Total War, 1939 to 1945. Trial and Error, 1945 to 1962. Hopes Revived, 1962 to 1974. Appendices: A Pamphlet of 1677. Extracts from ‘The Report of John Smeaton Upon the Harbour of Rye’ (1763). Extracts From the Report of Alexander Sutherland on a Proposed ‘Canal Through the Weald of Kent’ (1801). List of Harbourmasters. [ref: 19410 ] £35

ROYALIST PROPAGANDA NEWSBOOKS, 1642-44.1083. [RYVES, BRUNO]. MERCURIUS RUSTICUS: OR, THE

COUNTRIES COMPLAINT OF THE SACRILEDGES, PROPHANATIONS, AND PLUNDERINGS, COMMITTED BY THE SCHISMATIQUES ON THE CATHEDRALL CHURCHES OF THIS KINGDOME. Mercurius Rusticus, I-XVIII, 1642-43, I-IV, 1642-43, V (after Querela). [Bound with] Querela Cantabrigiensis: Or, A Remonstrance By way of Apologie. For the banished Members of the late flourishing University of Cambridge. By some of the said Sufferers. (Oxoniae,1646.); [Bound with] Mercurius Belgicus: Or, A briefe Chronologie of the Battails, Sieges, Conflicts, and other most remarkable passages from the beginning of this Rebellion, to the 25. of March, 1646...(Printed 1646.).

Oxford, Printed in the Yeare, 16468vo. 3.75 x 5.75 ins. [14] + 223 pp. + [1] + [12] + 34 pp. + [6] + [48] pp. This copy lacking the engraved title page (‘the barbarous out-rages’) which is supplied in facsimile. Includes preface at beginning, preface to the second series of Mercurius Rusticus (I-IV), with a catalogue of cathedrals; preface to the Querela with index to it and the Mercurius Rusticus; preface to Mercurius Belgicus and Chronologie; this section lacking the additional 16 page ‘Catalogue of the Persons of Quality slain on both sides’. In Mercurius Rusticus V, D1 has been replaced by an exquisitely hand-written leaf, simulating a printed page. Bound in Victorian blind-stamped decorated calf, spine divided into compartments by raised bands, with red morocco label and marbled endpapers. Faded red edges. Extremities worn. Lower corners of pages to H6, clipped. Tears and ink stains to preface; browning and ink and water stains in text. Ownership inscriptions of William Jame(e)son on reverseof title and margins and also of Elizabeth Guest on margins (with prayer on verso of Querela title-page), both 1695. Other names, comments, etc., elsewhere and drawings of birds on reverse of title.The 1646 single-volume edition of the royalist newsbook, Mercurius Rusticusfirst issued in parts, May 1643 - March 1644, reprinted with additional material. These newsbooks, which first appeared in late 1641, are regarded as the forerunners of the English newspaper. The royalist Mercurius Aulicus,was issued in the royalist headquarters of Oxford from January 1643, as an answer to the London newsbooks, and it inspired many similar publications.(Raymond lists about 70 Mercurius titles alone). Mercurius Rusticus was published anonymously from May 1643, but is attributed to Bruno Ryves

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(c.1596-1677), a royal chaplain and Vicar of Stanwell, Middlesex. After he joined the royal army, his living was sequestered, hence his recourse to journalism; (after the Restoration, he became successively dean of Chichester and of Windsor). The first series of Rusticus (I-XVIII) details the plundering of royalist households. It includes the ‘outrages of Colonell Sandyes in his perambulation of Kent,’ as Colonel Edwin Sandys, of Northbourne, was securing the county for parliament in 1642. In a raid by Sandys on the house of the absent dean of Canterbury, his wife is immodestlytreated, her cabinet broken open and her son sent to Dover Castle; later the Dean himself is arrested, ‘with their Swords drawn,’at Gravesend. A cleric ofLaudian persuasion, Ryves emphasised the despoliation of cathedrals, like Canterbury, Rochester and Chichester, described in the second series of Rusticus (parts I-IV). The ‘Rebells’ first attempt of this kind was ‘on the Cathedrall Church of Canterbury, under the conduct of Colonel Sandys,’ in which the soldiers, ‘Giant-like, began to fight with God himselfe, overthrew the Communion Table...defaced the goodly Screen...violated the Monuments...spoyled the Organs, brake downe the ancient Railes and Seats...forced open the Cupboards of the Singing-men, rent some of their Surplices, Gownes and Bibles...mangled all our Service-books and Books of Common-Prayer; bestrowing the pavement with the leaves thereof...’ (N5). Subsequently, as Ryves relates, the Colonel himself is mortally wounded in Prince Rupert’s first cavalry charge of the war, at the skirmish of Powick Bridge, near Worcester, in September 1642 (but living long enough to engage in a exchange of tracts on his alleged renunciation of the parliamentary cause). The Querela, concerning the sufferings of the University of Cambridge under Cromwell’s soldiers, is attributed to John Barwick (1612-64), a fellow of St. John’s College, and Dean of St. Pauls after the Restoration. To this 1646 edition of the Rusticus, is added the Mercurius Belgicus or ‘Chronologie’ of events from December 1641-March 1645, ‘a candid and impartiall Epitomie of an unnaturall Warre, Subjects banding against their lawfull Prince, Brother against Brother, and Father against Sonne.’ Scarce copy of a lively work of royalist propaganda. ESTC R203457 Thomason Tracts E.1099 (1)-(3). Raymond, Invention of the Newspaper (1996) DNB. [ref: 20439 ] £300

FIRST EDITION IN WRAPPER.1084. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. THE EDWARDIANS.

Published by Leonard and Virginia Woolf the Hogarth Press, Tavistock Square, [London]. 1930First edition. 5.25 x 7.5 inches. 349 pp. + [1]. Illustrated by Hogarth Press roundel on title page. Half-title. Bound in original orange cloth, gilt with buff pictorial dust wrapper. Some wear on spine and staining, extending to lower front board. Wrapper has small chips and splits at head of spine with minor water stain extending to back. Top edge darkened with small stains. Faded ownership inscription on first free endpaper. Otherwise a fine copy with clean interior.A fine copy of Vita Sackville-West’s second novel, published by her Bloomsbury collaborators, Leonard and Virginia Woolf at their Hogarth Press (established 1917) and complete in dust wrapper. Many of Vita’s books

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became best-sellers and, in fact, earned far more for the Press than those of Virginia, her lover. Woolmer 235b. [ref: 20680 ] £125

1085. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. ENGLISH COUNTRY HOUSES. Britain in Pictures Ltd. 1942First Edition. 48 pp., including 21 b/w illustrations + 12 coloured plates. Green cloth. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.One of the Britain in Pictures series. We have another copy without wrapper at £8. [ref: 18070 ] £12

SIGNED LIMITED EDITION.1086. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. THE GARDEN. Decorations by

Broom Lynne.Michael Joseph. 1946First Edition, 135 pp. with decorations, edges uncut. Limited edition numbered 667 of 750 printed, signed and numbered by the author. Original buckram with gilt titles to upper board and spine. Attractive bookplate on front paste-down otherwise a near fine copy in an acetate protective cover.[ref: 19498 ] £350

1087. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. IN YOUR GARDEN AGAIN Michael Joseph. 1953First Edition. 178 + [1] pp. iIllustrated with photographic plates. Original cloth in price clipped dust jacket. A fine clean copy in a near mint dust wrapper.This is very good copy of the first edition, the second of her classic gardeningbooks. [ref: 19490 ] £45

1088. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. KNOLE AND THE SACKVILLES.Heinemann, London. 1922First edition. xvi + 231 pp. with frontis and 18 other b/w illustrations. Original pictorial cloth. Ex-library copy with usual stamps, etc. Wear to extremities and 3-4 cm mark to upper board. A good reading copy.[ref: 18622 ] £85

1089. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. THE LAND. William Heinemann Ltd. 19558vo. 107 pp. Original gilt boards with dust wrapper First published 1927 poetry in the pastoral tradition. Woodcut by George Plank. [ref: 18072 ] £20

1090. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA. ORCHARD AND VINEYARD. John Lane. The Bodley Head . 19218vo. 101 pp. + [2] adverts. Text unopened.

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A very good example of Vita Sackville-West’s fourth work. [ref: 19524 ] £350

1091. SACKVILLE-WEST, VITA., Edited By Philippa Nicolson. V. SACKVILLE-WEST’S GARDEN BOOK A Collection taken from, In Your Garden, In Your Garden Again, More For your Garden, Even More For your Garden, By Philippa Nicolson.

Michael Joseph. London, 1968Second Impression of the First Edition, 8vo. 6 x 9 inches, 250 pp. With illustrations throughout. Bound in the original cloth, gilt in good condition in the original dust wrapper.The essence of Vita Sackville-West’s four gardening books here in one volume. [ref: 20979 ] £20

DECORATIVE MANUSCRIPT MAP 1092. SANDGATE. MANUSCRIPT DEED. RELEASE TO USES OF A

COTTAGE OR TENEMENT AND LAND AT SANDGATE IN THE PARISH OF CHERITION. MRS. ANN JEFFREY AND OTHERS RELEASE THE PROPERTY TO THE Rev. R.G. GREENE

7 March, 1840Four large (2 x 3 feet), vellum membranes, joined. The first has a large and fine calligraphic sUPERSCRIPTION - ‘RAWDON GRIFFITHS GREEN’ below which is a ‘MAP TO WHICH THE ABOVE WRITTEN INDENTURE REFERS’. A finely-drawn, coloured ink and watercolour, manuscript map, roughly 20 x 12 inches, showing the position of the property, the highways, roads and paths, together with the names of adjoining landowners. Below this are the seals and signatures of the eight people involved in this contract. ANN JEFFERY; W. BATEMAN; JEFFERY CULLEN; B. MINTER; R.G. GREENE AND RALPH THO. BROCKMAN. Traces of old folds and the outside a little dusty, otherwise very fresh and clean, all seals in good order.One parcel of land would seem to be situated on the north side of the present Sandgate High Street and the corner of what is now [Military Hill] (then Road from Sandgate to Cherition commonly called Bugg’s Hill). The positionwould appear to be what is now the Village Green. The other dwelling or possibly a shop is facing, ‘Street or Lane in Sandgate called The Back Lane’ Either side of the plot are strips marked with owners names including Cyrus Robert Purday who was the owner of the Circulating Library in Sandgate and publisher of several guides to Sandgate. Behind these shops is a long strip called ‘Garden Ground’ running behind the shops in Back Lane all the way to ‘Buggs Hill’’. Behind this Garden Ground is a Large Meadow or Pasture running from the garden ground at the rear of the shops in Back Lane to below the cliffs which are marked ’Land of Her Majesty’s Master General and Board of Ordnance or one of them commonly called Shorn Cliff’.[ref: 17162 ] £250

1093. SANDGATE PANORAMA. SANDGATE FROM THE SEA.

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Charles Reynolds and Co London, n.d. but c. 1890Folding lithographic panorama 21 x 3½ inches, now mounted and framed in conservation materials, overall size 28 x 10 inches.. Traces of old folds, otherwise in very good condition.Extensive view from the Coastgard Station on the left to Radnor Cliff on the right. Originating in Germany, this type of view was published in small concertina-folded view books without text. It is an example of the curious mixture of photograph and hand-drawn lithograph which were prolific fromabout 1875 to 1895, when photography finally prevailed. [ref: 20579 ] £110

1094. SANDGATE VIEW. THE EPISCOPAL CHAPEL, SANDGATE. Published by the Misses Purday, Sandgate. Lithographed by J. Newman, 48,Watling Street, London. No date but c.1845Hand-coloured lithograph mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 17.5 x 15 inches approx. Printed surface within inner margin, 14 x 11 inches. It depicts the chapel viewed from the northwest with sheep grazing in the foreground and a horse-drawn carriage ascending Military Road on the right, with the High Street and sea visible beyond; in the background is Martello Tower no. 4 at the end of the Leas. Good condition apart from an inch and a half, old closed tear in the lower margin and some slight loss of surface near, and slightly affecting, a few letters in the title.Rare lithographic view of the Episcopal Chapel at Sandgate, built in the Palladian style, with cupola on top. The Earl of Darnley built the ‘Episcopal Chapel’ on a plot of land from his adjoining estate and it was consecrated on 8 May 1822. Sandgate was developing rapidly at that time and a larger church was required. The earlier building was demolished in 1848 and a new, more commodious church, St. Paul’s, was completed the following year.Thomas Purday was established as a bookseller and owner of the circulatinglibrary at Sandgate as early as 1816. He published a Sandgate, Folkestone and Hythe Guide in the 1840s and passed his business on to his daughters, Sarah and Mary Ann, who reissued the guide wth their own imprint about 1846. It is possible that the view of the Chapel was issued as a consequence of its impending demolition and replacement. [ref: 20164 ] £350

1095. SANDGATE VIEW. NEW SCHOOLS, SANDGATE. c.1870Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conservation materials suitable forframing, overall size 8 x 7.5 inches approx.. Engraved surface including margin, 4.5 x 3.5 inches. View of the recently built Sandgate Schools with a carriage, mounted figures and pedestrians on the road in the foreground. Sandgate’s new National Schools were built in 1866 [ref: 20145 ] £20

1096. SANDGATE VIEW. THE NORTH WEST VIEW OF SANDGATE CASTLE IN THE COUNTY OF KENT This Castle was built by K: Hen: VIII ( at the Expence of £5000) together with Deal, Sandown,and Walmer, in Order to prevent a foreign Invasion on this Coast, which that King apprehended after he had shaken off the Popes Yoke, and

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provoked the Emp.r: by the Divorce of Q: Cath.: Q: Eliz: A: D: 1588 on her Progress into Kent to take care of the Defence of the Coast lodged in this Castle. Saml. and Nathl. Buck delin. et Sculpt. 1735.

Samuel and Nathaniel Buck. 1735Lightly hand-coloured etched and engraved on copper and mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 22 x 15.5 inches approx. Engraved surface including inner margin, 14.25 x 7.75 inches. Early manuscript inscription added in ink at foot of print: Sandgate Castle is near Folkstone.The classic view of Sandgate Castle, seen largely as built by Henry VIII, and before its remodelling to include a Martello tower, after 1805. The Buck Brothers were renowned for their accuracy and travelled around England between 1724-38 completing sets of prints for the regions, commonly known as Buck’s Antiquities or Views. [ref: 20161 ] £100

SANDGATE VIEW. 1097. SANDGATE Drawn and engraved by J. Jeakes 1816

Aquatint in original hand-colour, mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 11.5 x 9.5 inches. Painted surface including inner margin, 8.75 x 5.5 inches. View from neighbourhood of Martello tower no. 4, with foreground figures, the post-Napoleonic Castle and distant view of other towers on the heights and along Hythe Bay in the background. This rare view appeared originally in Five Views of Hythe, Sandgate, and Folkestone by J. Jeakes (1816) and is derived from an earlier view that first appeared in The Little Sea Torch; or, True Guide for Coasting Pilots, by J.T. Serres (1801). A larger version was drawn, etched and published by Wm. Findlater, aquatinted by R.and D. Havell, in 1812 under the title of ‘Sandgatein Kent, with Romney Marsh in the distance’. This smaller version is simplified, but shows similar figures, while prominent red ensigns have beenadded to the flagpoles. Abbey [ref: 20154 ] £225

SANDGATE VIEW.1098. SANDGATE. Drawn from Nature and on Stone by S. Prout.

Pub: by Rodwell and Martin. 46, New Bond St. Jan. 1823. Printed by C. Hullmandel. 1823Hand-coloured lithograph mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 22 x 15.5 inches approx. Printed surface within inner margin, 13 x 10 inches. Dramatic view of a two-masted sailing ship wrecked off Sandgate Castle. There is a rescue boat alongside the wreck and rescuers on the shore heave on a line to the beach. In the foreground are rocks and the ship’s rudder, which has carried away. This plate was originally issued as part of Hullmandel and Harding’s Britannia Delineata: Comprising Views of the Antiquities, Remarkable Buildings Buildings, and Picturesque Scenery of Great Britain. Kent (1822). It was the first of a series proposed to illustrate every county but, because of its high cost, it was a publishing failure and only Kent was ever issued. [ref: 20165 ] £300

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SANDGATE VIEW.1099. SANDGATE.

Edward Churton, 1847Hand-coloured wood engraving mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 9 x 8 inches. Engraved surface including margin, 5.5 x 3.75 inches. Figures and sheep in the foreground overlook Sandgate High Street, including the post-Napoleonic Castle and old chapel . Sailing vessels dot the sea in Hythe Bay. This illustration originally appeared as the frontispiece of ‘Sandgate: A Poem’ (1847), believed to have been written by Prudence Hogg, the wife of the Recorder of Folkestone, Mr Dinsdale. The sixty page book included a number of unusual views of the Folkestone area. [ref: 20147 ] £20

SANDGATE VIEW.1100. SANDGATE AND SHORNCLIFFE CAMP

Newman, no date but c.1840Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 8.5 x 7.5 inches approx. Window, 4.75 x 3.75 inches. Figures in the foreground look down over Sandgate from the Leas. The view ranges from Hythe bay to the post-Napoleonic Castle and new church with thebarrack blocks of Shorncliffe Camp and Martello towers on the heights in the background. [ref: 20144 ] £20

SANDGATE VIEW.1101. SANDGATE CASTLE Tomkins del. Eastgate sc.

Pub. Jan 1, 1801, by Edw. Harding 98 Pall Mall. 1801Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conservation materials suitable forframing, overall size 11 x 10 inches approx. Engraved surface, including margin, 7 x 5.75 inches. A view of the original Sandgate Castle, little changed from the time of Henry VIII, shortly before the interior was converted into a Martello tower, to match those under construction in its neighbourhood from 1805 onwards. There are two foreground figures looking out to sea where a small naval vessel flies the blue ensign. It is interesting that the Castle still flies the old union flag without the additional red stripe that signified the union of Britain and Ireland, which came into existence on 1st January, the first day of the new century, and the publication date of this print. It appears in book form in A Journey from London to the Isle of Wight, Vol. II, From Dover to the Isle of Wight, by Thomas Pennant (1801). Upcott [ref: 20155 ] £60

SANDGATE VIEW. 1102. SANDGATE CASTLE, KENT. Engraved by J. Newton.

Published by S. Hooper, June 16th 1787

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Lightly hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 10 x 9 inches. Engraved surface, including margin, 6.5 x 4.75 inches. A detailed view, from the west, of the original Castle, virtually untouched since the time of Henry VIII, standing in isolation, with two foreground figures, just before the start of the French wars. [ref: 20149 ] £25

SANDGATE VIEW.1103. SANDGATE FROM SHORN CLIFF Engraved by J. Newman,

Watling Street.J. Newman, Watling Street. c.1850Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conversation materials ready for framing, overall size 10.5 x 9 inches. Engraved surface including margin, 6.75 x 4.75 inches. A perspective from the heights of Shorncliffe, with a mounted figure and pedestrians on Military Road in the foreground, and a view over Sandgate showing the post-Napoleonic Castle, new church and Martello tower no.4 on the Leas; sailing craft and a steamship dot the sea. In the background are the houses of Folkestone with the parish church and Bayle fort, an East Cliff Martello tower, brick kilns, and signs of early industrial activity and the white cliffs. [ref: 20152 ] £ 35

1104. SANDGATE [FROM THE EAST]. J. and E. Harwood, 26 Fenchurch Street, London. No date but c.1840Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conservation material suitable for framing, overall size 9.5 x 8 inches approx.. Engraved surface, including margin, 5.5 x 4 inches. A group of figures in the foreground overlook Sandgate Hill and the High Street, including the post-Napoleonic Castle and old chapel; Martello tower no.6 is seen on the heights to the west and ships and boats in Hythe Bay. Based on an illustration which first appeared in one of J. Harwood’s view books. [ref: 20148 ] £20

1105. SANDGATE, FROM THE EAST Newman and Co. Litho: 48 Watling St., London.

Published by Jenner, Sandgate. c.1850Large tinted lithograph, in all likelihood, hand-coloured at the time of issue (certainly not modern). Mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 18 x 15.5 inches approx. Image, including inner margin, 14.25 x 11.25 inches. Wide view from below Martello tower no.4 with foreground figures, overlooking Sandgate Hill and the High Street with the post-Napoleonic Castle and the new St. Paul’s church; a line of Martello towers, starting from No.5, is visible on the heights. Messrs. Jenner and Co. Sandgate was an adaptable business, which was linked in some way with both the Purday printing and publishing concern, and with Tiffen’s circulating library of Hythe (and later of Folkestone), and who also issued a Sandgate guide of their own. Jenner’s was on the north side of Sandgate High Street, just past Military Road going towards Hythe

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and later ran a wine merchant’s business, supplying to the Shorncliffe garrison (see the two receipt books of Jenners from 1860-62, 20131). [ref: 20162 ] £450

1106. SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE FROM THE LEAS. J.T. Serres, 1801Hand-coloured aquatint mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 10 x 6 inches. Window, 5.75 x 1.5 inches. View from adjacent to Martello tower no. 4, which is part-illustrated, with foreground figures, the post-Napoleonic Castle, the old chapel and distant view of other towers on the heights and Hythe Bay and Romney Marsh in the distance. This is a view which first appeared in The Little Sea Torch; or, True Guide for Coasting Pilots, by J.T. Serres (1801). A larger version was drawn, etched and published by Wm. Findlater, aquatinted by R.and D. Havell, in 1812 under the title of ‘Sandgate in Kent’. [ref: 20141 ] £20

1107. SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE FROM THE LOWER ROAD. Engraved by J. Newman, 48 Watling Street.

c.1850Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conversation materials ready for framing. Engraved surface including margin, 6.75 x 4.25 inches. Engraved by J. Newman 48, Watling Street. A perspective from Lower Sandgate Road with figures in the foreground, sheep and a horsedrawn vehicle with a view over Sandgate showing the post-Napoleonic Castle, new church and Martello tower no.6 on the heights; boats are drawn up on the foreshore and other sailing craft and a steamship appear at sea. In the background is Hythe Bay, fringed with Martello towers and a windmill. [ref: 20151 ] £35

1108. SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE FROM THE SEA. Rock And Co., London No. 800.

[Rock And Co., London] No. 800.No date but c.1850Hand-coloured steel engraving, mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 8.25 x 7.5 inches approx. Window 4.5 x 3.5 inches. The view shows small sailing craft in foreground, the post-Napoleonic Castle, new church with Martello towers on the heights beyond and the new houses on Radnor Cliff to the right. [ref: 20140 ] £20

1109. SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE, FROM THE SEA Newman and Co. Litho: 48, Watling St. London.

Published by Jenner, Sandgate. Newman and Co.Litho 48, Watling Street, London. c.1850Large tinted lithograph, in all likelihood, hand-coloured at the time of issue (certainly not modern). Mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing. Image, including inner margin, 14.25 x 10.25 inches. View from the sea with rowing boat and passengers in the foreground, looking over to the

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foreshore (with bathing machines drawn up), the houses of the High Street, the post-Napoleonic Castle and new church; Martello towers, Nos.4, 5 and 6 are visible on the heights behind. Messers Jenner and Co. Sandgate was an adaptable concern, linked in some way with both the Purday printing and publishing concern and with Tiffen’s circulating library of Hythe and, later, of Folkestone. Jenner’s was on the north side of Sandgate High Street, just past Military Road going towards Hythe and later ran a wine merchant’s business, supplying to the Shorncliffegarrison (see the two receipt books of Jenners from 1860-62, 20131). [ref: 20163 ] £450

1110. SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE IN KENT, WITH ROMNEY MARSH IN THE DISTANCE Drawn and etched by Wm. Findlater. Aquatinted by R. and D. Havell.

Published July 1st. 1812, by W. Findlater, 7 Bolton Row, Piccadilly. 1812Hand-coloured aquatint mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 22 x 15.5 inches approx. Window 18.5 x 11.25 inches. View from next to Martello tower No.4 on the Leas, which is shown manned, with foreground figures. including off duty soldiers, overlooking the High Street and Military Road and the post-Napoleonic Castle. Details include horse-drawn vehicles, boats and bathing machines drawn up on the foreshore and sailing vessels offshore. Rows of Martello towers line the heights and the coast of Romney Marsh is seen across Hythe Bay, with the hills of the old shoreline in the background. Several original vertical fold lines are visible.This is derived from a view which first appeared in The Little Sea Torch; or, True Guide for Coasting Pilots, by J. T. Serres (1801). [ref: 20160 ] £750

1111. SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE, KENT Drawn by G. Rowe.Printed and Published by G. Wooll, Printseller, 5, High Street, Hastings. No date but 1830Hand-coloured lithograph mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 13 x 11 inches approx. Engraved surface including inner margin, 9 x 6.5 inches. View of Sandgate from the east, with the post-Napoleonic Castle, old chapel and buildings at the foot of Sandgate Hill and in the High Street beyond; distant view of Martello towers on the heights and along the shore of Hythe Bay. From G. Rowe’s ‘Illustrations of Hastings and its Vicinity’ . Abbey [ref: 20157 ] £250

1112.SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE, LOOKING SOUTH. Engraved by J. Newman, 48 Watling Street.

Pub. by S. and M. Purday, Sandgate. No date but c.1840Hand-coloured steel engraving mounted in conservation material suitable for framing, overall size 10.5 x 9 inches approx. Engraved surface, including margin, 6.75 x 4.75 inches. Sandgate, including the post-Napoleonic Castle, old chapel and foreshore with sailing craft and a steamship at sea and Martello

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tower no. 4 on the Leas to the east. Date added in ink after title: June 23 1852.This print was published and sold by the Sandgate bookseller, Purday, who published local guidebooks to Folkestone, Sandgate and Hythe, using these views. S. and M. were the initials of the sisters, Sarah and Mary Ann Purday, who tok over the running of the business from their father, Thomas. [ref: 20150 ] £35

1113.SANDGATE VIEW. SANDGATE [PANORAMA]. G. J. Knox, Del. E Walker, Lith.

Day and Son, Lithrs. to the Queen. No date but c.1850Tinted oblong lithograph mounted in conservation materials suitable for framing, overall size 26 x 11 inches approx. Printed surface within inner margin, 22.25 x 7 inches. Panoramic view of Sandgate from the east, with numerous figures and sheep in the foreground. The view stretches from HytheBay, with sailing vessels inshore, to the crests of the Downs inland, and includes the post-Napoleonic Castle, the High Street and new church, Military Road, and Sandgate Hill to the junction with Coolinge Lane, and has Martello towers nos.5 and 6 on the heights in the middle ground. Traces of original folds. A fine example.[ref: 20166 ] £750

1114.SANDWICH - ANDERSON, ARTHUR HENRY . SANDWICH , KENT. AN APPRECIATION OF AN ANCIENT BOROUGH, AND A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO ITS MOST INTERESTING FEATURES.

Homeland Association. No date but c.1923Ninth Edition, 32 pp.+ xxxv adverts. Illustrated with black and white photographs and plan of town Bound in Original printed wrappers with art nouveau design, neat bookplate, and presentation stamp to title page. A nice copy.An interesting volume from the Homeland Handy Guides series, this being No 3 official town Guide c.1923, highlighting places of interest and the history of this important town . [ref: 18920 ] £40

1115.SANDWICH - BENTWICH, MARGARET. HISTORY OF SANDWICH IN KENT.

Deal, T.F. Pain & Sons, 1971.168 pp., + (4) pp. with illus. Original cloth in dustwrapper, boards faded. *Limited edition of 500 copies - signed by the Author. The only modern history of the town. [ref: 18034 ] £25

1116.SANDWICH - DAWSON, ROBERT, Lieut. R.E. SANDWICH. (FROM THE ORDNANCE SURVEY). BOUNDARY COMMISSION MAP.

House of Commons, n.d. but 1831Lithographic map, 13 x 8 inches, with contemporary hand-colouring. A fine example with attractive colouring.

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These maps were produced from the Ordnance Survey maps, in this instanceon a scale of 4 inches to one mile, to redefine the Municipal Borough boundaries. Where previously the boundary had been defined by the bank of the Stour it now ran along the centre of the river. [ref: 16831 ] £40

1117.SANDWICH HANDBOOK. THE ANCIENT TOWN AND PORT OF SANDWICH. OFFICIAL HANDBOOK.

Published by the Sandwich Corporation in Conjunction with the Chamber of Commerce. No date but c.1955Booklet. 39 pp. with b/w illustration. Original coloured pictorial card wrappers. A near mint copy of an attractive post-war guide.[ref: 18468 ] £12

1118. SANDWICH HANDBOOK. Edited by C.P. NEILSON. THE ANCIENT TOWN AND PORT OF SANDWICH. OFFICIAL HANDBOOK.

Published by the Sandwich Corporation in Conjunction with the Chamber of Commerce. No date but c.192777 pp. with b/w illustration. Original pictorial card wrappers. A little foxing tofirst gathering otherwise a good copy.The illustrations show a wonderfully uncluttered street scene with none of the traffic congestion encountered today. [ref: 19802 ] £20

1119.SANDYS, CHARLES. CONSUETUDINES KANCIAE: A HISTORY OF GAVELKIND AND OTHER REMARKABLE CUSTOMS IN THE COUNTY OF KENT

John Russell Smith, 4, Old Compton Street, Soho Square, London. 1851xvi + 352 pp. + 12 + 12 adverts, with folding geanealogy of the Sons of Woden (browned as is usual), and two folding facsimile documents. Original blind-stamped blue cloth, gilt. Repair to spine, otherwise a very good copy.Scarce 19th century account of Gavelkind and other Saxon, Jutish and early Kentish matters including language. Only 184 copies are accounted for in the list of subscribers which gives an idea of the print run. [ref: 17226 ] £100

MANUSCRIPT TITHE MAP1120. SARR NEAR SANDWICH. PLAN OF THE PARISH OF ST.

GYLES OTHERWISE SARR IN THE COUNTY OF KENT. We the undersigned Tithe Commissioners for England and Wales do hereby certify this to be a copy of the map and plan referred to in the apportionment of the Kent

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Charge in lieu of tithes in the Parish of St. Gyles otherwise called Sarr in the County of Kent. As witness our hands signed William Blamire and T W Buller.

Signed G H Whalley, Assistant Tithe Commissioner. [Signed with initials] E.J.W. 23/3/43Surveyor’s signature abraded and so far not traced. [John ???man]. 1843Finely drawn manuscript tithe map, 25 x 18.75 ins. Ink and colour wash on paper, mounted and laid on linen. Some surface dirt and slight discolouring, later pencilling of names, with occasional additions in pencil. A very attractive mid-19th century Kentish tithe map of the parish now known as Sarre. An interesting feature of the map is that it shows an intricate network of water-filled ditches fed by the River Stour, which were presumably water-meadows. The scale is given at 6 chains to the inch. The fields are numbered and the owners’ names have been pencilled on to the map in a later hand. We have obtained a copy of the tithe schedule dated 1841, and most of the information on ownership is the same. From this list we know the uses of each field, i.e. its cultivation (marsh, arable, pasture etc). It also identifies all the buildings on the map, with ownership and use. Using Google Earth, it can be seen that the modern field patterns remain remarkably consistent, the most obvious change being the arc of the railway which cuts across the lower right hand quadrant of the map and the additionof new housing developments. The windmill still stands (in working order), with the nearby turnpike cottage still standing on the Rams gate-CanterburyA253. It is truly remarkable that so little has changed in the more than 170 years that have passed since the map was made. The Tithe Commutation Act of 1836 set up the Tithe Commission headed by three Commissioners sitting in London, William Blamire (1790-1862), Captain Thomas Wentworth Buller, RN, (1792-1852) and the Rev. Richard Jones. By 1841 G.H. Whalley was an Assistant Commissioner. The Act allowed the substitution of a money payment - the tithe rent-charge - for payment in kind. The first tasks of the Commissioners were to find out wherecommutation had already taken place, and also to establish the boundaries of every unit in which tithes were paid separately. This unit was known as a tithe district to distinguish it from a parish or township. This map would appear to be a result of these enquiries. [ref: 20446 ] £750

1121.SATTIN, D.L. BARGE BUILDING AND BARGE BUILDERS OF THE SWALE.

Rainham Meresborough Books, 17 Station Road, Rainham, Gillingham, Kent, ME8 7RS. 19908vo. 6 x 8.5 inches. 130 pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs, drawings and facsimiles in text. Bound in pictorial laminated boards. Small neat ink inscription on front paste-down; otherwise fine condition. A detailed history of barge building on the Swale, including a description of the construction process. Donald Sattin became an apprentice shipwright in Alfred Marconi White’s barge building yard at Conyer in 1936, eventually becoming foreman shipwright of the yard. [ref: 21125 ] £20

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1122. SATTIN, D.L. JUST OFF THE SWALE. THE STORY OF THE BARGE BUILDING VILLAGE OF CONYER. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BYJEREMY NESHAM.

Meresborough Books. 1978[12] + 140 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original illustrated boards. A very good copy.A very good history of this boat-building village and the barges they constructed, now out of print. [ref: 10889 ] £25

KENTISH SAINT.1123. SAWYER, MINNIE. THE STORY OF ST. MILDRED OF

THANET. A Saint of Saxon Times. By Minnie Sawyer. Edited with Preface by The Rev. T. E. Egan, O.S.B. Abbot of St Augustine’s, Ramsgate.

St. Anselm's Society, 3, Dyer’s Buildings, Holborn, London. 1912First edition. 8vo. 5 x 7.5 inches. xxxv + [i] +188 pp. Illustrated by six plates, including coloured map. Bound in original blue cloth, with pictorial front board. Lacks first free endpaper. Extremities worn and some spotting. Bookplate.The life and legends of St Mildred of Thanet (d.732). She was an Anglo Saxon princess, sent to France for her religious education and who, after many experiences that have become part of her legend, fled back to Thanet, via Flanders, landing at Ebbsfleet. She rejoined her mother, St. Ermenburga(herself a Kentish princess), who had founded the Abbey of Minster-in Thanet, about 670, and later succeeded her as Abbess. Devotion to her remained strong in the Thanet area. A second edition was published about 1920. [ref: 20678 ] £30

1124. THE OYSTER & DREDGERS OF WHITSTABLE. Joseph Collard, 1902

92 pp. with map and photo illustrations. Bound in original green wrappers.Standard book on the Kentish oyster fishery. Scarce. [ref: 18965 ] £85

1125. SCARLETT, BERNARD. SHIPMINDER. THE STORY OF HER MAJESTY’S COASTGUARD.

Pelham Books. 1971207 pp., with photo illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A very good copy.A good history of the service from the foundation to 1970. [ref: 8823 ] £18

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PRESENTATION COPY1126. SCOTT, BENJAMIN J. THE NORMAN BALLIOLS IN

ENGLAND COMPILED IN PART FROM MR.WENTWORTH HUYSHE’SHAROLD AND THE BALLIOLS. With illustrations and additional matter, including introductory and concluding chapters and a pedigree.

Privately Printed. 1914Large 8vo., xix + 476 pp., with numerous illustrations and folding pedigrees. Finely printed on hand-made paper with deckle edges. Original green cloth gilt, slightly rubbed on extremities but a very good copy.Presentation copy to Hugh Scott with a letter from the author inserted. Numerous annotations and extra material added to the chapter on the Scotts. The Kent connection here is with the Scotts of Scot’s Hall. There is a chapter on them and the book relates to the ancestry of this ancient family. Very scarce. [ref: 16511 ] £145

1127. SCOTT, RIVERS. THE GATEWAY OF ENGLAND. The story of Dover Harbour.

Dover Dover Harbour Board, 1965Second edition revised. 4to. 7.25 x 9.75 inches. 48 pp. + [55]. Illustrated by sepia endpapers and blue vignettes, by photographs in text and by 54 black and white photographs, including map, at end. Original coloured pictorial wrappers. Very good condition.First published in 1956, to celebrate the 350th anniversary of the Dover Harbour Board. An interesting look at the history of the Board and its state in the early sixties, with some fine photographs of the docks and ships. [ref: 21027] £12

1128. SCOTT-JAMES, ANN. SISSINGHURST. THE MAKING OF AGARDEN.

Michael Joseph. 1975Third impression. 159 pp. with colour and black and white photos. Original cloth gilt, in dustwrapper. A very good copy.The first edition. Still one of the best books on Sissinghurst. [ref: 19518] £20

1129. SELBY, ELIZABETH. TEYNHAM MANOR AND HUNDRED (798-1935). Meresborough Books. 1935

4to 10 x 7.5 inches xv +126 pp. including frontispiece, plus 9 pp. of photographic illustration and 4 maps. Original blue buckram, gilt. A fine copy.Containing much information on the history and social history of Teynham, Lynsted and Doddington with appendices on the Reeve’s Account (c.1346), Subsidy Rolls and Churchwardens’ Accounts. The scarce original edition which was produced in very small numbers.

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[ref: 21656] £65

1130. SELLER, JOHN. KENT. Francis Grose. 1787Hand-coloured copper engraved map with letterpress description below. A very good example.Published by Grose in his ‘Antiquities of England and Wales’ [ref: 17999] £65

1131.SEVENOAKS - DINES, H.G. and A. M. INST, and S. BUCHAN,and C.A. HOLMES, and C. R. BRISTOW. GEOLOGY OF THE

COUNTRY AROUND SEVENOAKS AND TUNBRIDGE. HMSO. 1969xii + 183 pp. with maps and photos. Original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. A mint copy.Part of the Memoirs of the Geological Survey of G.B. series. Now only published in paperback.

[ref: 16823] £30

1132. SEVENOAKS - DINES, H.G. and A. M. INST, and S. BUCHAN, and C.A. HOLMES, and C. R. BRISTOW. GEOLOGY

OF THE COUNTRY AROUND SEVENOAKS AND TUNBRIDGE.

HMSO. 1982xii + 183 pp. with maps and photos. Original printed card wrappers. A mint copy.Part of the Memoirs of the Geological Survey of G.B. series. Now

only published in paperback. [ref: 19527] £20

1133. SEVENOAKS - DUNLOP, JOHN. THE PLEASANT TOWN OF SEVENOAKS. A HISTORY.

Caxton and Holesdale Press, Sevenoaks. 1965Second Impression. 238 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original cloth in dust wrapper. Useful modern history, well compiled, also covers the large houses and land owners of the locality. [ref: 15701 ] £25

1134. SHEARS, W.S. WILLIAM NASH OF ST. PAUL’S CRAY PAPERMAKERS

The Batchworth Press, London. Published for private circulation, 19508vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. frontis. + ix + [i] + 177 pp. + [1]. Illustrated by 27 plates, two in colour and two sketches at foot of text. Original blue cloth, gilt, with detached dust wrapper inset. Top corners bumped and some stains and scratches to boards and spine, otherwise fine condition. 1963 inscription on first free endpaper.

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Interesting history of this North Kent paper mill printed for private circulation. It includes the War Diary, August 1940 - April 1945. The mill was heavily damaged in the air raid of 19th-20th March 1941. [ref: 20557 ] £20

1135. SHEERNESS. THE OFFICIAL GUIDE TO SHEERNESS AND THE ISLE OF SHEPPEY.

Printed and published by Walter Cole Limited. No date but 1949.Booklet. 5 x 7.25 inches. [iv] + 28 pp. + [12] adverts, with a number of b/w photo illustrations. Lacking wrappers and upper half damp-stained.[ref: 21659 ] £30

1136. SHELTON, HAROLD KENTISH RAMBLES By Harold Shelton, M.A. (Oxon).

President, Out of Doors Fellowship: President, London Antiquaries Society; Author of ‘Upland Rambles in Surrey and Sussex;’ ‘The Tourist’s Handbook,’ etc. Editor, ‘The World Book,’ ‘Geography and Man,’ etc. Lecturer in British Antiquities at the City Literary Institute.Sidcup: Kentish District Times Co., Ltd. 1939Small 8vo. 64 pp. [pp.1-2 not provided]. Bound in original stiff card pictorial boards, with illustration (of oast house). Some wear on spine and boards and tape on front hinges. Small neat bookplate inside front cover.Collection of rambles reprinted from the Kentish Times Kent Bibliography [ref: 19212 ] £10

1137. SHEPHERD, G. & GASTINEAU, H. A TREASURY OF KENTPRINTS. A SERIES OF VIEWS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS BY SHEPHERD AND GASTINEAU, &c.

Arthur J. Cassell Ltd. 31 Broadway, Sheerness, Kent. 1972Oblong 8vo., (6) + 124 pages of plates. Original cloth. in dust wrapper, a good copyThis is the only facsimile of the whole series of views, first published in 1829 in Ireland's History of Kent and Vertue's Picturesque Beauties of Great Britain. The reproduction is quite good, and this book is the only inexpensive way of obtaining these well-known views. [ref: 15969 ] £10

1138. SHEPPEY - DALY, AUGUSTUS A. THE HISTORY OF THE ISLE OF SHEPPEY FROM THE ROMAN OCCUPATION TO THE REIGN OF HIS MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY KING EDWARD VII. WITH 90 ILLUSTRATIONS BY JAMES PROCTER.

Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. 1904First edition. 297 pp. with 90 illustrations by J. James Proctor. Bound in original paper wrappers as issued, rebacked in cloth, otherwise a near fine copy.The scarce first edition of this history and guide. Combines charming illustrations and thorough text and remains one of thebest published volumes on the island’s history.

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[ref: 18877 ] £85

1139. SHERLOCK, D. and H. WOODS, ST. AUGUSTINE’S ABBEY: REPORT ON EXCAVATIONS, 1960-78 (Monograph series of

the Kent Archaeological Society)Kent Archaeological Society. 1988xxxi + 366 pp. + 3 coloured plates and 52 b/w plates with numerous figures to the text and several folding ground plans. Blue cloth gilt with slight fraying to top of spine, otherwise fine in dust wrapper.

[ref: 18989 ] £25

1140. SHERWOOD, TIM. THE STEAMBOAT REVOLUTION. London’s first steamships.

Brimscombe Port Tempus Publishing Limited, The Mill, Brimscombe Port, Stroud, GL5 2QG. 2007128 pp. Half-title. Illustrated with black and white photographs and drawings in text. In coloured pictorial card wrappers. In fine condition.An account of the introduction of steam navigation into the port of London. This book looks at sea-going steamboats operating between 1815-1860 serving routes from London to Gravesend, Margate, Ramsgate, Edinburgh, Dublin and the Continental services to Germany, Holland, Belgium and France. [ref: 21133 ] £12

1141.SHORE, W. TEIGNMOUTH. KENT. By W. Teignmouth Shore. Painted by W. Biscombe Gardner.

London A. and C. Black, Soho Square. 1907First Edition. 4to. 6.75 x 9.25 inches. x + 240 pp. Half title. with 2 folding maps and 73 coloured plates by W. Biscombe Gardner. Illustrated by 73 coloured plates, inc luding front ispiece, folding plan and map and a ground plan. Bound inoriginal decoratedgreen cloth, gilt. Topedges gilt. Bookplateon front pastedown.A nice example of this

attractive Black's Colour book. The hopdesign embossed on the boards combineswith the charming colour plates to form avery nice book. This first issue is far better than the later reprint in all respects. [ref: 15940 ] £85

1142. SHORE, W. TEIGNMOUTH. KENT. A. and C. Black. London. 19244to. 238 pp. with 3 maps and 32 coloured plates by W. Biscombe Gardner. Original decorated cloth, gilt.A nice example of this attractive Black's Colour book.

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[ref: 11286 ] £30

1143. [SHRUBSOLE, WILLIAM and DENNE, SAMUEL, editedby FISHER, THOMAS]. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF

ROCHESTER AND ITS ENVIRONS: To which is added, a Description of the Towns, Villages, Gentlemen’s Seats, and Ancient Buildings, Situate on, or near the Road from London to Margate, Deal, and Dover. Embellished with Copper-Plates

Rochester Printed and sold by T. Fisher. Sold also by S. Crowder, Bookseller, in Pater-Noster Row, London. 1772First edition. 12mo. 4.75 x 7.5 inches. xiv + 353 pp. + [1] errata. Irregularities in pagination as described by ESTC. List of subscribers. Illustrated by folding engraved plan of Rochester and 5 other copper-engraved plates. Recent half-calf over marbled boards with contrasting title label, gilt.

Fore-edge margin of one and a half leavesneatly excised with no loss of text,otherwise a very good copy.This work was said to have been startedby William Shrubsole (1729-1797), anindependent minister and mast maker ofSheerness, born in Sandwich. It was,however, substantially written andcompleted by Samuel Denne (1730-1799). He was educated at King’s School, Canterbury and Cambridge and was appointed vicar of Wilmington and Darenth, near Dartford, in 1767. He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1783. An enlarged second edition was published by W. Wildash, Mr Fisher’s successor as bookseller in Rochester, in 1817. ESTC T63426. Smith, p.275. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 19706 ] £200

1144. [SHRUBSOLE, WILLIAM and DENNE, SAMUEL, editedby WILDASH,W.]. THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF

ROCHESTER AND ITS ENVIRONS: To which is added, a Description of the Towns, Villages, Gentlemen’s Seats, and Ancient Buildings, Situate on, or near the Road from London to Margate, Deal, and Dover. Second Edition with considerable additions and improvements. Embellished with Engravings.

Rochester Printed and sold by W. Wildash; Sold also by Longman, Hurst,Rees, Orme, andBrown, Paternoster-Row, London; andall Booksellers. 1817

Second edition. 8vo. 8.5 x 5 inches, xvii+ 419 pp. List of subscribers. Illustratedby a folding engraved plan of Rochesterand 4 other copper-engraved plates.

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Recent quarter calf over marbled boards with contrasting title label, gilt. Map offset on to title page but a very good copy.This edition of The History of Rochester (first edited and published by Thomas Fisher in 1772), has been considerably revised by W. Wildash, Fisher’s successor as bookseller in Rochester. According to the editor’s advertisement, ‘The ingenious compiler of the greater part of it, at least, was the Rev. Samuel Denne.’ It was also said to have been started by William Shrubsole (1729-1797), an independent minister and mistaker of Sheerness, born in Sandwich. Denne (1730-1799) was educated at King’s School, Canterbury and Cambridge and was appointed vicar of Wilmington and Darenth, near Dartford, in 1767. He was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1783. This second edition is supplied with a new map and enlarged by an additional sixty-five pages, bringing it up to date. A further edition was published in 1833. Smith, p.276. [ref: 21071 ] £200

1145. SILLITOE, ALAN and FAY GODWIN. THE SAXON SHORE WAY FROM GRAVESEND TO RYE.

Hutchinson. 1983First Edition. 192 pp. with photo illustration throughout. This is the cheaper paperback edition, issued simultaneously with the hardback.Fay Godwin's fine evocative photographs combine with Alan Sillitoe’s interesting text to make this a sought-after volume. [ref: 18733 ] £25

SIGNED BY GODWIN1146. SILLITOE, ALAN and FAY GODWIN. THE SAXON SHORE

WAY FROM GRAVESEND TO RYE.Hutchinson. 1983First Edition. 8vo 8 x 7 inches, 192 pp. with photo illustration throughout. Bound in original cloth gilt, in the original dust wrapper. A very good copy.Fay Godwin's fine evocative photographs combine with Alan Sillitoe’s interesting text to make this a sought-after volume. This copy is signed by the photographer on the title page. [ref: 21084 ] £40

1147. SIMPER, ROBERT. RIVER MEDWAY AND THE SWALE. Vol. 7 English Estuaries Series.

Creekside Publishing. 1998Folio. 92 pp. with b/w photo illustrations throughout. Original pictorial laminated boards. A near fine copy.A comprehensive look at all activities on the Medway and Swale throughout the twentieth century. [ref: 20813 ] £20

1148. SIMSON, J. EMINENT MEN OF KENT. Elliot Stock. 1893178 pp. with engraved frontis. Original pictorial cloth, gilt. Slight wear to extremities otherwise a good copy.

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A useful reference work. [ref: 18514 ] £25

1149. SKINNER, DON. OLD TONBRIDGE. A selection of postcards first published between 1900 and 1930.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198148 pp. illustrated throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18633 ] £10

1150. SLADE, W.J. OUT OF APPLEDORE. Edited and prefaced by Basil Greenhill.

Conway Maritime Press, London. 1972Ex-library copy with usual markings. 124 pp. with b/w photo illustration. Grey library binding in dust wrapper. A good reading copy.Reminiscences of a Devon coasting seaman. [ref: 20799 ] £8

1151.SMARDEN - HASLEWOOD, REV. FRANCIS. THE MEMORIALS OF SMARDEN, KENT.

Ipswich, Ipswich, Privately Printed. 18864to. 7.5 x 10 inches, xv + 329 pp. with frontis and a number of illustrations in the text. Original decorated cloth, gilt. Spine slightly faded otherwise a very good copy of this scarce book. Companion work to Haslewood’s Antiquities of Smarden, this work is primarily concerned with people and genealogy and is fully indexed. A

privately printed limited issue, the subscribers list accounts for 184 copies, soit may be that, as with his other works, it was limited to 202 copies. [ref: 21082 ] £185

1152. SMITH, C. A NEW MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. DIVIDED INTO LATHES Etc.

Printed for C. Smith No 172 Strand January 6th 1821A further, revision of this map first issued in 1804. Original hand-coloured engraved map 17 x 20 inches, dissected and laid on to linen and preserved in aslip case. A very good example of a coloured map with fine wide margins.Nice example of this turn-of-the-century Kentish map from Smith’s ‘New English Atlas’. The maps were drawn by J. Tomkins and engraved by H. Vincent . [ref: 20908 ] £200

1153. SMITH, C. & SON’S. SMITH’S MAP OF THE ENVIRONS OF LONDON. Cover title:MAP OF TWENTY FIVE MILES ROUND

LONDON. London. Printed for C. Smith 63 Charing Cross Road. No date but c.1898.Large, folding map with vibrant hand-colouring, dissected and laid on to linen, 32

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x 24 inches, showing from Stoke Mandeville to Chelmsford and from Farnhamto Marden. Preserved within the original red cloth-covered boards with gilt titles to upper board. A near fine copy.Hyde 59 (5) [ref: 21551 ] £250

1154. SMITH, C. & SON’S. SMITH’S MAP OF THE ENVIRONS OF LONDON. Cover title:MAP OF TWENTY FIVE MILES ROUND LONDON.

London. Printed for C. Smith 63 Charing Cross Road. No date but c.1898.Large, uncoloured, folding map, dissected and laid on to linen, 32 x 24 inches, showing from Stoke Mandeville to Chelmsford and from Farnham to Marden. Preserved within the original chocolate cloth-covered boards with printed paper title labels toupper board. A near fine copy.

Hyde 59 (5) [ref: 21552 ] £200

1155. SMITH, C. LESLIE W. STORIES OF FAVERSHAM Faversham: Privately Published, 1974.8vo., 521 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth gilt.An extremely interisting collection of essays on all aspects of Faversham history, legend and topography. This copy is signed by the author. [ref: 19756 ] £30

1156. SMITH, C. LESLIE W. STORIES OF THE ISLE OF THANET Faversham: Privately Published, 1981Second Edition. 257 pp., with photo illustrations. Original cloth gilt An extremely interesting collection of essays on all aspects of Thanet history,legend and topography. [ref: 19713 ] £30

1157. SMITH, CHARLES ROACH and F.W. FAIRHOLT. THE ANTIQUITIES OF RICHBOROUGH, RECULVER, AND LYMNE, IN KENT.

John Russell Smith. 18504to. 272 pp. with coloured frontispiece, nine plates, and illustrations in the text throughout. Original blind stamped cloth, worn at extremities, small water stain to the corner of four plates not affecting image, otherwise a good copy.A good example of this text by the well-known archaeological pioneer. The first recorded digs at

these important sites. [ref: 18923 ] £125

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RARE REPORT ON LYMPNE.1158. SMITH, CHARLES ROACH and JAMES ELLIOTT, JUN.

REPORT ON EXCAVATIONS MADE ON THE SITE OF THE ROMAN CASTRUM AT LYMNE, IN KENT, IN 1850 ..... WITH NOTES ON THE ORIGINAL PLAN OF THE CASTRUM, AND ON THE ANCIENT STATE OF ROMNEY MARSHES ...

Printed for the Subscribers to the Excavations, London, 18524to. viii + 45 pp. + [5] list of subscribers + etched folding frontis + 10 etched plates, by W.H. Brooke, H.W. Rolfe, R. Windle and others, one of which is hand-coloured, and numerous wood-engraved plans and illustrations to the text. Original printed paper wrappers, spine repaired. A little worn at extremities and somewhat timestained but a very good copy. The front bears the neatly inked name of ‘Stephen Steele Esq`re’ and the signature of ‘C[harles] Roach Smith’, so possibly a gift from the author. Another hand has inscribed H. Lemmon, and a further hand at the bottom has written ‘Supplement to The Antiquities of Richborough, Reculver, and Lymne.’ This report was produced for the Subscribers to the Lymne excavation and more than two years after Smith’s work The Antiquities of Richborough, Reculver and Lymne. It is more fully illustrated, with specially produced plates, and more descriptive of the excavations than the section on Lympne in that work. The report has additional notes by James Elliott Jnr., a principal subscriber to the dig, who had made previous excavations in the area. The subscribers to the Lymne dig appear in the order in which they subscribed andwith the amount of their subscription. Interestingly, neither of the names on the cover appears in the list of subscribers in the ‘Report’ or that in the ‘Antiquities’. The list of Lymne subscribers amounts to 109 names so perhaps 120 copies were produced, of which this is a rare survivor. [ref: 19647 ] £250

1159. SMITH, C.S. A NEW MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. DIVIDED INTO LATHES Etc.

Printed for C. S. Smith No 172 Strand January 6th 1804Original hand-coloured engraved map 17 x 20 inches. Trace of an old fold, buta very good example with fine wide margins.Nice example of this turn-of-the-century Kentish map from Smith’s ‘New English Atlas’. The maps were drawn by J. Tomkins and engraved by H. Vincent . [ref: 18301 ] £250

1160. SMITH, C.S. A NEW MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. Divided into Lathes &c.

London: Printed for C. Smith, No.172 Strand, January 6th.1804, corrected to1818Third edition. Hand-coloured folding engraved map, 19 x 21 inches, dissected and laid on to linen. Preserved in the original card slip-case with printed labeland neat contemporary inscription.Good example of this pre-railway Kentish travelling map from Smith’s New English Atlas. The maps were drawn by J. Tomkins and engraved by H.Vincent.

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[ref: 19160 ] £250

1161.SMITH, F.F. A HISTORY OF ROCHESTER The C.E. Daniel Co., Graham House, Tudor St, London E.C.4. 1928First Edition. Fat 8vo. xv + 523 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth gilt, spine repaired and slightly faded, but a good copy.Still a standard work on Rochester, though more commonly found in the 1970's reprint, this is a good copy of the earlier edition and has the bookplateof Fiennes Stanley Wykeham Cornwallis, 1st Baron Cornwallis, who was created Baron only the year before this book was published. [ref: 17306 ] £45

1162. SMITH, F.F. A HISTORY OF ROCHESTER John Hallewell Publications. 1928 edition reprinted. 19768vo. xvi + 523pp. with 60 b/w illustrations Original red cloth, pictorial dust wrapper, worn at extremities, otherwise a nice copy.This edition, which was limited to 1,000 copies, is an authoritative history of this ancient city ‘Commencing with the Roman occupation, it contains full particulars about the Cathedral, Castle, Corporation Records, Bridges, and all matters of past and present interest, with sixty illustrations, so as to forma general history’. [ref: 18944 ] £25

1163. SMITH, F.F. ROCHESTER IN PARLIAMENT 1295-1933. INCLUDING THE CHATHAM AND GILLINGHAM DIVISIONS OF ROCHESTER. ALSO THE BOROUGH OF CHATHAM FROM JUNE 1832 TO 1918

Simpkin Marshall. 1933190 pp. Original cloth gilt. A good copy from the Law Society's Library with some neat stamps.With a presentation letter from Smith to the Library and an inscription. A scarce title. [ref: 10896 ] £40

PRESENTATION COPY1164. SMITH, GERARD EDWARDS. A CATALOGUE OF THE

RARE OR REMARKABLE PHAENOGAMOUS PLANTS, COLLECTED IN SOUTH KENT : WITH DESCRIPTIVE NOTICES AND OBSERVATIONS.

Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, Paternoster Row, London: 1829First Edition. 8vo. viii + 78 pp. illustrated with 5 fine hand-coloured plates including Early Spider Orchids and Bee Orchids. Original green half-morocco. Spine in compartments tooled in gilt with contrasting title label. Rebacked, retaining the original spine. Corners a little rubbed, otherwise a very good copy.This copy is inscri bed to ‘Ward Hunt Painter, with the author’s kind regard, January 1877’ and a botanical note in his hand on page 18. G. E. Smith lived in Sandgate and compiled this detailed list of

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local plants in his leisure with the help of many local people, landowners andclergy, most of whom appear in the list of subscribers, which accounts for exactly 350 copies, so only this number and perhaps a few more were printed. The list is fascinating for the locations given and the finders’ names and, in some cases, the author’s digressions on the views from the spot wherea rarity was found etc. The quality of the hand-coloured plates is very high and the book contains first records for thirty-six plants of the Kent Flora (SeeHanbury and Marshall). Very rare. Smith p.91; Hanbury and Marshall p. lxx. [ref: 15952 ] £450

1165. SMITH, J. RUSSELL. BIBLIOTHECA CANTIANA. A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ACCOUNT OF WHAT HAS BEEN PUBLISHED...ON THE COUNTY OF KENT. VOLUME. 1. (ALL PUBLISHED) 1837.

Reprinted J. Hallewell, Chatham. 1980360 pp. Original cloth, gilt. A near mint exampleInvaluable reference work. Although originally published in 1837, this remains the standard bibliography. Even this reprint is becoming harder tofind. [ref: 15348 ] £45

1166. SMITH, MARY. A CENTURY OF ELHAM PHOTOGRAPHS. Photographs compiled by Mary Smith.

[s.l.] Printed by Trevor Hobbs. [1989]4to. 8 x 10 inches. 47 + [1] pp. Illustrated by numerous sepia photographs, which are continued on both endpapers. Plain card boards, with pictorial wrappers, supplying imprint. Slight tear to foot of front wrapper, which has slight signs of wear; otherwise in fine condition. A scarce compilation of Elham photographs, attractively reproduced in sepia tone. The author’s introduction and epilogue are in old Kent dialect. [ref: 21062 ] £20

1167. SMITH, R.A.L. CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL PRIORY. A STUDY IN MONASTIC ADMINISTRATION.

Cambridge University Press. 19438vo. 237 pp. with photo illustrations. Original cloth gilt, spine faded, otherwise a very good copy.A clear, objective account of the farming and finances of one of the greatest of the English Monasteries. A very useful text, always in demand. [ref: 18750 ] £25

1168. SMITH, VICTOR T.C. THE LATER NINETEENTH-CENTURY LAND DEFENCES OF CHATHAM.

Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology. 1976Offprint from Post-Medieval Archaeology Vol. 10. pp.104-117 with 2 figures to the text and 5 b/w illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers. A very good copy.A consideration of the Land Defences built to protect the Royal Navy Dockyard.

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[ref: 18667 ] £10

1169. SMITHERS, DAVID WALDRON. JANE AUSTEN IN KENT. Westerham Hurtwood Publications. 19818vo. 9 x 5.5 inches 133 pp. with illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper, a very good copy.Thorough work on Jane Austen’s many Kentish connections, Sevenoaks, Godmersham and East Kent, Dartford, Etc. [ref: 21213 ] £12

1170. SMITHERS, D.W. CASTLES IN KENT John Hallewell Publications, Chatham. 19804to. 144 pp. with illustrations throughout. A very good copy in dust wrapper.A useful, quick-reference book. [ref: 15416 ] £15

1171. SMUGGLING. SMUGGLING AND SMUGGLERS IN SUSSEX. THE GENUINE HISTORY OF THE UNPARALLELED MURDERS OF MR. WILLIAM GALLEY, AND MR. DANIEL CHATER, BY FOURTEEN NOTORIOUS SMUGGLERS, WITH THE TRIALS AND EXECUTION OF SEVEN OF THE CRIMINALS AT CHICHESTER, 1748-9.

Brighton : W. J. Smith. No date but c.1880263 pp. with frontispiece and other illustrations. Modern half-morocco, gilt, over marbled boards in Victorian style. A very good example in a very attractive binding.This reprint of the famous narrative, first printed in the eighteenth century, has the virtue of having several articles concerning smuggling added. The events described have obvious connections with smuggling in Kent. [ref: 19115 ] £125

MISSENT FISH AND UNPAID TOLLS.1172. ROCHESTER C.1860SOLICITOR’S COPY LETTER

BOOK, ROCHESTER, 1859 AGENTS AND GENERAL LETTER BOOK. COMMENCING 19TH OCT. 1859 ENDING 31ST DECEMBER 1861. Mr. Webb Hayward Solicitor Rochester 19 October 1859.

1859Lined copy letter book, with manuscript entries. [23] p. index (1 page blank) + 309 p. + [16] p. blank. [6] registered letter receipts tipped in. Bound in vellum, marbled boards and edges. Extremities worn, especially at top of spine. Ink titles. Clean interior in several legible copperplate hands.The outgoing letters of a busy Rochester solicitor, amounting to some 1,200 separate entries over a period of two years and ten weeks. In the 1878 directory, William Webb Hayward of 196 High Street, Rochester, was also Clerk of the Peace, and to the trustees of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital and registrar of the county court, etc. The new letter book opens with the acrimonious dissolution of Esell and Hayward: ‘Mr. Esell has excluded me from the offices and he has all the Books and Accounts’ and ‘has treated me in a very cruel manner depriving me of a position worth £7,000 to me and putting his own relations in my place and refusing to return to me the £4,000 I paid him when I went into partnership.’ He was also pursuing the

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Postmaster General over a letter, misdirected ‘to another party thereby doing me a serious injury and inducing the commencement of legal proceedings against me.’ Hayward acts on behalf of the Commissioners of Paving, etc., Rochester and Strood and writes to Samuel Smiles (1812-1904, author of Self-Help and Lives of the Engineers), Secretary of the South Eastern Railway about water dripping from a bridge over Strood High Street. He also acts for a client, who is claiming damages from the London, Chatham and Dover Railway, as goods, sent from Chatham to Canterbury, arrived late and caused financial loss. Another failed delivery was the case of the ‘fish missent’ by Messrs. Pickford from London to Stroud in Gloucestershire (instead of Strood), for which loss the client claimed £5.5.6. Mr Aveling was written to in December 1861, ‘the men in charge of your engine having refused to pay the Toll [at Strood] yesterday’, Hayward also observing that the weight of the locomotive was not ‘legibly conspicuously affixed thereon,’ (the toll depended on the weight). Thomas Aveling (1824-82), the pioneer of steam traction engines, had just established his main works in Strood, having developed his first self-moving engine in 1859. Hayward was involved in several maritime cases. In 1860, a ship named The Guard, belonging to Frederick Fussell of Rochester, coal merchant, ran aground at the mouth of the Tees, and was salvaged by a shipbuilder, inevitably resulting in a dispute over conflicting claims and costs. Inland waters close to home also claimed his attention. The brig Tanner of Whitby ‘was with her cargo seriously injured...owing to the defective and improper Moorings in the River Medway.’ Hayward acted for the owner against Rochester Corporation and the case became complicated when he discoveredthat the city had borrowed diving apparatus from the Royal Engineers to survey the moorings, ‘notwithstanding Captn. Mann’s denial I am in a position to prove that the request for the loan was made by the Water Bailiff’s son to the Sapper who referred him to the Sergeant who referred him to the Officer who gave permission.’ Hayward complained of Captain Mann’s conduct to the War Office. He also communicated with the Secretaryof State for War on another matter involving the Royal Engineers at Chatham. A local builder, Mr Alfred Stump of Brompton had been unable to obtain payment of his outstanding account for constructing their new Mess House. Captain Casey, R.E. of the Ordnance Survey office, Southampton, received a complaint from Hayward on behalf of a farmer of Smolledge, near Chatham, whose field of peas has been damaged by a survey team. Along with his corporate clients and the usual conveyancing (including the sale of a windmill at Cliff) and probate work, Hayward was concerned in breach of promise and bastardy matters and also took the cases of many smaller litigants: a woman injured by the ‘furious’ driving of a grocer’s cart, a Mr Trott annoyed by observations on his honesty made by a butcher on thetrain from London and a Miss Siburn offended by the remarks of another woman (in this case Hayward writes to her husband ‘on the subject of the language made use of by your wife towards her without any foundation or provocation,’ demanding an immediate apology and payment of 5s. expenses to avoid legal proceedings). Making enquiries on behalf of solicitorsin Bath, he advises them that a debtor, Dr. Bigg ‘has recently Married a lady with at least £300 a year private property.’ A fascinating window on the detail of everyday life in the Medway towns around 1860 Kelly’s Kent Directory, 1878. Porter, Industrial Medway.

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[ref: 20960 ] £350

1173. SOMERVELL, D. C. A HISTORY OF TONBRIDGE SCHOOL Faber & Faber 1947150 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper. A good copy, inscribed to Elizabeth Melling on front free endpaper.A very good history of the school up to the second world war. [ref: 21191 ] £15

1174. SOUTH EASTERN UNION OF SCIENTIFIC SOCIETIES. A SURVEY AND RECORD OF WOOLWICH AND WEST KENT. Combining descriptions and records, brought up-to-date, of the Geology, Botany, Zoology, Archaeology and Industries of the district, with a brief Photographic Commentary, in commemoration of the 12th Annual Congress, 1907, of the South Eastern Union of Scientific Societies. General Editors: C. H. Grinling. T.A. Ingram,. Polkinghorne,.

Labour Representation Printing Co., Ltd. (T.U.) 8, New Road, Woolwich. 19098vo. 6 x 8.5 inches. viii + 526 pp. Illustrated by text figure. Cover title: Woolwich Surveys. Bound in original patterned grey cloth, titled in black. Ex-library copy with white class mark on lower spine, Borough of Chatham Reference Library armorial bookplate on front paste down, rubber stamp on title page and occasionally elsewhere, accession number on verso of title. Ownership inscription, dated 1909, and occasional ink notes and corrections in text. Printed inset: Woolwich Surveys, 1909. [Appeal for corrections, suggestions, etc].A comprehensive survey and list of the geology, botany, zoology, archaeology and industries of Woolwich and the surrounding area of north west Kent, issued to mark the Woolwich Congress of the South Eastern Union of Scientific Societies in 1907. The natural history sections list species occurring and cover flowering and non-flowering plants, mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians, fishes, insects and molluscs. There is an account of the ancient churches in tabular form and description of all ‘the scientific industries’ (i.e. engineering, chemical, military and shipbuilding, etc.). The various sections have separately named editors being Charles Herbert Grinling, Bennett Corcyra Polkinghorne and Thomas Allan Ingram. Grinling, a curate from Nottinghamshire who settled in Woolwich, producedseveral other books on the area and its industries but is best known for his works on railways, especially his History of the Great Northern Railway. [ref: 20178 ] £75

1175. SPEECHES BY CHARLES II AND SPEAKER IN PARLIAMENT OF 1661 HIS MAJESTIE’S GRACIOUS SPEECH TO BOTH HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT, ON MONDAY, JULY 8. 1661. TOGETHER WITH THE SPEECH OF SIR EDWARD TURNER, KT. SPEAKER OF THE HONOURABLE HOUSE OF COMMONS.

London: Printed by John Bill and Christopher Barker, Printers to the King’s most Excellent Majesty. At the King’s Printing-House in Black-Fryers. 1661Folio pamphlet. 7.5 x 11 inches. [2], 2, 5-14 + [2] pp. Text and register continuous despite pagination. A, B-D2. Illustrated with royal arms on both

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title pages. Disbound with sewn wrappers Slight damage at lower page edge of title and some, probably original, internal creasingTitle of King’s speech repeated at head of text. Separate title page for ‘The speech of Sr Edw. Turner, Kt. Speaker of the Honorable House of Commons tothe King’s Most Excellent Majesty, Delivered on Monday the Eighth day of July, 1661 at the Passing the Bill for Confirmation of the Act of Oblivion, etc.’ Title repeated at head of text with variant spelling. At foot of title: Cum privilegio. Imprint repeated in colophon on separate page at end.The King’s speech refers to the passing of the money bill, granting revenue for the government from the customs and excise duties, and his ‘Assent to this other very good Bill that accompanies it,’ which may refer to the Act of Oblivion. The various acts of indemnity, pardon and oblivion of 1660 had extended the royal pardon, saving only a certain number of regicides who were executed, to those who had served the cause of parliament. The new Cavalier Parliament of 1661 confirmed various of the bills of the previous year.The King appears to be pleased with his parliament and hopes that they will be ready for Adjournment until the winter by the twentieth of the month. He refers to his Declaration from Breda and ends by expressing his great satisfaction at the course of events: ‘God hath wrought a wonderful Miracle in setling Us as he hath done’ and is conscious of the Parliament’s ‘extraordinary affection’ to him. The Speaker delivers an obsequious oration, referring to the oblivion and revenue bills: ‘ We know great Sir, that money is both the Sinews of War, and Bond of Peace; we have therefore taken care of Your Majesties Revenue,’ concluding by humbly presenting the monarch, on behalf of the Commons, with ‘An Act for a free and voluntary Present.’Sir Edward Turner (1616/17-1676) served in several protectorate parliaments but was excluded in 1656. He was re-elected on the eve of the Restoration, to which he gave great support, expediting a £100,000 loan to the king through his links with city financiers. He was involved in drafting the Bill of Indemnity and Oblivion and he prosecuted during the trials of the regicides. He was elected Speaker when the new parliament met in May 1661: ‘his addresses in parliament to the king were characterized by their florid tone and adulatory, ifnot slavish nature.’ Turner was later satirized for his graft and hypocrisy by Andrew Marvell.An interesting pamphlet which gives a flavour of proceedings in the early Restoration parliaments. ESTC notes nine copies in US libraries. ESTC R13945 (State B). Wing C 3043. DNB [ref: 19486 ] £100

SPEED’S KENT 16161176. SPEED, JOHN. KENT WITH HER CITIES AND EARLES

DESCRIBED AND OBSERVED. No place or date but London [1616]Hand-coloured copper-engraving, 15 x 20 inches. Mounted in conservation materials double-sided to show the text in Latin on verso. Framed and double glazed in a suitable moulding. A fine, strong impression, from the second issue which had no publisher’s imprint, the centre fold retains the original guard and there are no repairs or restorations. The colouring, which has some

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age but is not original, is particularly attractive. A fine example of the second edition identifiable by the Latin text on verso.John Speed's justly renowned map of the county from the second edition of his great early 17th century atlas of the British Isles. His survey was based on the earlier work of Philip Symonson with the addition of his own embellishments, and separate plans of Canterbury and Rochester. The beauty of the 17th century engraving is particularly evident in such a strong impression. One of the most attractive and decorative maps of Kent, from the early Latin issue. [ref: 18013 ] £1500

SPEED’S KENT 16271177.SPEED, JOHN. KENT WITH HER CITIES AND EARLES

DESCRIBED AND OBSERVED. No place or date but London [1627]Hand-coloured copper-engraving, 15 x 20 inches. A fine, strong impression, the centre fold has been strengthened on verso with some minor repairs evident. The colouring, which has some age but is not original, is very attractive. A fine example with English text on verso.John Speed's justly renowned map of the county from the second edition of his great early 17th century atlas of the British Isles. His survey was based on the earlier work of Philip Symonson with the addition of his own embellishments, and separate plans of Canterbury and Rochester. One of the most attractive and decorative maps of Kent. [ref: 20710 ] £850

SPEED’S MAP 16761178. SPEED, JOHN. KENT WITH HER CITIES AND EARLES

DESCRIBED AND OBSERVED. Performed by Iohn Speede and Are to be sold by Tho: Bassett in Fleetstreet and Ric: Chiswell in St. Pauls Churchyard, [London]. [1676]Hand-coloured copper-engraving, 15 x 20 inches. Mounted in conservation materials, double-sided to show the Latin text on verso. Framed and double glazed in a suitable moulding. John Speed's justly renowned map of the county from the second edition of his great early 17th century atlas of the British Isles. His survey was based on the earlier work of Philip Symonson with the addition of his own embellishments, and separate plans of Canterbury and Rochester. The beauty of the 17th century engraving is particularly evident in such a strong impression. One of the most attractive and decorative maps of Kent, from the rare Latin issue. There are slight variations in the abbreviations of the names as described by Burgess. Chubb, 37. Skelton, 92. Burgess, 9/viii. BL Maps C 7 e 6 [ref: 20634 ] £850

1179. SPELLING, R.S. ROLVENDEN REFLECTIONS. A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF A VILLAGE IN THE WEALD OF KENT.

Published by the author. 198548 pp with b/w illustration throughout.. Original laminated pictorial card wrappers. A mint example.Useful history. [ref: 18670 ] £10

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1180. SPELLING, R.S. TENTERDEN A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF A MARKET TOWN IN THE WEALD OF KENT.

Published by the author. 198552 pp with b/w illustration throughout.. Original laminated pictorial card wrappers. A mint example.Useful history. [ref: 18671 ] £10

1181. SPENCE, KEITH. THE COMPANION GUIDE TO KENT AND SUSSEX

Collins. 1973First Edition. 480 pp., illustrated throughout. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A good copy.The first issue of this very good guide book. [ref: 14943 ] £12

1182. ST. MARGARET’S AT CLIFFE. ORIGINAL WATERCOLOUR OF ST. MARGARET’S AT CLIFFE.

October 1851Original monochrome wash sketch, image approx. 10 x 6 inches, mounted in conservation materials ready for framing, overall size 14.5 x 11 inches. Depiction of the village of St. Margaret’s at Cliff, as viewed from a pasture to the the north-east, with the church dominating the background. Titled in pencil ‘Taken from the Curfew Field. St. Margaret’s at Cliff, nr Dover, October 1851.’ [ref: 20218 ] £120

1183. STAFFORD, F. and YATES, N. THE LATER KENTISH SEASIDE (1840-1974) KENTISH SOURCES IX

Maidstone Alan Sutton for Kent Archives. 1985194 pp. with illustrations throughout. Original printed wrappers,Economic and social history. [ref: 18040 ] £12

1184. STANDEN, MARY. PEMBURY IN THE PAST. Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198448 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Original laminated pictorial wrappers.Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18661 ] £10

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1185. STANFIELD, CLARKSON. R.A. STANFIELD’S COAST SCENERY. A SERIES OF VIEWS IN THE BRITISH CHANNEL, FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS TAKEN EXPRESSLY FOR THIS WORK BY

CLARKSON STANFIELD, ESQ. R.A.Smith, Elder & Co. 1836viii +128 pp. illustrated with 40 highly-finished steel-engraved views including the vignette on the title-page. Finely bound in the publisher’s original full morocco. Pictorial embossed gilt with all edges gilt. A fine copy, but the plates are affected with foxing here and there, and roughly 10 are quite badly foxed.An attractive copy of this steel engraved view-book, in the fine embossed gilt publisher’s binding with decorative lozenge on the boards of Neptune’s trident surrounded with fish and seaweed, the spine decorated with anchors and shells, all in gilt. The

engravings are the productions of one of the pre-eminent marine painters of the Nineteenth century. Despite the foxing this is one of the nicest examples of this work we have seen. [ref: 17374 ] £200

1186. STANLEY, ARTHUR P. HISTORICAL MEMORIALS OF CANTERBURY. THE LANDING OF AUGUSTINE, THE MURDER OF BECKET, EDWARD THE BLACK PRINCE, BECKET'S SHRINE.

John Murray. 1875Seventh Edition, 304 pp. with a folding plan and wood-engravings in the text. Contemporary full leather binding by Bickers, with stamped decoration. Very slightly rubbed at extremities otherwise a very good copy.Standard work, we have other copies in cloth at more modest prices. [ref: 17891 ] £30

RARE DEAL PILOTS JOURNAL1187. STANTON, WILLIAM. THE JOURNAL OF WILLIAM

STANTON PILOT, OF DEAL. Introduction by Aston H. Long.Portsmouth and London W.H. Barrell, Ltd., 114 High St., and Simpkin Marshall Ltd. Stationers Hall Court, E.C. 19294to. 7x 8.5 inches. [x] + 130 pp. + [2]. Illustrated with half tones in text, including frontispiece, based on drawings by the editor. Bound in original navy cloth, decorated with attractive period vignette on front board. Extremities a little worn but otherwise a fine

clean copy.Rare journal, published in a limited edition, of the Deal Pilot, William Henry Stanton (1803-c.1878), covering the period 1811 - 1867. A fascinating insightinto the hard world of pilotage and smuggling off Deal and the Downs. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21299 ] £140

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STAPLEHURST PARISH REGISTER 1188. STAPLEHURST - CHAMBERLAIN, JAMES SLADE

FFOSTER. THE REGISTERS OF STAPLEHURST, 1558-1596, WITH INTRODUCTION [BOUND WITH] THE REGISTERS OF STAPLEHURST, 1596-1653, WITH INTRODUCTION.

Canterbury: Gibbs and Sons, Printers, Palace Street 1910, 19138vo. 6.75 x 8.75 inches. [ii] + ii + 127 pp.; [iii] + 154 pp. Inserted is the Staplehurst Register, by J.S. FF. Chamberlain, M.A. Stapled article. 283-299 pp. and illustrated with three photographic plates, an offprint from unspecified journal. Bound in later red cloth, gilt. Light rust impressions from staples of inseton front endpaper. Occasional light foxing and

page edge abrasions with tear to 1596-1553 registers, pp. 27-28. A few pencil ticks are also present.The first volume is a transcript of the old paper register, with additional material from the parchment register, and the second volume is a transcript from the parchment register, with additional material from a duplicate paper register. Thomas Cromwell had ordered that registers should be kept by churches in 1538 but in 1597 it was ordered that a fair copy of the entries, but only from Queen Elizabeth’s accession in 1558, should be made into a parchment book. In many parishes the old paper registers going back to 1538, and containing much additional information, were lost or destroyed. Fortunately those for Staplehurst survived. The Reverend Chamberlain also published a transcript of the earliest registers as ‘The Old Register of Staplehurst, 1538-1558’ (1907). The article inset gives some extracts, with commentary, from the paper registers, including entries for the period, 1538-1558. Both volumes are indexed. [ref: 19471 ] £145

1189. STATHAM, REV. S.P.H. THE HISTORY OF THE CASTLE, TOWN AND PORT OF DOVER.

London, Longmans, Green and Co. 1899.8vo, 8 x 5.5 inches. 462 pp. with folding plates andphoto illustrations. Original cloth, gilt, a very goodcopy.Late 19th century history of Dover which remains a standard source book.

[ref: 21310 ] £75

1190. STEAD, RICHARD. (Editor). BYGONE KENT. Edited by Richard Stead, B.A., F.R.H.S.

(Bygone England Series).Canterbury H. J. Goulden; Hull: William Andrew & Co, The Hull Press; London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, and Co., Limited. 1892First Edition, limited to 750 copies. 8vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. [x] + 267 pp. + [1]+ [16] pp. publisher’s advertisements. Illustrated with wood engravings,

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including frontispiece. Decorated by publisher’s device on verso of title. Bound in original blue cloth,gilt, with bevelled edges Extremities worn, but otherwise a sound copy. Ink inscriptions on front pastedown and first free endpaper.An interesting collection of essays on the history of the county, with subjects including Kentish Place-names, Ruined Chapels and Chantries of Kent, Lyminge Church, William Lambarde, Kentish Dialects, Greenwich Fair and Smuggling and Huguenot homes in Kent. [ref: 21673 ] £40

1191.STEAD, RICHARD. (Editor). BYGONE KENT. EP Publishing. 19728vo. [x] + 267pp. illustrated with engravings. Original cloth, gilt, in price-clipped dust wrapper. Rear of dust wrapper has small tears and repairs, otherwise a good copy. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.First published 1892. Varied collection of essays on many aspects of Kentish history, including placenames, dialects, smuggling, Huguenots, William Lambarde, the Peasants’ Revolt, St. Augustine and aspects of Canterbury, Dover, Lyminge, Eltham, Greenwich, etc. [ref: 19043 ] £15

1192. STEPHENSON, JOHN. A SURVEY OF THE EAST SWALE FROM THE BUOYS OF THE NARROWS AND SPANIARD. By John Stephenson. A Master in the Royal Navy.

London Printed for Robert Sayer, No. 53, Fleet Street. 1786Copper engraved sea chart, 28 x 20 inches. ‘A Scale of One Nautic League or Three Miles.’ Mounted, framed and glazed Hand coloured sea chart, originally folded in centre. Fine condition.A scarce chart of the eastern part of the Swale estuary on the north Kent coast. It indicates the parishes of Reculver, Hearn, Swale Cliffe, Whitstable, Sea Salter, Graveney, Faversham, Ore or Oare and the Isle of Sheppey parishes of Hartey and Leysdon. The map shows the times of high water, depth in fathoms, types of shorelines, sand and mud banks, anchorages the positions of buoys, and a few notable seamarks. etc. It includes sailing directions for the East Swale. [ref: 21769 ] £435

1193. STOCKMAN, FLIGHT-LIETENANT ROCKY. Edited by THE HISTORY OF RAF MANSTON 1916 - 1986.

[ref: 18409 ] £12

PRESENTATION COPY 1194. STOWTING - BRENT, JOHN. AN

ACCOUNT OF RESEARCHES IN AN ANGLO-SAXON CEMETERY AT STOWTING, IN KENT During the Autumn of 1866.

Communicated to the Society of Antiquaries by John Brent, Esq., F.S.A.Printed by J.B.Nichols and Sons, London; c

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Large 4to. [ii] + 12 pp. Illustrated with one full page lithographic plate.Bound in are two offprints by John Brent from the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, both of which are reports of the last year’s progress in archaeology in East Kent March 23, 1871 (Proc.S.A.L. 2S. v.124), 6 pp.April 29, 1875 (Proc.S.A.L. 2S. vi.375), 7 pp, illustrated with engravings.Three page epistle in French from author, dated Canterbury 19 November 1872, also bound in. Contemporary green quarter-morocco, spine stamped J. Brent in gilt, with marbled boards and endpapers.An interesting bound collection of the author’s accounts of archaeological excavations in East Kent with a presentation letter. This copy is inscribed and signed and was clearly a gift to a French colleague M. Henri ...... as is witnessed by the accompanying letter, which has what appears to be a response from the recipient on the last page. We have not seen a copy of this paper before. Rare. [ref: 19122 ] £300

1195. STRAKER, ERNEST. WEALDEN IRON. A MONOGRAPH ON THE FORMER IRONWORKS IN THE COUNTIES OF SUSSEX, SURREY AND KENT.

Augustus M. Kelley, New York. 1969.8vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. xiv + 487 pp. with maps, plans and illustrations throughout. Original cloth with dust wrapper. A very good copy.Reprint of the scarce and standard title. Printed in Great Britain for publication in the United States. [ref: 21136 ] £40

1196. STRANGE, F.G. ST. CLAIR. THE HISTORY OF THE ROYAL SEA BATHING HOSPITAL MARGATE 1791 - 1991 With a chapter on the League of Friends of the Royal Sea Bathing Hospital by P.B.Wright, FRSC and A Note on the Chapel by T.G. Thomas, FRCS.

Meresborough Books. 19918vo., 216 pp. illustrated in colour and black and white. Lacking front free endpaper (see notes below). Original laminated illustrated boards. A very good copy.The first full history of the famous Hospital. In this copy, loosely inserted, is a handwritten letter from Christina Foyle commenting on her 6 month say at the hospital when she was 7 years old, sending the book to unknown recipients Hermione and Vivian. Presumably she had bought the book secondhand and removed the front free endpaper, no doubt to remove the previous owner’s name. [ref: 20849 ] £25

1197. STURRY. [VARIOUS AUTHORS]. STURRY THE CHANGING SCENE.

K.H. Mcintosh. 19728vo.112pp.Original cloth. gilt. Illustrated with b/w photographs and drawings throughout and folding map to rear. Various authors add to the parish history of Sturry. [ref: 17970 ] £12

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MANUSCRIPT ESTATE MAP1198. SUNDRIDGE. MANUSCRIPT ESTATE MAP. CHAINS FARM,

BOREHILL, DILLAWAY, AND COX’S LANDS IN THE PARISH OF SUNDRICH IN KENT. BELONGING TO CHARLES POLLHILL OF CHIPSTED Esq.

PURCHASED BY LORD AMHURST 1817.Anonymous manuscript estate map 1817 or earlier. 1817Manuscript Estate map, on vellum, pen and ink and watercolour wash. 19 x 30 inches. Title within decorative watercoloured Rococo cartouche, surmounted by an eagle; table of reference in the form

a scroll; scale of chains and compass rose. Traces of old folds but a fine unfaded example example.The detailed map shows the area between the B2042 Chiddingstone to Sevenoaks road and Borehill Lane, now a footpath, with Idehill to the north, the whole extending about a mile north-south and a half-mile east west. Detailed field boundaries, with field sizes, contain houses, depicted in plan orelevation, and barns, ponds, shaws, gardens, woods, stiles, gates and yards are delineated. Owners of adjacent fields are also indicated. In total 35 fields, 6 woods and shaws, a hop garden and 11 other small enclosures, along with 3 ponds, are depicted.

Charles Polhill lived between 1725 - 1805 and the map refers to land belonging to him. It is reasonable to infer that the map was drawn during his lifetime, thus making the latest date for its creation 1805 - certainly the Rococo style was an eighteenth century fashion so most likely the map dates from the late eighteenth century. The reference to Lord Amherst and his purchase of the land are later annotations, probably contemporary with that purchase. [ref: 21096 ] £1500

1199. SWAIN, ERIC. WILLIAM TWOPENY IN KENT Winston Publications Sittingbourne Kent 1986Square 8vo. 122 pp. Illustrated throughout.. Original glossy laminated pictorial boards.Study of the draughtsman William Twopeny and his drawings of buildings and antiquities in Kent. [ref: 17965 ] £12

1200. SWALE - [JORDAN, D. and J.A.VISGAR.] ANNALS OF A FISHING VILLAGE. DRAWN FROM THE NOTES OF 'A SON OF THE MARSHES' EDITED BY J.A.OWEN

William Blackwood and Sons, 1891.|First Edition, 8vo., viii + [1] + 289 pp. + 24 pp. advertisements at end. Illustrated with six plates. Original pictorial cloth gilt. Light wear to cloth boards.

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An interesting snapshot of life in the north Kent marshes as it was a hundredyears ago, the manners and customs of the marshmen are well described and even the dialect is recorded. The tale centers around Milton Regis, or Marshton as it is disguised. Very scarce. [ref: 19056 ] £95

1201. SWANN, EDWARD. AN ARTIST IN OLD CANTERBURY. Charles Skilton 1970Small 4to. illustrated with 16 plates and accompanying leaves of text. Cloth gilt in price clipped dust wrapper, chipped and torn at top and bottom. Front boards slightly warped. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.[ref: 19064 ] £00.00

1202. SWIMMING. SWIMMING TIMES. Vol. XXI, No.1, July 1943- Vol. XXII, No. 10, December 1945 (Vol.XXII, No. 2, February 1945 is missing from this copy).

Hon Editor: Capt. B. W. Cummins, 4, Waddon Pk. Ave., Croydon; Wartime Editor(later Hon. Sub-Editor): Miss Janet Bassett-Lowke, 18, Albion Place, Northampton.[Croydon] Swimming Times 1943-45.Bound periodical. 8vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. 268 pp. + 323 pp. (pp. 37-68 not included).

Illustrated throughout with black and white photographs. Bound in red cloth, gilt. Each issue of some 20-30 pages, includes the front and back paper wrappers and advertisements, printed in several colours. In fine condition.Despite the necessary economies of wartime publishing, this journal of swimming news and events, remained attractively produced and well-illustrated, including numerous charming period advertisements. Very scarce. [ref: 21343 ] £85

1203. SWIMMING. SWIMMING TIMES. Vol. XXIII, No.1, February 1946- Vol. XXIIV No. 12, December 1947.

Hon Editor: Capt. B. W.Times Cummins, 4, Waddon Pk. Ave., Croydon; Hon. Sub-Editor: Miss Janet Bassett-Lowke, 18, Albion Place, Northampton, later Mrs E.C. Dicks, 32, Booth Lane, Weston Favell, Northampton.[Croydon] Swimming Times 19456-47Bound periodical. 8vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. 319 pp. + [1] + 392 pp. Illustrated throughout with black and white photographs. Bound in red cloth, gilt. Each issue of some 30-40 pages, includes the front and back paper wrappers and advertisements, printed in several colours. In fine condition.Despite the necessary economies of wartime, and immediate post-war publishing, this journal of swimming news and events, remained attractivelyproduced and well illustrated, including numerous charming period advertisements. The later issues are starting to look forward to the 1948 Olympic Games in London. Very scarce. [ref: 21344 ] £85

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1204. SYDENHAM - KELLY'S. DIRECTORY OF SYDENHAM AND FOREST HILL.

Kelly's Directories. 19268vo. A3-A40 + 340 pp. From the General Index to the Private Residents and Commercial Directory. All sections are complete but the last few leaves of the Professional and Trades section at the rear are missing. No map present. Later hard binding in burgundy cloth with gilt titles. Lacking original wrappers. Generally browned otherwise a very good copy.Massive works of reference, Kelly's directories are now in demand with those being published before 1939 being very scarce. [ref: 19567 ] £85

SYMONSON, BUT SOMEWHAT WORN.1205. SYMONSON, PHILIP. A NEW DESCRIPTION OF KENT.

DIVIDED INTO FYVE LATHES THEREOF : AND SUBDIVIDED INTO BAYLYWICKES; AND HUNDREDES; WITH THE PARISH CHURCHES CONTEYNED WITHIN EVERY OF THE SAME HUNDREDES. ALL WHICH, FOR BETTER UNDERSTANDINGE, ARE DISTINGUISHED WITH VARYETYE OF COLOURES. COMPREHENDING AS WELL THE CITIES; THE USUALL MARKET TOWNES; AND THE PORTES, WITH THEIR MEMBERS LYING IN KENT: AS ALSO SUCH OF THE HOWSESOF THE NOBYLITIE AND GENTRYE AS THE PLOTT COULDE CONVENIENTLY RECEAVE. WHERIN MOREOVER THE NATURE OFTHE SOYLE (WHETHER PLAYNE, HYLLYE ,OR WOODDYE) IS MOREDILIGENTLYE OBSERVED : AND THE TRACTES OF RYVERS, RYLLES AND CREEKES AND THE TRENDINGE OF THE SEA-SHORE BE MORE NATURALLY DESCRIBED THEN HERETOFORE IT HATH BEN DONE. BY THE TRAVAYLE OF PHIL: SYMONSON OF ROCHESTER GENT.

Printed and Sold by J. Overton at Ye White Horse neare St. Pilchers Church. [London] . No date but c.1665-1680Large coloured copper-engraved map, 30 x 20 inches, printed on two sheets joined. Title in elaborate cartouche with scale of English Myles, Tables of Lathes and Hundreds, Cities, Ports and Franchises. The sea is dotted with ships and a sea-monster. All within a decorative scalloped and scaled border. The map is time-stained and worn but which still retains its original hand-coloured lathe borders, seashore and river, tinting to the views and cartouche and washes on high ground and tables. The map retains borders and margins on three sides. The top is trimmed to just outside the border, which has suffered slight loss. Repaired tear adjacent to join with slight loss and some damage from creasing. Traces of old folds. The tables appear to have been wiped with a damp cloth and some of the information is difficult, and in one or two instances impossible to read. However, the map detail is still easily legible. A rare opportunity to purchase at a substantial discount one of the most important Kent maps.This map comprises the county of Kent in its entirety, with parts of Middlesex (including the City of London), parts of Essex, Surrey and Sussex. Philip Symonson’s map of Kent, the first engraved map of the county and

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only the second English printed map to show roads was first published in 1595 and only one complete copy of that issue is known. This map went through a number of iterations and this is the seventh state of the map as published by Overton who took it over from Stent. Overton added two views;Dover Castle and Towne from ye Landside, and Rye, by W. Hollar and Sir Anthony Van Dyke. The scale is half an inch (13mm) to one mile, the largest scale that had been used for a printed county map at this date. To accommodate the size, the map was printed from two plates on two sheets and then joined together. The scale allowed for great detail, all the churches are accurately depicted with a spire or square tower. It is also the first county map to show latitude and longitude, based on the Azores meridian. [ref: 20619 ] £850

1206. SYMS, JAMES ANTONY. KENT COUNTRY CHURCHES. A PERSONAL EXPLORATION.

Rainham Meresborough Books. 19868vo. 5.75 x 8.25 inches. viii + 214 + [1] pp. Illustrated with map and drawingsby the author. Original pictorial card wrappers.

First published privately by the author in 1984. First book in the series of three. [ref: 21024 ] £10

1207. SYMS, JAMES ANTONY. KENT COUNTRY CHURCHES CONCLUDED. The end of an account.

Rainham Meresborough Books. 19898vo. 5.25 x 8.75 inches. 190 pp. + [1] pp. Illustrated with map and drawings by the author. Original pictorial card wrappers.Third and final book in the series. [ref: 18074 ] £10

1208. SYMS, JAMES ANTONY. KENT COUNTRY CHURCHES CONTINUED. An undiminished infatuation.

Rainham Meresborough Books. 19878vo. 5.75 x 8.25 inches. 250 pp. + [6] pp. Illustrated with map and drawings by the author. Original pictorial card wrappers.Second book in the series of three. [ref: 18073 ] £10

SHOPS AND STREETS OF GRAVESEND, 18391209. TALLIS, JOHN. GRAVESEND STREET VIEWS.

[London] [John Tallis, 15, St. John’s Lane, St. John’s Gate]. [n.d. but 1839]Oblong single sheet, previously folded. 17.5 x 5.5 inches. Four strip views of both sides of Gravesend High Street, with names of businesses. At one end an engraving of the Falcon Hotel, at the other a street plan of the town centre, signed E. A. Sergeant, del. In his study of the London Street views by John Tallis, Jackson, referencing Gravesend Library, mentions the Gravesend Street Views as having been published in July 1839: ‘It was a charming little production which, in

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addition to the text, contained three plates of exactly the same size and format as those of London, each with four elevations bounded by a view and a map.’’ (p.17). It would therefore appear that this single sheet, of the High Street, is an extract from the complete work of four plates. We have not been able to trace any other copies of the Gravesend Street Views, although the Kent Bibliography lists a comprehensive gazetteer of Gravesend with its environs: being a complete guide for visitors on pleasure or business, to which is added a general directory of Gravesend (published by Tallis in 1839; copy in Gravesend Library), which may be related to it. John Tallis ( 817-1876) was a cartographic publisher, best known for his London Street Views. [ref: 21566 ] £200

1210. TANNER, NORMAN. Edited by. KENT HERESY PROCEEDINGS 1511-12. KENT RECORDS VOLUME XXVI.

Kent Archaeological Society, Maidstone. 19978vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. xxvi + 129 pp. Bound in original dark blue cloth, gilt. A mint copy.[ref: 20092 ] £25

1211.TANNER, NORMAN, Editor. KENT HERESY PROCEEDINGS 1511-12. (Kent Records. Volume XXVI).

Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19978vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xxvi + 129 pp. + [1]. Series title. Text in Latin and English. Illustrated by frontispiece and map in text. Bound in original dark blue cloth, gilt, with Society’s device on front boards, in laminated coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Mint condition. Inset: Review from the Bibliothèque de L’École des Chartres, 137, 1999.Thirty two extracts from the register of Archbishop Warham of Canterbury, containing the proceedings of fifty three defendants accused of the practice of Lollardy. The documents record the abjurations of those tried and the penances and punishments imposed upon them. The five who refused to abjure were handed over to the secular arm and could in theory have been burnt as obdurate heretics. An informative and evocative account of religious dissent in England on the eve of the Reformation, recording the beliefs of the defendants in their own words, the abjuration sections being in the vernacular. [ref: 21202 ] £25

1212. TAYLOR, ALAN F., EAMONN D. ROONEY and CHARLES E. WHITNEY. Collected by FOLKESTONE IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS.

Alan Sutton, Stroud. 19908vo. 159 pp. Original laminated card covers. A very good copy signed by Alan Taylor.Out of print and always in demand. [ref: 21278 ] £15

1213. TAYLOR, FRANK. A HISTORY OF FAVERSHAM AND OARECREEKS AND THE FAVERSHAM NAVIGATION.

Chaffcutter Books, Ware. 2002

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Folio. 8 x 11.5 inches. 82 pp. with numerous b/w photo illustrations. Bound inoriginal laminated pictorial card wrappers. A fine copy.[ref: 20842 ] £20

SIGNED COPY1214. TEMPLE, PETER. ENGLISH CHANNEL. WITH PAINTINGS

AND DRAWINGS BY KEITH BAYNES.Hodder and Stoughton. 19524to. 224 pp. with 12 colour plates and b/w illustrations. Original pictorial cloth in a very good dustwrapper. A very good copy.A charming sea journey from west to east, visiting both sides of the Channel, well-written by an engaging character who managed to spend time with some of the more interesting people to be met with in each port. This copy is signed by Peter Temple on the title page. [ref: 14519 ] £30

SURVEY OF TENTERDEN1215. TENTERDEN - FREDERICK MACMANUS AND

PARTNERS. TENTERDEN EXPLORED. AN ARCHITECTURAL AND TOWNSCAPE ANALYSIS. Frederick MacManus and Partners, Chartered Architects & Planning Consultants. George Cullen, Townscape Consultant.

Maidstone: Kent County Council 1967Oblong folio. 12.5 x 8.25 inches. [ii] + 117 pp. Extensively illustrated with photographs, drawings and maps. Copy no?1235, stamped on back. Stapled, illustrated card wrappers, with plastic overlay bearing title in red. Ex-library copy with bookplate inside front wrapper, and stamps, etc. on title and rear of title. Study commissioned jointly by Kent County Council and the Borough Council of Tenterden to analyse the architectural character of the town ‘and to suggest how it might be conserved while allowing the town to continue to serve contemporary needs.’ A brief historical section with maps is followed by an architectural appraisal of the buildings and a visual analysis of the townscape. This consultants’ study, with its numerous street scenes populated by 1960s cars, is now possessed of a certain period charm itself. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19480 ] £40

1216. FOLKESTONE - TAYLOR, ALAN F. FOLKESTONE THROUGH TIME

Chalford, Strood: Amberley Publishing, 20098vo., 6.5 x 9.25 inches, 96 pp. Illustrated throughout in sepia and colour. Original boards. Mint condition. Signed by author on title page.This book uses more than 180 comparative photographs, old and new, to illustrate the many changes that have occurred to the fabric of Folkestone over the past century. With introduction and captions.An attractively presented old and new survey of the town from a prolific local historian. [ref: 19679 ] £13

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1217. THAMES BARGE SAILING CLUB. THE GOLDEN CHAFFCUTTER. Fifty years of the Thames Barge Sailing Club 1948-1988.

London Thames Barge Sailing Club c/o National Maritime Museum Greenwich, SE10 9NF. 1998Oblong 8vo. 8.25 x 5.75 inches. 144 pp. Half-title. Illustrated by black and white photographs, drawings and facsimiles in text. In coloured pictorial wrappers, later covered in clear plastic. Fine condition.‘This book was compiled by the present Hon. Secretary [i.e. D. G. Wood]. A chronological account of the Club’s activities, with its officers listed in an appendix. [ref: 21130 ] £10

FROM THE LIBRARY OF DR. COOK1218. THAMES ESTUARY - ANDREWS, J., A. DURY, AND W.

HERBERT. A TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP OF THE COUNTY OF KENT INTWENTY FIVE SHEETS. SHEET NUMBER 3 - HUNDRED OF HOO - SHERENESS - THAMES ESTUARY.

London. 1769Copper engraving in original outline colouring. Sheet approximately 19 x 28 inches. This example is dissected and laid on to linen and preserved within the original 18th century slip case, which has section 3 from the index map cut and pasted on to the upper side. Below this is pasted anold label inscribed ‘Part of Dury and Andrews’s Survey of Kent 1769. The only specimen I have seen in this form. F.W. Cook. 1918’. A large area of this map is the Thames estuary, but this is dotted with sand banks and ships. The town of Sheerness

is on the right at the bottom of this sheet with the mouth of the Medway separating the Isle of Sheppy and the The Isle of Grean [sic], and most of the Hundred of Hoo. [ref: 19569 ] £150

PRIVATELY PRINTED BROADSIDE1219. THOMAS, Mrs. WILD FLOWER ALPHABET. TO MY LITTLE

DAUGHTER MARY. Mrs Thomas, Eyhorne House, [Hollingborne, Kent] March 1849Two Folio broadside sheets, letterpress printed on one side only. The first appears to be a proof for the second one, as a quotation is supplied in manuscript at the head of this sheet and on the second the quote is typeset. The quotation is by Bernardin de St. Pierre - “Les Prairies seront votre école, les fleurs vos Alphabets, et Flore votre Institutrice.“ Below the title are twenty-six verses of charming poetry, each verse representing a letter of the alphabet - Arum, Buttercup, Cowslip and so on. In fine condition apart from one having been removed from an album, therefore remains of old glue on verso.I have not been able the find anything definite on the history of this private press. These two printed broadsides are very well-handled so it is very hard to think of them as sole productions.

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[ref: 17158 ] £150

BY STEAMER TO MARGATE, 1935.1220. THOMPSON, A. G. THE THAMES AND ALL THAT. A History

of the River, by A. G. Thompson. 1824-1935 [cover subtitle].London The General Steam Navigation Co., Ltd., 15 Trinity Square, E.C.3. n.d. but [1935]Oblong 8vo. 8.5 x 5.5 inches. 80 pp. Illustrated by 24 pp. black and white plates, 7 pp. coloured maps and by photographs, drawings, map and illustrated advertisements in text. An attractively illustrated account of the resorts served by the General Steam Navigation Company from Tower Pier. This promotional brochure includes descriptions, departure times and fares of the three Eagle steamers, Royal Eagle, Crested Eagle and Golden Eagle, which sailed to Southend and Clacton, Margate and Ramsgate. There is also a survey of the London riverside, of the new Ford Works at Dagenham and of the Kent shore to Gravesend. [ref: 21129 ] £25

ORIGINAL PHOTOGRSPHS1221. THOMPSON, STEPHEN. OLD ENGLISH HOMES A

SUMMERS’S SKETCH BOOK THE ILLUSTRATIONS BY THE AUTHORSampson Low, Marston, Low, and Searle, Crown Buildings 188, Fleet Street1876Small folio. viii + 215 pp. illustrated with 24 ‘Woodbury type’ mounted real photographs. Bound in the original publisher’s elaborate green decorated cloth, blocked in gilt and black, on thick bevelled boards, all edges gilt. Extremities a trifle worn but a fine example.The contents are: Ightham Mote (4), Hever Castle (1) Penshurst Place (6), Knole (8), Hampden House (3) and Stoke Poges (2). The images are a mixture of interiors and exteriors with fine views of the houses and some of the villages associated with them. [ref: 18553 ] £275

1222. THORNTON, E.C.B. THAMES COAST PLEASURE STEAMERS.

T. Stephenson and Sons, Prescot, Lancs., 1972Oblong 4to., 7 x 9 inches approx., iv + 49 pp. with numerous b/w illustrations.Original coloured printed card wrappers. Wrapper a little yellowed and marked, otherwise a very good copy.Forty-nine pages may not seem much but the oblong format gives space for a comprehensive and informative study of the subject. Well-written and illustrated. [ref: 19689 ] £20

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1223. TIFFIN, ALFRED W. THE GOUDHURST CORONATION BOOK. A RECORD OF CELEBRATIONS IN GOUDHURST AND

KILNDOWN (KENT) ON MAY 12th, 1937 THE CORONATION OF THIR MAJESTIES KING GEORGE VI. AND QUEEN ELIZABETH. DIRECTORY, REMINISCENCES AND LOCAL LORE.

The Courier Printing and Publishing Co. Ltd. 1937896 pp. with numerous illustrations throughout. Bound in the original gold-decorated blue cloth boards. A clean brightcopy.The rare, companion volume to the much sought-after Jubilee Book. We also have a second copy, the binding

showing some wear and tear and the gilt not so bright as the example above (but internally clean and sound). This is offered at the reduced price of £200.[ref: 20369 ] £250

DEAL PRINTED MUGGLETONIAN TRACT.1224. TOMKINSON, THOMAS. A PRACTICAL DISCOURSE,

UPON THE EPISTLE, BY JUDE. Originally Written by Thomas Tomkinson, Gent. Being a copy of a manuscript left with Thomas Tomkinson, Jun. His Grandson. [Secondpart entitled] The Mystery of Faith, by Thomas Tomkinson, Copied by Samuel Morris Baily, May 1823.

Deal: Printed for James May, and Joseph Gandar, by J.B. Underdown. 1823Small 4to. 5.75 x 9.25 inches. [8] + 215 pp + [1]. Illustrated by head- and tail-piece vignettes. The Mystery of Faith has

separate half-title but pagination and register continuous. In original, blue, sugar paper wrappers. Pages partly uncut and edges deckled. Wrappers partly eroded on spine, otherwise a fine crisp copy.Rare Deal printed Muggletonian Tract. We have previously sold The Harmony of the Three Commissions by Tomkinson, a James May printing of1822. ‘Tomkinson's most important work from the sect's perspective was ‘A Practical Discourse upon the General Epistle by Jude.’ This was probably thelast book Tomkinson wrote and he did so at the request of William Hall, a Derbyshire Muggletonian. Although only a short work of 25 verses, the Epistle of Jude was of disproportionate significance to Muggletonians. Its darkly poetic language seemed to give scriptural support to important Muggletonian ideas.’ The Muggletonians were a sect founded about 1651 byLodowicke Muggleton and John Reeve. The belief of the sect rested on the personal inspiration of the founders, who claimed to be the 'two witnesses' ofRev. 3-6. Despite the informal nature of the sect (having no ministers nor meeting houses and non-proselytizing) it continued in Kent well into the nineteenth century. Believed extinct, it was by chance discovered that at leastone Muggletonian was alive at Matfield, Kent, in the mid 1970s. Muggletonian theology was mostly circulated in manuscript form among believers. Thomas Tomkinson (1631-1710) was one of the early

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Muggletonians. Born at Ilam, near Dovedale, Staffordshire he converted after a revelatory experience in 1662, meeting Lodowicke Muggleton in London the same year. [ref: 20677 ] £90

1225. TOWNSEND, WILLIAM. BRITISH CITIES : CANTERBURY. Batsford. 195088 pp. with photographic illustration. Original cloth. Fine in dustwrapper. Nice example of Batsford’s 'Face of Britain' series with the wrapper designedby Brian Cook. [ref: 10899 ] £15

1226. TRADE CARD. JOHN COULTER, WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANT. HIGH STREET CHATHAM. Office 79 and 81 High St., Chatham. Bonded and Export Warehouse, 3,7,8, and 10 High St. Chatham. Telegraphic address Coulter. Chatham.

No place or date but c.1890Engraved Trade Card, or Show Card, 10 x 6.5 inches, printed on card, with three vignette views of Coulter’s Offices and Shop; the Bonded Warehouse and an interior view of their Bottling Cellars, all worked with elaborate lettering into an elegant show card. Slight browning to edges but otherwise in fine condition.A large Trade Card cum Bill Head or Show Card. Removed from an unknown printer’s guard book, where a copy of each previous job was retained to show prospective clients. A fine example of late nineteenth century trade engraving and typography. [ref: 12852 ] £45

TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. THE CRY FROM THE SEA AND THE ANSWER FROM THE SHORE.

London Religious Tract Society, 56 Paternoster Row, and 65 St. Paul’s Churchyard [1898]First Edition 8vo 8 x 5.5 inches 256 pp. With engraved Frontispiece, photographic vignette on the title page and 25 illustrations. Original pictorial cloth, gilt a clean, bright copy. A fine copy of the rarest of the Treanor trilogy on the Goodwins and the Life-boatmen‘The Heroes of the Goodwin Sands’ and ‘The Log of a SkyPilot’ were much reprinted whereas this seems to have been the only edition of this title.

We have another similar copy in a darker blue binding, with advertisements at the end. [ref: 21134 ] £125

1227. TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. THE CRY FROM THE SEA AND THE ANSWER FROM THE SHORE.

London Religious Tract Society, 56 Paternoster Row, and 65 St. Paul’s Churchyard [1898]First Edition 8vo 8 x 5.5 inches 256 pp. + 16pp. publishers catalogue With engraved Frontispiece,

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photographic vignette on the title page and 25 illustrations. Original pictorial cloth, gilt a clean, bright copy.A fine copy of the rarest of the Treanor trilogy on the Goodwins and the Life-boatmen‘The Heroes of the Goodwin Sands’ and ‘The Log of a Sky Pilot’ were much reprinted whereas this seems to have been the only edition of this title. This copy is a slight binding variation on others we have handled, the background cloth is a darker blue and the title lettering on the upper board is in yellow and red as opposed to gilt and red. The authors name on the upper board is in black instead of gilt as it is on the spine and the publishers device is also black. These variations are just that, there is no precedent known. [ref: 21330 ] £125

1228. TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. HEROES OF THE GOODWIN SANDS. By the Rev. Thomas Treanor, M.A. Chaplain, Mission to Seamen, Deal and the Downs.

London Religious Tract Society. 56 Paternoster Row, 65 St Paul’s Churchyard and 164 Piccadilly. 1892First Edition. 8vo. 5.5 x 7.75 inches. 255 pp. + [1]. Illustrated with 24 plates, including frontispiece, half tones, and woodcuts in text. Bound in original pictorial blue cloth, gilt. Some wear to extremities but a good copy.The first edition of the classic book on the Goodwins by the Rev, Thomas Stanley Treanor (1873-1910). It gives an account of the Deal boatmen and their luggers and rescues from ships wrecked on the Goodwin Sands by the crews of the Deal lifeboats, and was the first volume of a trilogy on this subject. [ref: 20898 ] £60

1229. TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. HEROES OF THE GOODWIN SANDS.

Religious Tract Society 1900Seventh edition. 256 pp. with maps and wood-engraved and half-tone illustrations. Original pictorial cloth, gilt. A good copy of the seventh edition of this classic book on the Goodwins. [ref: 17896 ] £40

1230. TREANOR, REV. THOMAS STANLEY. HEROES OF THE GOODWIN SANDS. By the Rev. Thomas Stanley Treanor, M.A. Chaplain, Mission to Seamen, Deal and the Downs. Author of ‘The Log ofa Sky Pilot.’ With Coloured and other Illustrations.

London The Religious Tract Society. [1904][Ninth edition]. 8vo. 5.5 x 8 inches. 250 pp. + [20] pp. advertisements. Illustrated with 22 plates, including coloured frontispiece, half tones, and woodcuts and maps in text. Bound in original pictorial green cloth, gilt. Some light foxing, but otherwise good condition. 1914 Sunday school prize label on front pastedown.The ninth edition (preface dated 1904) of the classic book by the Rev. ThomasStanley Treanor (1873-1910). The first edition of this work on the Goodwins,

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the Deal boatmen and their luggers and rescues from ships wrecked on the Goodwin Sands by the crews of the Deal lifeboats, was published in 1892.We have another copy of this edition, bound in blue cloth, with a half title and an inscription on first free endpaper. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21290 ] £35

1231. TUBBS, DOUGLAS BURNELL. KENT PUBS. drawings by Alan F. Turner.

London B. T. Batsford Ltd. 19668vo. 5x 7.75 inches. 144 pp. Illustrated with drawings in text. Bound in original red cloth, gilt, in pictorial dust wrapper. Some foxing on edges but otherwise fine condition.A selection of Kent pubs described, illustrated and arranged by place. The Index of Special Drinks at the end lists brews that have mostly vanished, including many varieties of Fremlins and several examples of the top pressure keg beers - Tavern Keg, Watney’s Red Barrel and Whitbread’s Tankard - whose growing ubiquity helped to bring about the Campaign for Real Ale in the following decade. Kent Bibliography [ref: 21717 ] £5

1232. TUNBRIDGE WELLS PELTON'S ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO TUNBRIDGE WELLS AND THE NEIGHBOURING SEATS, TOWNS, AND VILLAGES. [1881] BY J. RADFORD THOMSON, M. A. WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY JEAN MAULDON, REFERENCE LIBRARIAN, TUNBRIDGE WELLS.

Republished by S.R. Publishers Ltd 1970Small 8vo. xii + 204 pp. Original cloth, gilt, in dustwrapper.Useful working reprint, itself now long out of print. [ref: 18197 ] £15

1233. TUNBRIDGE WELLS - BRISTOW, C. R. and R. A. BAZLEY. GEOLOGY OF THE COUNTRY AROUND TUNBRIDGE WELLS.

Stationery Office, 1972x + 161 pp. with maps and photos. Original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. A mintcopy.Part of Memoirs of the Geological Survey of G.B. series. Now only published in paperback. [ref: 19576 ] £20

1234. TUNBRIDGE WELLS. DEAKIN, RICHARD. THE FLOWERING PLANTS OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS and NEIGHBOURHOOD.

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Tunbridge Wells, Stidolph and Bellamy. 1871371 pp. with hand-coloured frontispiece and numerous wood-engravings in the text. Co ntemporary green half-morocco, gilt, with contrasting title label. Extremities slightly rubbed otherwise a very good copy.Rare Tunbridge Wells flora. This copy has the bookplate of William Brackettof Tunbridge Wells, founder of the well-known auctioneers and estate agents. [ref: 15309 ] £250

1235. TUNBRIDGE WELLS GUIDE - BRITTON, JOHN. DESCRIPTIVE SKETCHES OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS AND THE CALVERLEY ESTATE; WITH BRIEF NOTICES OF THE PICTURESQUE SCENERY, SEATS, AND NOTICES OF THE ANTIQUITIES IN THE VICINITY. EMBELLISHED WITH MAPS AND PRINTS.

Published by the author, Burton Street ; Longman & Co. Paternoster Row; and Rodwell, New Bond Street.

Sold by Nash, and Elliott, Tunbridge Wells. 1832xii + 148 pp. with 3 double-page maps and plans, 10 lithographic plates, and two woodcuts in the text. Original cloth, skilfully rebacked. Original label on the spine. Some foxing and browning but a good copy.Scarce work by the distinguished architect John Britton, designed to promote Decimus Burton's Calverley Estate. [ref: 17904 ] £250 TUNBRIDGE WELLS AND CALVERLY ESTATE

1236. TUNBRIDGE WELLS GUIDE - BRITTON, JOHN. DESCRIPTIVE SKETCHES OF TUNBRIDGEWELLS AND THE CALVERLEY ESTATE; With brief notices of the picturesque scenery,seats, and antiquities in the vicinity.

Embellished with Maps and PrintsPublished by the author, Burton Street ; Longman & Co. Paternoster Row ; and Rodwell,

New Bond Street, Sold by Nash, and Elliott, Tunbridge Wells. 18328vo. xii + 148 + 4 pp. With 3 double page maps and plans, 9 lithographic plates, and two woodcuts in the text. Bound in the original cloth with paper labels on the upper board and spine. A very good copy.Scarce work by the distinguished architect John Britton, designed to promote Decimus Burton's Calverley Estate. [ref: 19104 ] £250

1237. TUNBRIDGE WELLS - CAUSTON, PETER. TUNBRIGIALIA. [OR, THE PLEASURES OF TUNBRIDGE]

London: 17098vo. 12 pp. Title page with wood cut coat-of-arms of sevenstars. Latin poem in praise of Tunbridge Wells. Late 19th century paper-covered boards. Manuscript title to upper board on printed paper label with decorative border, lettered Biliotheca Cantiana with a similar bookplate of William John Mercer to the front pastedown. A rare item.

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One of the ‘incunabula’ of Tunbridge Wells books, there being only a handful of prior publications, all of which are virtually unobtainable. Smith notes in Bibliotheca Cantiana that an edition was published, in Latin and English, in 1705 in Tunbridge Wells. That edition is incredibly rare and the present London imprint of four years later is no less scarce. We have never handled a copy previously. [ref: 18314 ] £350

CLIFFORD’S TUNBRIDGE WELLS 1238. CLIFFORD, JOHN. THE TUNBRIDGE WELLS GUIDE OR

AN ACCOUNT OF THE ANCIENT & PRESENT STATE OF THAT PLACE. with a particular description of all the Towns, Villages, Antiquities, Natural Curiosities, Ancient & Modern Seats, Founderies &c. within the circumference of sixteen Miles, with accurate Views of the principal Objects.

: Printed and Published by J.Clifford. Tunbridge Wells, May also be had at either of the Libraries, on the parade. Sold also in London by Hamilton Adams & Co., Paternoster Row. 1840Seventh edition, revised. 12mo. [4] + xi + [1] + 172 pp. a-a6, B-P6. Illustrated with 2 folding maps and fourteen plates, including seven engravings (2 folding) and seven woodcuts. plus title page vignette and dedication. A slip, Tunbridge Wells fares, bound in after p.165. Original yellow printed paper wrappers, sometime respined in yellow card. Wrappers and some lower page corners a little grubby and worn, but preserving the original apperance. One folding plate repaired. A plan of Tunbridge Wells, serving as a frontispiece has the southern Parish and County boundaries hand-coloured in outline.A late edition of Clifford’s guide with the (undated) title page little changed from the early years of the century. It is similar to Goulden 61 but has additional plates and is in paper covers. The Address to the reader is dated January, 1840. The front cover contains the same date and the edition statement with an altered imprint, Sold also by R.Nash and J.Elliott (compare Goulden 62) All these ephemeral guides have become very difficult to find complete. Goulden [ref: 19105 ] £375

COLBRAN’S NEW GUIDE 1239. TUNBRIDGE WELLS GUIDE - COLBRAN, JOHN.

Edited by JAMES PHIPPEN. COLBRAN’S NEW GUIDE FOR TUNBRIDGE WELLS, Being A Full and Accurate Description of The Wells and Its Neighbourhood, within a Circuit of nearly twenty Miles;

Illustrated with Plates, Wood Engravings, etc. of most of the principal Places. Edited by James Phippen.

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Printed and Published by John Colbran, Tunbridge Wells, Kent., and A.H. Bailey and Co., Cornhill, London. 1839 [1840]Small 8vo. Engraved folding map and frontispiece + xiv + 404 pp. + xi , list ofsubscribers + [i] + 32 pp. advertisements [8], B-2N4. Illustrated with folding coloured map and 14 plates (11 engravings, two folding and one lithograph and two woodcuts) including frontispiece and several woodcuts to the text. p.117 is misnumbered 116. Original green cloth, gilt. A little rubbed at extremities. Front hinges loose and front endpaper detached. Small tear to map. Some staining and occasional light foxing to plates otherwise a very good, clean copy.This is one of the early versions of Colbran’s New Guide (see Goulden, p. 94). The map and title are both dated 1839 and the Advertisements are both dated January 1840. This seems to conform most closely to Goulden 63 but has fourteen inserted plates, including frontispiece, rather than sixteen.Colbran’s guides are a mine of information and difficult to find in good condition. Goulden [ref: 19106 ] £250

SPRANGE, JASPER. THE TUNBRIDGE WELLS GUIDE Or An account of the ancient & present State of that Place. To which is added a particular

description of the Towns and Villages, Remains of Antiquity, Gentlemens Seats, Founderies &c.&c. within the Circumference of Sixteen Miles.Tunbridge Wells: Printed and Sold by J.Sprange, at his Circulating Library. Sold also in London by T. Beecroft Bookseller, Pater Noster Row. 178012mo. [4], viii, 48, 45-53, [3], 49-68; 54, vi, 51-52, 55-98, xii, 99-106, vi, 107-178; 14; 16. illustrated with 3 plates, one folding, in

addition to frontispiece, title vignette and dedication. Bound in contemporary full calf with contrasting title label, gilt, and gilt decoration to spine. Lacks final blank leaf but has the advertisement from an earlier issue pasted on the rear paste-down endpaper. Front hinge cracking and split at top otherwise a very good copy.First published in 1780, the early issues of this little guide, all dated 1780, have very eccentric pagination and Goulden lists five variants. This issue conforms almost entirely to number three, giving it a date after March 5th but before July 27th 1782. A very attractive Tunbridge Wells guide with a fine collection of wood engravings, paying particular attention to the major country seats, which are described in detail with lists of paintings. Goulden 3, p.99. [ref: 19114 ] £200

- SPRANGE, JASPER. THE TUNBRIDGE WELLS GUIDE. Or An account of the ancient & present State of that Place. With a particular description of allthe Towns, Villages, Antiquities, Natural Curiosities, Ancient & Modern seats, Founderies &c. within the circumference of sixteen Miles, with accurate Views of the principal Objects.

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Tunbridge Wells: Printed and Sold by J. Sprange. Sold also in London by Rivington’s Booksellers St Pauls Ch Yard.. 181712mo. [4] + x x + 332 pp. [2], A-A2,B-B8,C-GG4. illustrated with table and twelve plates, including eight folding, in addition to frontispiece, title vignette and dedication. Bound in contemporary half-calf over marbled boards, gilt title to spine. Calf is frayed and split at top and bottom of spine with some interior stains opposite some plates. Small, contemporary newspaper cutting tipped in, p.206. Otherwise a fine complete copy.Author’s address is signed J. Sprange. January, 1815. This copy is a reissue of the 1815 edition and is similar to Goulden 27 but has additional plates, even more than Goulden 28, which has only eleven. It has the preface complete and ‘A list of the Lodging Houses’, pp.313-320. The colophon, in the name of Clifford, Printer, is on p.332 only. This suggests an intermediateversion between John Clifford, taking over from Jasper Sprange (died 1823),his uncle.A very attractive Tunbridge Wells guide with a fine collection of wood engravings, paying particular attention to the major country seats, which are described in detail with lists of paintings. [ref: 19102 ] £375

1240. TUNBRIDGE WELLS VIEWS - AMSINCK, PAUL. TUNBRIDGE WELLS, AND NEIGHBOURHOOD, ILLUSTRATED BY A SERIES OF ETCHINGS, AND HISTORICAL DESCRIPTIONS. THE ETCHINGS EXECUTED BY LETITIA BYRNE.

London: By William Miller and Edmund Lloyd, 1810Folio, [12] + 183 pp. with 31 full page engraved plates and12 vignettes. Bound in contemporary red half morocco over marbled boards, probably by the publisher. Spine in compartments and titles and decoration in gilt with a decorative paper title label to upper board. Mostly found with foxing and browning to text and plates, this copy appears less affected than most. A very good copy.A scarce work which lists 196

subscribed copies, making it likely that only 200 orso copies were produced. The charming illustrationsfocus on the gentlemen’s seats which abound in theneighbourhood. Sadly, as one of the best view booksof this part of the county, a large number of copies ofthis work have been broken-up for the plates but it ishere presented in its complete and original state [ref: 19925 ] £600

1241. TURNER, GORDON. ASHFORD THE COMING OF THE RAILWAY.

Christine Swift. Maidstone: 19848vo. [12] + 191 pp. with photo illustrations and end-paper maps. Original cloth gilt, in dustwrapper. A near mint example.Excellent history of Ashford and its relationship with the Railway. Now out of print. [ref: 11197 ] £15

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1242. TURNOR, REGINALD. KENT. With Wood Engravings by Monica Poole.

(Vision of England).London and New York Paul Elek. 19504to. 7.25 x 9.25 inches. 128 pp. Half title. Illustrated with 74 black and white photographs, 37 wood engravings, including frontispiece and head and tail piece vignettes and 5 pp. maps. Bound in original terracotta cloth, gilt, in price-clipped dust wrapper. Some foxing, largely confined to fore edge and endpapers, otherwise a good copy. Ink signature and rubber stamp 1951 date on front pastedown. A circular tour of Kent with some delightful wood-engravings. [ref: 21720 ] £18

1243. TURNPIKE ROADS. STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURE ON ACCT OF THE HIGHWAYS OF THE PARISH OF DEAL, [1854]. General Statement of the Receipts and Expenditure on account of the Highways of the Parish of Deal...for the Year ending 25th March 1854, as appearing from the Accounts of James Dowers and Vincent Cornwell...Surveyors of Highways...allowed by the Justices at a Special Sessions for the Highways ...at the Guildhall...on the thirtieth Dayof March 1854.

Settled by William Foote, Esq., for the Law Times Office, 29, Essex-street, Strand, London. 1854Letterpress form on blue paper with manuscript insertions. 16.25 x 12.75 inches. Folded document, later folded in four at right angle to original fold. Cover title on front fold. Some fraying along centre line fold and browning of later fold edges. Two small edge tears, not affecting legibility, otherwise fine condition and clearly legible manuscript entries. White horse on red stamp, inscribed Gordon Ward, M.D. , F.S.A . on front blank side.The annual account of the Deal Surveyors of Highways, which by the Act of 1849, quoted on the form, was required to be submitted to the Secretary of State (presumably the Home Secretary of the time, Lord Palmerston). This particular copy of the form would have been the one that was retained locally. By the 1835 Highway Act, surveyors of highways had the duty of the upkeep and repair of parish roads. By clause 44 of the Act the surveyors had to submit their yearly accounts to special sessions of the local justices of the peace, who were responsible for the execution of the provisions of the Act. The repair work required to the roads was now funded directly from the rates, although the form still makes provision for work to be performed directly in lieu of rates, an obsolescent concept since the 1835 Act. This Statement shows the rates to be the only source of income of £160/8s/11d, while the main heads of expenditure are manual and team labour and the cost of materials. The £24/5s/0d paid to the Commissioners of Pavement presumably relates to the provision of pedestrian pavements in the town centre. At the same sessions a schedule of the state of repair of the roads wasalso submitted by the surveyors (according to clause 45 of the Act) and it supplies further details of the work carried out. This particular version of theform, lists the penalties liable for non-compliance of the surveyors duty to submit their accounts, at its foot. Of the two, James Dowers and Vincent Cornwell, it is possible that the latter is the person of that name listed as bootand shoemaker of Lower Street in the 1858 Directory. The parish still had a liability for contributions towards the repair of turnpike roads within its

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boundaries but in this particular year, the Dover to Sandwich Trust has not required any such payment. A scarce example of the financial statement forDeal parish highways, required by law to be submitted to the local justices and to the government in Whitehall. [ref: 20367 ] £25

1244. TURNPIKE ROADS. DOVER TO SANDWICH. BORO’ OF DEAL RETURN BY SURVEYORS OF HIGHWAYS OF STATE OF ROADS 30TH MARCH 1854. The Schedule of the Surveyors of the Highways of the Parish of Deal in the Borough of Deal presented with their Accounts to the Magistrates at the Special Sessions held the 30th day of March 1854.

Prepared manuscript form with manuscript entries. 15.75 x 12.75 inches. Folded document, later folded in four at right angle to original fold. Cover titleon front fold. Some browning and staining of outside, with slight fraying along front fold line, but otherwise fine interior.This schedule is an annual return of the state of the roads in the parish and borough of Deal and the repairs carried out for the year ending 31st March 1854. This was compiled in accordance with clause 45 of the General Highway Act of 1835, which provided for special sessions of the local justices of the peace, to execute the provisions of the Act, ‘And at the special sessions held next after the twenty-fifth day of March...the surveyor...shall verify his accounts, And shall make a return in writing to such special sessions Of the state of all the roads, common highways, bridges, causeways, hedges, ditches, and watercourses...And of all nuisances and encroachments, if any...As well as the extent of the different highways which the said parish is liable to repair, What part thereof has been repaired, And with what materials, At what expense, And what was the amount levied during the time he was surveyor of the said parish.’ The Deal return follows this clause of the Act almost exactly, except that it fails to note the specific cost of the repairs and their materials (here chalk, flints, stones and bricks). Perhaps we may assume that this figure was the same as the total amount levied for the year, £160.8.11. The seven miles of the parish roads still required repairs in some places and this semed to be an ongoing task as resources allowed, but ‘Such as have been repaired are in good repair.’ There had been no complaints over nuisances and no encroachments on the road had been made. The Schedule is signed by the two parish surveyors, James Dowers and Vincent Cornwell and by the four Deal JPs. Of the surveyors, it is possible that Cornwell is the person of that name listed as boot and shoemaker of Lower Street in the 1858 Directory. Of the justices, C. Kingsmillmay be connected with Kingsmill and West, auctioneers and appraisers of Beach Street. and George Hammond and William Watt are listed as magistrates in 1858. The turnpike road from Dover to Sandwich went through Deal and the seven miles of parish highways would have included this stretch. The parish still maintained a liability for the upkeep of turnpike roads within its boundaries. A scarce document illustrating the regulatory control exercised by the government over local highways and how this was put into practise by the parish authorities.

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Foote, The General or Principal Highway Act, 1862. Melville, Directory of Kent, 1858. [ref: 20365 ] £45

1245. TURNPIKE ROADS. DOVER TO SANDWICH. [LETTER CONCERNING ENCROACHMENT OF HIGHWAY ON PROPERTY IN WALMER]. [Later pencil note:] Deal and Walmer T.P. Road. Complaint against surveyors for neglect re encroachments. [Heading on back:] Bridges, JT Esqer 10 July 1837. The Information and complaint of John Thos Bridges Esqu of Cinque Port...Parish of Walmer...taken before me [space left blank] one of her Majestys justices of the Peace in respect of said Cinque Ports.

1837Manuscript letter. 7.25 x 8.75 inches. Four leaves. Double folded sheet, later folded in three at right angle to original fold. Slight browning on outside of three folds but otherwise in fine crisp condition.Bridges is laying a complaint against the two Surveyors of Highways of the Parish of Walmer (James Leith and William Bushell) for neglect of their duties. Their specific offence has been to tolerate an encroachment of a bank and ditch less than fifteen feet from the centre of the Walmer parish highwayleading from Grams’ Lane under Hawks Hill to Lower Walmer at the bottomof the Generals or Rackleton [?] Hill field, belonging to George Leith. Bridges refers to clause 69 of the 1835 General Highway Act, ‘ If any person shall encroach, by making...any building, hedge, ditch, or other fence on any carriageway...within the distance of fifteen feet from the centre thereof, every person so offending shall forfeit, on conviction...any sum not exceedingforty shillings.’ The surveyor is to remove or fill in any such obstruction at the expense of the offender and the justice may, at a special sessions for the highways, seize his goods to meet this cost. Furthermore, Bridges considers that the negligent surveyors, have incurred the penalty imposed by clause 20of the Act, which states that, ‘If any surveyor...shall neglect his duty...he shallforfeit...any sum not exceeding five pounds.’ As a consequence, the two surveyors may be summoned to answer these charges before two JPs. Overleaf, Bridges excuses himself from coming to Deal on magistrates’ business, ‘but found myself so ill from a violent cold in my head that I was quite fit for nothing and went back to bed again.’ The Mr Backhouse referred to in this letter may be the Rev. Ralph Backhouse listed in the 1840 Directory of Kent. John Thomas Bridges (1805-53) was born at St Nicholas at Wade and was a Justice of the Peace for Kent. He married Harriet Elizabeth Affleck (1807-97) of East Retford, Notts, and in the censuses of 1841and 1851, they were living at High Street, Walmer with their children, Bridges giving his occupation as county magistrate in 1851. George Leith, the landowner, is likely to the resident of Liverpool House and the neglectful surveyor, James Leith, may indeed be his relative, who lived in Walmer Court. The other surveyor, William Bushell, could be the bricklayer of that name in the 1840 Directory. By the 1835 Act, surveyors of highways, often responsible to parish highway boards, under the jurisdiction of local justices,had the duty of the repair and upkeep of parish roads. They were elected, or re-elected annually, and obviously the burden of office was found to be onerous by some of them, leading to neglect of duty as here, requiring intervention by the justices. The parish still maintained a liability for the

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upkeep of turnpike roads within its boundaries. Earlier in 1837, Bridges, a trustee of the turnpike from Dover through Deal to Sandwich, had been a signatory to a circular raising concern over a perceived threat to turnpike roads from proposed railways reaching the Kent coast. [ref: 20364 ] £45

RAILWAYS AND TURNPIKE ROADS1246. TURNPIKE ROADS. DOVER TO SANDWICH. [SPECIAL

MEETING OF DOVER TO SANDWICH TURNPIKE TRUST CONCERNING PROPOSED RAILWAY]. At a Special Meeting of the Commissioners of the Turnpike Road from Dovor through Deal to Sandwich....in the Guildhall, Deal, on Friday the 13th of January, 1837.

Deveson, Printer, Deal. 1837Letterpress, signed and dated in manuscript. 7.75 x 9 inches. One leaf. Printedon crown paper, originally folded in three. Slight browning along edge of former fold, otherwise fine condition.The calling of this public meeting shows an early concern at the competition offered by the new railways to the established turnpike roads. A railway from London to Dover was suggested as early as 1825 and the South EasternRailway Act, establishing it, was passed in 1836. At the same time there was a proposal for a North Kent line from London, via the Medway towns to Canterbury with a branch to Deal, although this scheme did not materialise. Clearly with the enthusiasm for railway promotion in Kent so much in the air, the Trust felt there to be a real threat to the financial interests of its investors. It considered that lenders should be granted some form of ‘indemnity’ by Parliament (which had established the Trust in 1797) ‘against the depression...in the value of their Bonds should the proposed ‘Kent Railway’ or any other Railway affecting their Trust be carried into effect.’ Its operating capital was provided from the income generated by farming the gate tolls to private investors. Confidence in the continued future profitability of ‘all Turnpike Investiture, good faith in which has has hitherto effected to the Public admirable and satisfactory despatch,’ was required and this was jeopardised by the possibility of ‘uncalled for and hazardous competitions’ offered by railways. It is not known whether the subcommitteeof five appointed ‘to watch the bills’ or other lobbying proposed by the Trust in this document, had any impact on local railway promotion. In the immediate aftermath of its 1837 campaign the Trust’s financial position did deteriorate and the following year, it added two new gates (making a total of six) to the road, in order to increase revenue from tolls. Pigot’s 1840 Directory lists daily coaches to London, Canterbury and Herne Bay, with a twice daily service to Dover and five services to Sandwich, in additon to daily van sercices to Canterbury and Dover, all of these having to traverse the turnpike. Income was still outstripped by the cost of repairs and occasionally the Trust had to collect its own tolls directly as lessees were slow in coming forward. However, by the time that a railway actually beganto invade its territory, it had once more become solvent. In the event, the railway from Sandwich terminated at Deal in 1847 and this caused toll collections to fall to about half their previous levels on this stretch of the road. The Deal to Dover section of the turnpike (over which the first

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locomotive for the 1847 branch had been laboriously hauled) remained viable until the Trust was wound up in 1874, the railway not being extended over this difficult section until 1881. A scarce document concerned with the perceived threat to the turnpike road system from the new railways years before their actual construction. [ref: 20363 ] £45

FARNBOROUGH TO SEVENOAKS TURNPIKE1247. TURNPIKE ROADS. FARNBOROUGH TO SEVENOAKS.

ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for repairing and widening the Road leading from ...the Town... of Farnborough in the County of Kent, to ...Riverhill, in the Parish of Sevenoaks...

Printed by Thomas Baskett, Printer to the King’s most Excellent Majesty; and by the Assigns of Robert Baskett, London. 1748 Disbound in plastic sleeve. Folio. 7.75 x 12.25 inches. [2] + 131-160 pp. Illustrated with vignette initial at start of main text, which is in black letter. Fine crisp condition.This turnpike Act establishes a trust to improve the eleven mile stretch of road from Farnborough to Riverhill, just south of Sevenoaks, which also formed part of the post road from London to Tunbridge Wells and on to Rye.The preamble states that this highway is, ‘by reason of the great and heavy Carriages frequently passing through the same, greatly in Decay, and the same is become very bad in the Winter Season; and ...is in many places very narrow and incommodious...’ The Act makes detailed provisions for the collection of toll, erection of gates and toll houses, exemptions from toll (e.g.. the carriage of agricultural produce, ‘Lop or Top-wood,’ etc. for local consumption, the transport of fish and on election days), penalties for evasion and for the system of financial administration and accountability required to operate the turnpike system. The amounts due in tolls are specified in various price categories, from passenger coaches (drawn by varying numbers of horses or mares), waggons and carts drawn by horses and oxen, laden or unladen animals not drawing, droves of oxen, cows or neat cattle and of calves, hogs, sheep or lambs. The turnpike surveyors wereto co-operate with the parish Surveyors of Highways, employing a ‘Statute-work’ labour force. Nearly 140 named trustees, composed of local nobility, gentry, clergy and medical men, were appointed and invested with powers to oversee the administration and operation of the trust. Although ESTC records only one copy (in the US), we do not regard this as a scarce item in the UK. ESTC N52922. [1748 i.e.1749] [ref: 20338 ] £45

1248. TURNPIKE ROADS. FARNBOROUGH TO SEVENOAKS.SEVENOAKS TURNPIKE TRUST - DRAFT INDENTURE FOR CONVEYANCE OF LAND. The Hon. R. H. Clive by the direction of the Earl and Countess Amherst and The Trustees of the Sevenoaks Turnpike Road. (Copy draft) Conveyance by way of exchange of certain lands in theparish of Sevenoaks, Kent, forming the site of a new line of Road near White Hart Hill. (The word,‘certain’ and those after Kent have been

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crossed through). Dated 22nd October 1852. Austen and Holcroft, Sevenoaks.

1852Manuscript on blue paper, tied with tape, with annotations in several other hands Folio. 10 x 16.75 inches. [28] pages, numbered 1-13. The plans mentioned as drawn in the margin are not included in this draft document. Red stamp with white horse, inscribed Gordon Ward. M.D. F.S.A. Originally folded in four, with foldmarks, a small missing section on former front and back of folded document, not affecting legibility. Extremities worn but otherwise in fine condition. An extensively annotated draft indenture for the conveyance and exchange of land in the vicinity of Knole Park, between the Trustees of the Sevenoaks Turnpike Trust on one hand and Robert Henry Clive and the Earl and Countess of Amherst on the other. In 1822 a specification of the construction work for realigning the road in the area of White Hart Hill was issued, and the Trustees were further authorised by two Acts of the mid-1830s to divert the turnpike road along a new line. By this Indenture the two Treasurers of the Trust, Charles Palmer and Joseph Palmer of Sevenoaks, agree to pay Clive ‘£65.12.6 of lawful British money’ for a piece of land of just over one acre, being part of two fields called Shangden Meadow, or Long Meadow, and Seven Acres, belonging to Whitehart Farm. An insertion at the end grants to Clive in exchange, a ‘part of the Old Road intended to be abandoned’ between Knole Park on the north and Clive’s existing land to the south. The document rehearses at great length the descent of the land sold to the Trust from the Duke of Dorset to his daughter, Mary, then Countess of Plymouth, and later Countess Amherst in 1825. By a family settlement of 1839, Clive (now a relative by marriage) had acquired an interest in the Amherst land in question. William Pitt Amherst, first Earl Amherst (1773-1857), served as a diplomat at the courts of the two Sicilies and of the ChineseEmperor before his appointment as Governor-General of Bengal in 1823. On his return from India to Knole House, he sometimes occupied himself in local affairs, particularly in promoting road improvements. He married Mary (1792-1864), widow of his stepson the sixth Earl of Plymouth, as his second wife in 1839. She had been born Lady Sackville, one of the daughters of JohnFrederick, 3rd Duke of Dorset, of Knole House. Robert Henry Clive (1789-1856) of Oakley Park, Shropshire, who had married Harriet, daughter of Other Windsor, 5th Earl of Plymouth in 1819, was a grandson of Clive of India and was MP for Ludlow, 1818-32 and for Shropshire South from 1832. [ref: 20872 ] £50

1249. GREENWICH TO WOOLWICH. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for repairing, widening, and improving the Lower Road leading from the Town of Greenwich to the Town of Woolwich in the County of Kent. [30th May 1818]. [58 GEO. III. c. lxxviii]. [on front board: Georgii III. Regis].

[Act:] Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, Printers to the King’s most Excellent Majesty, London. 1818 and [c. 1920-40]Folio. 7.5 x 12 inches. 1785-1820 pp. 8 pp. typescript with tipped in plate and plans, and hand-written notes. Bound in brown half morocco, gilt, with marbled boards. Elliston Erwood bookplate. Fine condition.

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Erwood’s bound copy of the Act establishes a trust to improve the Lower Road between Greenwich and Woolwich which is currently ‘unsafe, narrow, incommodious, and out of Repair, and in some Places in a ruinous Condition,’ facilitating access to the ‘Dock-Yard and Arsenals at Woolwich, and the Conveyance of Navy, Ordinance, and other Public Stores to and from the same.’ It appoints some fifty Trustees, many of whom are ex-officiomilitary and naval personnel, e.g the Commanding Royal Engineer and the Master Shipwright at Woolwich, along with individually named local notables, clerics and army officers. The eighty sections of the Act detail the administration of the trust and the activities of its officers. Erwood has assembled some extracts from the minute book for the New Cross Turnpike Trust (1813-20) which examined the proposals for the new act in 1817, but as he notes at the end, decided not to add to its existing road network, which would have linked up to its route in Greenwich. Hence the need to establish a new trust for this short stretch of road. Erwood has also inserted a copy of an 1825 illustration of the Royal Arsenal Gates where the new road ended, and of an 1810 plan of the road, which he has redrawn from Essex Record Office (proposed ferry link from Woolwich to Plaistow, Essex). At the end are his tracings showing the locations of toll gates on the Lower Road. [ref: 20891 ] £75

SOUTHWARK TO DEPTFORD1250. TURNPIKE ROADS. KENT ROAD TO DEPTFORD. ACTS

OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for making and maintaining a Road from the Kent Road, in the County of Surrey, to Deptford, in the County of Kent; and a Branch therefrom, to Horsleydown, in the County of Surrey. [1st July 1811.]. Bound with, An Act for amending an Act of his present Majesty for making a Road from the Kent Road in the County of Surrey, to Deptford in the County of Kent, and a Branch therefrom to Horsleydown, in the said County of Surrey. [18th July 1812.].

Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, Printers to the King’s most Excellent Majesty, London. 1811, 1812.Folio. 8 x 12.75 inches. 1811, [4929], 4930-5000; 1812, [4437], 4438-4444. Illustrated with royal arms at head of titles. Disbound and rebound in later limp brown cloth, with added paper title, The Road from the Kent Road to Deptford, etc. Edges grimed and frayed. Rear pages of both Acts more heavilygrimed. 1811 Act formerly folded in two and 1812 Act in four.‘Whereas the making and maintaining of a Turnpike Road from the Kent Road, at or near a certain House called the Bricklayers’ Arms, in the Parish of Saint George the Martyr, to join the Turnpike Road leading from Rotherhithe to the Lower Town of Deptford, near the Transport Office in Grove Street, in the Parish of Saint Paul’s Deptford, and to pass in a Line...along and Part of Blue Anchor Road, and across the Deptford Lower Road and across the Grand Surrey Canal, through the several Parishes of Saint Paul’s Deptford, Saint Mary Rotherhithe, Saint Mary Magdalen Bermondsey, and Saint George the Martyr...and also...a Turnpike Road from Horsleydown in the Parish of Saint John’s, at the Point of Junction of Charles Street, Fair Street, and Freeschool Street, to join...where such newly intended Road will cross the Blue Anchor Road, and to pass through Dockhead across Neckinjer Road, across Dandy’s Corner near Dandy’s Turnpike, and across Blue Anchor Lane, and through the several Parishes of

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Saint Mary Rotherhithe, Saint Mary Magdalen Bermondsey, and Saint John’s Southwark...will be a great Benefit...’ Some of these streets and localities no longer exist. The parish of Southwark St John Horsleydown wascreated from St Olave’s in 1733 and merged into Bermondsey in 1904. The church was destroyed in 1940 and the losses of that era and subsequent rebuilding may account for the absence of Charles, Fair and Free School Streets, all of which still existed in 1891. Dandy’s Corner and Turnpike seem to have disappeared as names but Blue Anchor Lane, Dockhead, Fair Street and Grove Street, Deptford (now Lewisham) still exist. The Neckinger river, which gave its name to the road, now flows underground into the Thames at St Saviour’s Dock, in an area that was formerly the notorious Jacob’s Island,but is now part of the fashionable Shad Thames. The Grand Surrey Canal was constructed in 1801-07 from Rotherhithe to Mitcham. The purpose of the Act was to ‘open a shorter and better Communication...between the Citiesof London and Westminster and the Borough of Southwark, and the Lower Town of Deptford...’ ‘as the present Roads are very circuitous and inconvenient.’ Traffic to Dover passed along Borough High Street, Church Street and into the Kent Road of this Act, now renamed Tabard Street. The branch to Horsleydown improved the road system south of the Surrey bank The Act also amends various earlier acts which altered the road system in this area and allows for the compulsory acquisition of land required for the improvements and compensation as necessary. It nominates trustees and provides detailed regulations for the administration of the toll collecting, including a surcharge on overweight vehicles (not applicable to the armed forces), rules controlling the passage of night soil, the appointment of watchmen, patrols and night constables the provision of hackney coach stands and the protection of existing corporate rights. A ten page schedule, annexed to the Act, lists the owners and addresses of all properties along the route of the proposed turnpikes. A wide range of further provisions are included in the amending Act of 1812, probably following reaction to the publication of the first Act. These include a prohibition on the taking of gravel from the River Thames. A detailed source for the early nineteenth century road system of Southwark and Deptford. [ref: 20432 ] £65

1251. TURNPIKE ROADS. SEVENOAKS COMMON TO COWDEN PENSHURST AND WATS CROSS TO COWDEN. [NOTICE REQUIRING LISTS OF THOSE ELIGIBLE FOR STATUTE LABOUR TO WORK ON TURNPIKE ROADS IN THE VICINITY OF PENSHURST]. Notice...that the next Meeting of the Trustees for repairing and widening the Road, from Wats Cross to Cowden...the Road...from Sevenoaks Common to Crockhurst Hatch Corner, and from Penshurst Town to Southborough...is appointed to be held at the Leicester Arms, in Penshurst...at which Meeting, the several Surveyors ofthe Highways in the Parishes and Boroughs of Hillden, Holllanden, Charket, Penshurst Town, Middleward, Hallborough East, Hallborough West, Ashurst, Speldhurst, Bidborough, Southborough West, Hever, Cowden, and Chiddingstone, are hereby required to deliver to the Surveyors of the said roads...true Lists...of the Names of all the

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inhabitasnts and Occupiers of Lands, Tenenements, or Hereditaments...and which...keep Teams or Draughts, or occupy Plough Lands, and are liable to do Team’s Duty, and which of them are Labourers...and also the number of Day’s Work which such Teams or Draughts, or otherwise each Person ought to do on the said Roads...Hereof fail not, under the Penalty of Five Pounds.

Dakens, Printer, Tonbridge 1828Letterpress notice with manuscript insertions and alterations, mounted on later card. 8 x 10 inches. Edges frayed and stained with some missing sections, not affecting legibility. Small hole in centre obscuring part of word, ‘Hatch,’ otherwise fine condition.At this meeting of the Turnpike Trustees for the area centred around Penshurst, the highway surveyors of the fourteen parishes through which theturnpike roads run, are summoned to liaise with the turnpike road surveyors. The parish surveyors are to supply lists of all the local inhabitants who are able to provide team labour (i.e. horses and carts) or ordinary day labour, to repair and widen the turnpike roads. The requirement for statute labour on parish roads dates back to the 1555 Act. The new turnpike trusts were empowered by the acts of parliament which established them, to demand this statute labour as well as additional labour, to be paid at an agreed rate, from those living within a four mile radius of the turnpike roads. Statute duty was abolished by the General Highway Act of 1835 and road repairs were henceforward funded entirely from the rates. The Trusts for the turnpikes in this part of Kent were established 1765-67. Of the ‘Parishes and Boroughs’ listed, Penshurst, Ashurst, Speldhurst. Bidborough, Hever, Cowden and Chiddingstone are ancient parishes and Southborough a later one. Hillden (or Hilden) is a locality north west of Tonbridge, Hollanden a hamlet in the ancient parish of Leigh and Hallborough a locality in Penshurst parish. A scarce record of a turnpike trust calling on parish statute labour to carry out road repairs, seven years before this system was replaced by the 1835 Act. [ref: 20372 ] £40

1252. SEVENOAKS TO TUNBRIDGE WELLS TURNPIKE ROADS. SEVENOAKS TO TUNBRIDGE WELLS. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for enlarging the Term ...of...An Act for repairing and amending the Highways leading from Seven Oaks to Woods Gate, and Tunbridge-Wells... And for explaining and making more Effectual the same Act; And for amending ... the Highways leading from Woods-Gate... to Kippings-Cross in the Parish of Brenchly...

Printed by John Baskett, Printer to the King’s most Excellent Majesty, And by the Assigns of Henry Hills, deceas’d, London. 1724Disbound, in plastic sleeve. Folio. 7.5 x 11 inches. [2] + 307-312 pp. Illustrated with royal arms on title page and vignette initial at start of main text, which is in black letter. Fine crisp condition.This turnpike act amends the 1709 Act which improved the road between Sevenoaks and Tunbridge Wells via Tonbridge and Woods-Gate and provided for a short extension from Woods-Gate to Kippings-Cross, in the parish of Brenchly (which was later continued on to Lamberhurst and Flimwell in East Sussex). The original act was for a term of fifteen years and this was renewed for a further twenty-one as, ‘by reason of the Natural Clay

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and deepness of the Soil, and the Difficulty of getting proper Materials for Amendment,’ it had not been effectively repaired during that time. The shortmile-and-a-half extension from Woods-Gate was required as that road ‘is very bad, and dangerous to his Majesty’s Subjects passing that Way.’ Tolls and duties were authorised to be collected to ameliorate these roads and any adjoining landowners evading tolls, by allowing passage though their grounds of any ‘ Horse, Cattle, Coach, Calash, Chaise, Caravan, Waggon, Wain, or other Carriage whatsoever,’ would forfeit ten shillings to the toll collector. The Act made provision for maintenance by surveyors to amend, repair or remove and prevent ‘Annoyances...Filfth, Dung, Rubbish, Water-Courses, Drains, or other Nuisances’ on any part of the highway. These surveyors were to co-operate with the parish Surveyors of Highways, employing a ‘Statute-Work’ labour force. Ninety seven named Commissioners, composed of local nobility, gentry and clergymen were appointed, with three additional individuals charged with putting the act into effect, without receiving any profits from the tolls levied. Although ESTC records only four copies (in the US), we do not regard this as a scacre item in the UK. ESTC N50462 [1725 imprint] [ref: 20305 ] £45

SEVENOAKS TO TUNBRIDGE WELLS1253. TURNPIKE ROADS. SEVENOAKS TO TUNBRIDGE

WELLS ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for enlarging the Terms and Powers granted by Two Acts of Parliament, For repairing the Roads leading from Seven-oaks to Woodsgate and Tunbridge-wells, and from Woodsgate to Kipping’s-cross in the County of Kent; and also for repairing the Roads from Kipping’s-cross ... to Lamberhurst Pound; and Pullen’s-hill ... and to Flimwell-vent in the County of Sussex.

Printed by John Baskett, Printer to the King’s most Excellent Majesty, London. 1740Disbound, in plastic sleeve. Folio. 8 x 12.25 inches. [2] + 247-270 pp. Illustrated with royal arms on title page and vignette initial at start of main text which is in black letter. Fine crisp condition.This turnpike Act amends the 1709 and 1724 Acts, for repairing and improving the road between Sevenoaks and Tunbridge via Woodsgate. It renewed the 1724 Act for a further period of twenty one years and, because this stretch had ‘become so bad and ruinous’, extended the short Kipping’s Cross spur via Pullen’s Hill and Lamberhurst, to Flimwell-vent, in the parish of Ticehurst, just over the Sussex border. The Act made detailed provisions for the collection of tolls, erection of gates, exemptions (‘Fish to be Toll-free’ and no toll on election days), penalties for evasion, erection of milestones and for the system of financial administration and accountabilityrequired to operate the turnpike system. The amounts due in tolls are specified in seven categories, including various types of passenger coaches (drawn by more than four or by three or four horses or mares), waggons and carts drawn by horses and oxen, laden or unladen animals not drawing,droves of oxen, cows or neat cattle and of calves, hogs, sheep or lambs. The turnpike surveyors were to cooperate with the parish Surveyors of Highways, employing a ‘Statute Work’ labour force. 108 named trustees, composed of local nobility, gentry and clergymen were appointed and

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invested with powers to oversee the administration and operation of the trust. Although ESTC records only one copy (in the US), we do not regard this as a scarce item in the UK. ESTC N51785 [ref: 20308 ] £45

MANUSCRIPT TURNPIKE MAP. C. 18431254. TURNPIKE ROADS. SEVENOAKS TO TUNBRIDGE

WELLS. THE SEVENOAKS, WOODSGATE, TUNBRIDGE WELLS ANDKIPPINGS CROSS, AND THE TUNBRIDGE WELLS - WOODSGATE TURNPIKE ROADS. c.1845. [Pasted to front endpaper: Printed notice of meeting of turnpike Trustees, Tonbridge, 1828}.

c.1845 [Notice, 1828]Large square folio. 19.5 x 19 inches (boards). 6 manuscript maps (numbered by Elliston Irwood), in double linen sheets, with hand coloured and lettered plans of turnpike roads running from sheet to sheet. Bound in later brown buckram. Hand labelled on front board by Irwood. Linen maps are stained and show signs of much use, presumably having been employed in the field.The route of the turnpike is shown from just north of the Sevenoaks/Tonbridge boundaries, via Watts Cross and Hildenborough, through Tonbridge Town, and via Quarry Hill, Bounds Corner, Castle Hill, Fairthorne Gate and Southborough to Woodsgate. The final map shows the section from Woodsgate to Kippings Cross. The Turnpike Trust to improve the road between Sevenoaks and Tunbridge Wells via Tunbridge and Woodsgate was established by an Act of 1709, which was enlarged by the subsequent Acts of 1724 (creating also a short extension from Woodsgate to Kippings Cross) and of 1740. The depiction of Tonbridge railway station on map 3 confirms a date after 1842. A scarce example of a turnpike map provided for practical use by the officers of the Trustees. [ref: 20341 ] £350

WROTHAM TO FOOT’S CRAY1255. TURNPIKE ROADS. WROTHAM HEATH TO FOOTS

CRAY. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. An Act for repairing the Road leading from the Royal Oak on Wrotham Heath, to the town of Wrotham...and from thence to the Village of Foot’s Cray...

Printed by Thomas Baskett, Printer to the King’s most Excellent Majesty; and by the Assigns of Robert Baskett, London. 1752Disbound in plastic sleeve. Folio. 7.75 x 12.25 inches. [2] + 202-203 pp. Illustrated with royal arms on title page and vignette initial at start of main text, which is in black letter. This turnpike Act establishes a trust to improve the twenty mile stretch of road from Wrotham Heath via Wrotham to Foots Cray. The preamble states that this highway ‘is, by reason of the heavy Carriages frequently passing through the same, greatly in Decay; and is very bad and deep in the Winter Season; and in many Places very narrow and incommodious, so that

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Carriages are frequently hindered and delayed in the said Road...’ The Act makes detailed provision for the collection of tolls (and exemptions from payment), the erection of milestones and gates (including side-gates from adjoining roads), the appointment of officers such as surveyors, and their powers, the authority to sell parts of the old road ‘for the best Price that can be got for the same,’ the use of ‘Statute-work’ (part of the parish highway repair system established by the 1555 Act), the penalties for evasion and for the system of financial administration and accountability required to operate the turnpike system. Around one hundred named trustees (some names are partly left blank in the text), composed of local nobility, gentry and clergy were appointed and invested with powers to oversee the administration and operation of the trust. ESTC N52572 [ref: 20431 ] £45

1256. TUTT, W. G. RISE AND PROGRESS OF THE SHEERNESS CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY LIMITED. [Cover title:] Sheerness Co-

operative Society Limited. Established 14th December, 1849. A Souvenir of the Society’s JubileeFebruary, 1900. Shewing its Rise and Progress by W. G. Tutt President.

London Co-operative Printing Society Limited, Tudor Street, New Bridge Street, E.C; and at Manchester and Newcastle. 19008vo. 5 x 7.25 inches. 99 pp. + [1] pp. Title page in red and black. Illustrated by black and white photographs and drawings; decorated with title page vignettes and publisher’s device at end. Bound in original decorated burgundy cloth, gilt. Extremities a little worn but

otherwise a fine copy. An attractive production with photos of the staff and shop etc. Very scarce. and not listed in the Kent Bibliography. COPAC records two copies in the British Library and the Bishopsgate Library. [ref: 21643 ] £35

1257. TWYSDEN, SIR, ROGER. KENT RECORDS. THE TWYSDEN LIEUTENANCY PAPERS, 1583-1686. Edited with an introduction by Gladys Scott Thomson, M.A., Somerville College, Oxford.Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Issued to the Subscribers to the Records Branch, Kent Archaeological Society.

(Kent Records. Volume X).Ashford Kent Archaeological Society, Records Branch. 19268vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. xi + [i] + 124 pp + [2]. Serial title page. Illustrated by folding map, serving as frontispiece and by 2 black and white photographic plates. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with the Society’s device on front boards. Slight wear to extremities, otherwise a fine copy. Bookplate of John Avery, F.C.A., Woodford Green, Essex.The great mass of Twysden papers held in the archives of the British Museum, in Kent and in private hands were all examined and rendered here accessible to the general reader. This volume prints the book of Sir Roger Twysden (1597-1672) concerning the Lieutenancy of Kent, 1660-68 and

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calendars his collection of papers relating to the Lieutenancy,1583-1622. These are largely concerned with the defence of the county, the musters and levies, raised against the threat of invasion, and their arms and equipment. Sir Roger lists the Armada beacons along the Shepway coast from Caldam, Sandgate and Postling to Lydd and the editor has added a facsimile of the ‘Carde of the Beacons’, which appeared in the second edition, 1596, of Lambarde’s Perambulation of Kent. There is also a genealogical table of the Twysden family, 1500-1672. [ref: 21176 ] £35

1258. UGLOW, CAPTAIN JIM, MBE. SAILORMAN. A Barge-Master’s Story.

Conway Maritime Press, London. 19758vo. 163 pp. illustrated with a number of b/w photographs collected by Tony Farnham. Original pale blue cloth. A very good copy in like dust wrapper.The story of a seasoned sailorman and successful racing skipper. [ref: 20817 ] £15

1259. ULLYETT, HENRY. RAMBLES OF A NATURALIST ROUND FOLKESTONE. With occasional papers on the fauna and flora of the district, to which are added lists of plants, lepidoptera, birds, and land and freshwater shells, by Henry Ullyett, B.Sc., F.R.G.S., Honorary Secretary to the Folkestone Natural History Society.

Folkestone J. English, Steam Printer, High Street, and all booksellers. 18808vo. 5.25 x 7.5 inches. [vi] + 157 pp. + [1]. Decorated with tailpiece vignettes. Bound in original blocked green cloth. Head of spine a little frayed otherwise aclean, sound copy.Accounts of nature rambles in Folkestone’s countryside and occasional papers on a number of species. It also includes useful lists of plants, butterflies, moths, birds and shells found within six miles of the town. Henry Ullyett (1838-98) was master of St Mary’s School in Dover Road, President of Folkestone Museum and founder of the Folkestone Natural History Society and of art and science classes in the town. Ros McCarthy, Arnold Henry Ullyett site. [ref: 21079 ] £50

1260. URRY, WILLIAM. CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE AND CANTERBURY. Edited with an introduction by Andrew Butcher.

London Faber and Faber. 19888vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xl + 184 pp. Half-title. Bound in original black cloth, gilt, in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Paper browned, otherwise good condition.Dr William Urry (1913-1981) was the city and cathedral archivist at Canterbury and left this book in manuscript, which has been edited by Andrew Butcher, University of Kent. His introduction includes an account ofWilliam Urry and Canterbury and a section on the biography of ChristopherMarlowe (1564-93), with a particular emphasis on his family origins and education in Canterbury, before he moved on to Cambridge and London. Eight appendices include documents relating to his life and background. [ref: 21240 ] £12

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1261. URRY, WILLIAM. THOMAS BECKET: HIS LAST DAYS Edited with an Introduction by Peter A. Rowe.

Stroud Sutton Publishing 19994to. 7 x 10 inches. xv + 192 pp. Half-title. Illustrated with black and white photographs and plans in text. Original black cloth, gilt in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Slight scoring across lower edge. Dr William Urry (1913-1981) was the city and cathedral archivist at Canterbury and left this book in manuscript, which has been edited by Peter A. Rowe. The foreword contains the text of an address given at his memorialservice by Dr Henry Mayr-Harting. [ref: 21228 ] £12

MINIATURE SPEED1262. VAN DEN KEERE, PIETER. KENT.

(John Speed and George Humble) 1646Uncoloured copper engraving 3.5 x 5 inches. English text on verso plus 2 pp., of the text from the atlas still joined to the map as published. An attractive example.The rare Kent map from the so-called 'Miniature Speed' county atlas. Pieter van den Keere issued a miniature atlas of the English Counties in around 1605 based on Christopher Saxton's atlas of 1579. Subsequently the map-plates were reprinted by W.J. Blaeu and then acquired by George Humble the London publisher of John Speed's 'Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain'. He had the old plates reworked with English titles and 23 new plates engraved - they were issued in 1627 as a 'pocket atlas' under the title 'England Wales Scotland and Ireland described from a farr larger voulume by John Speed'. Skelton County Atlases 4 & 17. [ref: 18294 ] £145

1263. VAYNES, JULIA H.L. DE. (EDITOR). THE KENTISH GARLAND. With Additional Notes, and Pictorial Illustrations copied from the rare Originals, by J. B. Ebsworth, M.A., F.R.S.A.

Hertford, Stephen Austin & Sons, 1882.Limited Edition, only 150 copies printed. 2 vols. Vol.I. xx + 455 pp. Vol.II. xix + 446-950 pp. + v + list of subscribers, with engraved illustrations in thetext throughout. Original blue decorated cloth, gilt, very slightly rubbed at extremities, spine of volume one snagged but neatly repaired. A very good set.A good set of this most important collection of Kentish ballads, music, poetry and legends, Kent isfortunate to have such a comprehensive collection,

culled from the rare broadside ballads and poetry collections, in an indexed and easily accessible form. [ref: 21633 ] £175

1264. VICTORIA COUNTY HISTORY. KENT. Ed. WILLIAM PAGE.

Archibald Constable and Company Ltd. and The St. Catherine Press. 1908, 1926 and 1932

390

First Edition. Folio. Three volumes, with maps, plates and illustrations throughout. Volumes I and II finely bound by Sawyer in full red crushed morocco, gilt; with spines in compartments with raised bands and gilt title and Tudor rose and crown decoration in each compartment, and date to base of spines and all edges gilt. Volume III is in original red cloth, with gilt titles and elaborate gilt decoration to spine and upper board.Volumes I and II have the bookplate of Annie Cowdray to the front pastedown. The V.C.H. grand scheme projected five volumes for Kent but only three were ever published in 1908, 1926 and 1932. The gestation period of the book clearly defeated Annie Cowdray and she did not manage to have the third volume bound, nonetheless the first two volumes are very attractiveand lavishly bound. The work covers the early history, ecclesiastical history, archaeology, natural history, geology, maritime history and many other subjects and remains a very useful work. [ref: 18196 ] £450

1265. VICTORIA COUNTY HISTORY, KENT. EDITOR WILLIAM PAGE.

Dawsons 1974Folio. Three volumes, with maps, plates and illustrations throughout. Bound in red cloth gilt. A fine copy in original glassine wrappers.These are the Dawson reprint produced in 1976and are now out of print. Covering the early history, ecclesiastical history, archaeology, natural history, geology, maritime history and many other subjects it remains a very useful work. For a modern reprint quite high production values were maintained. [ref: 17066 ] £250

1266. VIDLER, L.A. A NEW HISTORY OF RYE. With Fifty Illustrations

First published by Combridges-Hove-Sussex-1934. This edition published by Gouldens-Rye-Sussex-1971. 1971Facsimile reprint of the first edition, 4to. xii + 180 pp. Illustrated with frontispiece and illustrations in text. Original cloth in pictorial dust-wrapper, designed by Michael Renton.The best Rye history, reprinted with a few corrections and a new dust wrapper. This facsimile reprint did make the book common for a time, but this edition is out of print now and becoming difficult to find; its major virtue being that it is half the price of the early edition. Leopold Amon Vidler(1870-1954) was a native of Rye, Mayor from 1927-28 and founder and first curator of the Rye Museum. The history first appeared in monthly instalments in the Sussex County Magazine, 1933. [ref: 20266 ] £40

PRESENTATION COPY

391

1267. VINE, FRANCIS T. CAESAR IN KENT. The landing of Julius Caesar and his battles with the ancient Britons with some account of early British trade and enterprise

Privately Printed. 1886Square 8vo. xiii + 242 pp. with title page vignette. Earlier owner’s quarter-binding initialled and titled gilt, and bookplate on front paste down and later bookplate on front endpaper. Presentation statement from the author to G. Payne on the front free endpaper and four page letter to the same, dated 1886,pasted in opposite title page. Sepia photograph of The Marquis Conyngham, to whom the book is dedicated, pasted in opposite the dedication. Occasional ink comments and corrections in the text by Mr Payne, the original owner.Although not in its original printed wrappers, this is a very interesting copy of a presentation volume with inscription and letter from the author. [ref: 19015 ] £80

1268. VINE, P.A.L. THE ROYAL MILITARY CANAL. David and Charles. 19728vo. 239 pp. with maps, plans and illustrations. Original cloth in dustwrapper.Standard work on the subject, long out of print and much in demand. [ref: 10650 ] £30

1269. VINE, REV. FRANCIS T. CAESAR IN KENT. THE LANDINGOF JULIUS CAESAR AND HIS BATTLES WITH THE ANCIENT BRITONS, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF EARLY BRITISH TRADE AND ENTERPRISE.

Elliot Stock, 1887.Second Edition, xiii + 248 pp. with title page vignette and two folding maps Original cloth, gilt. Slight wear to head and tail of spine and spine darkened and boards evenly spotted. Library stamp to front free endpaper. Edges untrimmed. Front inner hinge cracked but holding, otherwise a good copy.Two maps are added to the revised edition of this interesting work. Library stamp to front free endpaper. [ref: 21758 ] £35

1270. VIRTUE, GEORGE. VIRTUE'S PICTURESQUE BEAUTIES OF GREAT BRITAIN: SERIES OF VIEWS. By the most approved artists, taken expressly for this work, Messrs G. Shepherd, H. Gasteneau, etc. etc. Comprising the Principal Cities and Towns, Public Edifices and Dock Yards; Seats of the Nobilility and Gentry, Hospitals, Churches, Castellated and Monastic Ruins, etc,

Accompanied by Historical and Biographical Notices, Combining Every Interesting Object, Ancient and Modern, from an Elaborate Survey, and Original Designs taken upon the spot. Kent.

G. Virtue, 1829

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4to. 11 x 9 inches. Engraved title with steel engraved vignette, full page frontispiece of Canterbury Cathedral, letterpress title opposite the folding engraved map,130 pp. and 126 steel engraved plates, printed two to a page. Unsympathetic recent full-calf gilt, but preserving the original labels. Some occasional foxing, occasionally quite severe, but otherwise a good copy.The principal engraved view book of 19th century Kentish topography. [ref: 19470 ] £325

1271. WALKER, J. AND C. WALKER’S [FOLDING MAP OF] KENT.

Printed by J. & C. Walker, n.d. but c.1843Hand-coloured engraved map, 16 x 13 inches. Dissected and mounted on linenfolding into original cloth boards with the original label on the upper board and mileage chart on inner paste-down. A very good example.Nice example of this map of Kent with boundaries of the Lathes, Railways (such as there were at this date, South Eastern to Dover, and Canterbury and Whitstable) and parklands etc. [ref: 15905 ] £65

1272. WALLENBERG, J.K. KENTISH PLACE NAMES. A TOPOGRAPHICAL AND ETYMOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE PLACE -NAME MATERIAL IN KENTISH CHARTERS DATED BEFORE THE

CONQUEST. Uppsala, 1931.First and only edition, 378 pp. Skilfully bound in modern buckram, a near mint copy.The first of the two definitive studies of Kentish Place Names, issued in wrappers only, this has been very well bound in a strong and attractive working binding. This fundamental work has never been reprinted and demand always outstrips

supply. Rare. [ref: 21634 ] £165

1273. WALMER - CURZON, GEORGE NATHANIEL, 1ST MARQUESS CURZON OF KEDLESTON. THE PERSONAL HISTORY OF WALMER CASTLE AND ITS LORDS WARDEN. By The

Marquess Curzon of Kedleston K.G. Edited by Stephen Gwynn.

London Macmillan and Co. Limited, St. Matrin’s Street. 1927First Edition. 8vo. 6.5 x 8.25 inches. xv + [i] + 329 pp. + [1].Half title. Illustrated by 41 photographic plates, including frontispiece and by two text engravings.

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Bound in original decorated cloth, gilt. Very slightly rubbed, but a very good copy.Complete history of the Wardens of the Cinque Ports, and the structure and content of the Castle. A very useful work. We have a second copy, rebound in red cloth, with contrasting morocco label, gilt, small neat library stamps at lower edge of each plate and bookplate of David Pilgrim, £30. Kent Bibliography [ref: 16772 ] £35

1274. WALMER - ELVIN, REV. CHARLES S. THE HISTORY OF WALMER AND WALMER CASTLE.

Cross & Jackman, Canterbury. 18978vo. 151 pp. with photo illustration. Original card wrappers with paper label on upper cover, a little worn on extremities, buta good copy.The first printing of this work was produced by the author in asubscription edition of around 125 copies in 1894. This reissue is also scarce.

[ref: 16865 ] £65

1275. WALSH, RICHARD. KATHLEEN. The Biography of a Sailing Barge.

Terence Dalton, Lavenham. 1986Ex-library copy with the usual markings.190 pp. b/w photo illustration throughout. Blue library binding in dust wrapper. Lacking front free endpaper otherwise a good copy.[ref: 20797 ] £15

1276. WALTON, ROBIN A. E. OASTS IN KENT 16th-20th CENTURY. THEIR CONSTRUCTION AND EQUIPMENT.

Maidstone: Christine Swift, 45 Scott Street. 1984First edition. 4to. 10.5 x 8 inches, [12] + 134 pp.+ [3] . Original brown cloth gilt in dust wrapper. A very good clean copy.The standard work on the subject, now out of print. [ref: 19905 ] £35

1277. WANOSTROCHT, CHARLES. Collected by SANDWICH IN OLD PHOTOGRAPHS.

Alan Sutton. 1993160 pp. Illustrated throughout. Original glossy paper wrappers.Part of the popular soft-bound ‘Britain in old photographs’ series. [ref: 18012 ] £10

394

1278. WARD, LOCK & CO. GUIDE TO BROADSTAIRS, RAMSGATE, MARGATE, HERNE BAY, CANTERBURY AND NORTH EAST KENT.

Ward, Lock and Co. 1950Eleventh Edition. 8 + 152 pp., + viii pp. adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth.Universally popular guides, now becoming more difficult to find. The large folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. [ref: 7356 ] £15

1279. WARD, LOCK & CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, LITTLESTONE ON SEA, RYE, ETC.

Ward, Lock & Co., n.d. but c.1950176 pp., + 14 pp., adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth.Popular guides now becoming more difficult to find. This is one of the first issues after the second world war. [ref: 8722 ] £10

1280. WARD LOCK AND CO. GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, HYTHE, AND THE KENT COAST....... Edited by Reginald J.W. Hammond.

Ward, Lock & Co. n.d. but c.1953Second Edition. 192 pp. + 3 folding maps and photo illustrations. Original redpictorial cloth in a slightly worn dust wrapper. An extremely good copy.The ‘Second Edition’ seems to relate to it being the second post-war issue which was probably the last of this series. [ref: 16369 ] £10

1281. WARD, LOCK AND CO. GUIDES TO THE KENT COAST TOWNS .

Ward, Lock and Co. We have a range of the Kentish guides. Please enquire. [ref: 20653 ] £

1282. WARD, LOCK AND CO. A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GUIDE TO FOLKESTONE, SANDGATE, HYTHE, DYMCHURCH, NEW ROMNEY, LITTLESTONE ON SEA, ETC.

Ward, Lock and Co., 1920 - 21Sixth edition - Revised. 16 + xx + 80 pp. + 80 pp. adverts with maps and photo illustration. Original red pictorial cloth. Well-thumbed and lacking one district map, one map neatly excised, laid on to linen, and housed in a tipped-in envelope.Popular guides now becoming more difficult to find. The folding maps of the towns are an invaluable record. An idiosyncratic copy, apparently the

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former property of a Folkestone hotelier/boarding house owner. It was presumably lent to guests during their stay, hence the reinforcing of the Folkestone map. [ref: 14300 ] £15

SIGNED PRESENTATION COPY1283. WARNICKE, RETHA. M. WILLIAM LAMBARDE.

Elizabethan Antiquary 1536-1601.Chichester Phillimore. 1973First Edition. 8vo. 9 x 5.5 inches. xv + [i] + 188 pp. Illustrated with four plates, including portrait frontispiece. Bound in original blue cloth in pictorial dust wrapper.A detailed survey of Lambarde’s career and historical writings. This copy is signed by the author and presented to Elizabeth Melling, of Kent Archives thanking her for her help. We have an other copy at £25, with price clipped dust wrapper. [ref: 21159 ]£35

1284. WARREN, JOHN, Editor. WEALDEN BUILDINGS. Studies in the timber-framed tradition of building in Kent, Sussex and Surrey in tribute to R. T. Mason FSA. Editor: John Warren, M.LITT, RIBA, FRTPI,FSA.

Horsham Produced for the Wealden Buildings Study Group by Coach Publishing. 1990Large 8vo. 6.25 x 9 inches. xi + [i] + 232 pp. Half title with errata slip pasted to verso. Illustrated throughout with map, plans and black and white photographs. Bound in original green cloth, gilt with pictorial dust wrapper. Fine condition.A tribute to Reginald T. Mason, FSA, author of Framed Buildings of the Weald, by members of the Wealden Buildings Study Group. [ref: 21777 ] £20

1285. WATSON, HILARY. THE BOOK OF MAIDSTONE . KENT’S COUNTY TOWN.

Barracuda Books Ltd., Buckingham. 1981First Edition, 8vo. 144 pp. With illustrations throughout. Original cloth, gilt spine slightly faded, otherwise in near mint condition in the original dust wrapper.A good general and social history of the town.* Signed presentation copy. This volume was produced as a limited edition, this is number 59 of about 350 copies. [ref: 17961 ] £30

1286. WEBB, ANTHONY. Compiled by. BATTLE OVER KENT. Published by the author. 1990Extended edition. [28 pp.] with b/w illustration throughout. Original pictorialcard wrappers. A mint copy signed and inscribed by the author ‘To Dave with best wishes from Tony Webb’. From the collection of historian David Collyer.[ref: 18453 ] £10

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FIRST BOOK ON CHANNEL SWIMMING1287. WEBB, MATTHEW. THE ART OF SWIMMING BY CAPTAIN

WEBB THE CHANNEL SWIMMER. (EDITED BY A.G. PAYNE).

Ward, Lock and Tyler, Warwick House, Paternoster Row. no date but [1875] First Edition, 8vo. 111 pp. + [1] + [4] pp. advertisements. Illustrated with a colour printed frontispiece portrait and three full-page, wood-engraved plates. Bound in decoratedblue cloth with a gilt portrait of Webb as part of the design on the cover.This is the earliest published account of Captain Webb’s

great swim of August 1875, rushed into print to satisfy the public demand foran account of the event. The book appeared in three different issues: the firstbound in blue cloth with a gilt portrait of Webb as part of the cover design, which Thomas in his Bibliography of Swimming dates to 1875; the second is a ‘Yellowback’ paper-covered edition which he is unable to positively date but speculates 1876; and the third version is another hard bound edition, identical to the first in every respect apart from the cloth colour being red, the absence of the coloured frontispiece and a cancel title page with the publisher’s imprint altered.The cheap ‘paperback’ issue of Webb’s book is, due to its ephemeral nature, probably the scarcest of the three issues, Thomas’s speculation is that it was later than the first issue (this may well be wrong as it would seem most likelythat the hard bound 2/6d issue would be sold alongside the cheaper 1/- issue). The Victorians were clever at marketing, and from the beginning Captain Webb controlled the published records of his swim together with A.G. Payne, who was a respected sports journalist who was a friend of Webb’s and witnessed the swim. They issued a fairly well constructed book giving a short life of Webb, followed by an instruction book on swimming, and a résumé of recent swimming feats, finally the first-hand account (by Payne) of Webb’s first unsuccessful attempt and last of all his successful swim. Webb was one of the first sportsmen to value himself as a ‘brand’ in the way sports celebrities do today. [ref: 20281 ] £375

1288. WEBB, WILLIAM. KENT’S HISTORIC BUILDINGS. Hale. 1977192 pp. with photo illustration. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A very good copy.A useful general survey of our castles, abbeys and larger houses together with their history and legends. [ref: 10903 ] £12

1289. WEST, JENNY. THE WINDMILLS OF KENT. Charles Skilton. 19734to.126 pp. with diagrams and photo illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper, A very good copy.[ref: 16868 ] £25

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1290. WEST, JULIE, edited by DEBRETT'S PEOPLE OF KENT. Edited by Julie West. Executive Editor Patricia Ellis. Series Co-ordinator Michelle Jacques.

London Debrett’s Peerage Limited. 1990First edition. 4to. 7.5 x i0 inches. 72 + 205 pp. + [44] pp. Half-title. Illustrated by colour and black and white photographs. Bound in original green cloth, gilt, in coloured pictorial dust wrapper. Decorative endpapers. Slight wear to extremities but otherwise fine condition.A list of the county’s notables in 1990, preserved in print. [ref: 21243 ] £20

1291. WEYDA, RON, with BOB HORLOCK. THE RACING HORLOCKS 1868-1971. A tribute to Chubb Horlock and his family’s Thames Barge racing endeavours. Ron Weyda with Bob Horlock. Design by Mike Fryer.

Mistley, Essex R. J. Horlock, Calm Waters, Mistley, Essex, CO11 1HS. 20084to. 7x 9.75 inches. [2] + vi + 160 pp. Illustrated with pictorial endpapers, 8 pages of colour plates and black and white photographs, drawings and maps in text. Bound in coloured laminated pictorial boards. Fine condition.An account of the racing history of the Horlock family of Mistley, important operators and owners of sailing barges in the Harwich area from the 1830s until the demise of the trade in the 1950s. Chapter 2 is a detailed survey of the design of the sailing barges, and the rest of the book is largely concerned with describing racing achievements in the estuaries of the Thames and Medway and of the Stour and Blackwater in Essex. Appendices give a systematic survey of of the Horlock race history and an index of the barges. [ref: 21124 ] £40

KENT CATHOLICS1292. WHATMORE, L.E. RECUSANCY IN KENT: STUDIES AND

DOCUMENTS. By Revd. L. E. Whatmore, M.A., F.R. Hist.S.[C.W. Field, 26, High Street, Robertsbridge]. 1973 [Preface dated 19 October 1974]Large 4to. 8.5 x 13.5 inches. [viii] + 63 pp. + [4] pp. Stapled paper wrappers. Duplicated foolscap size typescript and letterpress title page and front wrapper. Slight wear to extremities, otherwise in fine condition.‘Among the papers of the late Arthur Hussey of Wingham and presented by his wife to the Kent Archaeological Society (bundle 14, Arthur Hussey Mss, Museum, Maidstone) are some 150 quarto sheets concerning Kentish recusants...’ This collection publishes these transcripts with additional material from the now defunct Southwark Record. It includes population statistics for East Kent parishes, 1557-63 and lists of recusants for 1581-93 and 1678. Leonard Elliott Whatmore (1912-82), born in Hastings, was a scholar and Catholic priest who served in the parishes of Polegate and Hailsham, Sussex, 1966-78. As a historian, he was particularly interested in the subjects of recusancy and catholic loyalism. His works also included

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Archdeacon Harpsfield’s Visitation, 1557 (Canterbury diocese) and studies ofthe Elizabethan settlement and the Carthusian order. A scarce compilation of material relating to post-Reformation Catholicism in Kent with indexes of priests and family names. [ref: 20286 ] £25

1293. WHITE, JOHN TALBOT. THE COUNTRYMAN’S GUIDE TO THE SOUTH-EAST.

Routledge and Kegan Paul: 1978150 pp. with map and photo illustrations. Original cloth gilt in dust wrapper. A very good copy.A monthly guide for the naturalist, of the best things to see and where to findthem. Wrapper design by Rowland Hilder. [ref: 17327 ] £12

1294. WHITNEY, CHARLES. BYGONE HYTHE WITH SALTWOOD, SEABROOK AND LYMPNE

Phillimore. 19894to. [126] pp. With photo illustration throughout. Bound in cloth, gilt, in dustwrapper. A mint example.Well-compiled photographic history, now out of print. [ref: 20259 ] £15

REPORT ON OYSTER BEDSWHITSTABLE - GREAT BRITAIN. LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD. ON OYSTER CULTURE IN RELATION TO DISEASE. Twenty-fourth annual

report of The Local Government Board, 1894-95. Supplement in continuation of the Report of the Medical Officer for 1894-95. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of Her Majesty. [C.- 8214.]. Half title: Report and papers on the cultivation and storage of oysters and certain other molluscs in relation to the occurrence of disease in man submitted by the Medical Officer of The Local Government Board. Bound with: Supplement in continuation of the Report of the Medical Officer for 1894-95. Inland Sanitary Survey, 1893-95. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of Her Majesty. [C.- 8215.]. Half title: Report on the Inland Sanitary Survey, 1893-95; submitted by

the Medical Officer of The Local Government Board.Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, by Eyre and Spottiswoode. London: 18968vo. [2] + xxvi + 174 pp. illustrated with 4 photographs, 24 folding maps in colour and black and white and 16 plates. Inland Sanitary Survey, viii + 284 pp. illustrated with one folding coloured map. Bound in green cloth library binding, gilt with original card front covers of two parts preserved. Small library stamps on covers and title pages. Detached cover of Oyster Culture report chipped at edges. Interiors clean. The report wascommissioned todetermine the extent ofthe bacterial

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contamination of oyster and other mollusc fisheries by bacteria, especially those of cholera and typhoid. The greater part of the text comprises four appendices, of which the longest is a report by Dr. H. Timbrell Bulstrode on oyster beds around the coastline of England and Wales. Particular attention is given to the important Thames Estuary fisheries, including those of the Colchester and Brightlingsea area and the other Essex beds and for Kent the Whitstable, Seasalter, Swale and Medway beds. It is copiously illustrated bymaps which show the relationship between the fisheries and the sewage outfalls. Further appendices examine the bacteriological contamination of oysters under the microscope, a typhoid outbreak at a Connecticut college, linked to oyster consumption and a short report in French.The Inland Sanitary Survey provides abstracts of 220 urban districts. Each abstract comments on dwellings of the poor, water supply, sewerage and drainage, the state of middens and privies, refuse removal and certain registered trades with an assessment of the efficiency of the relevant authorities in dealing with sanitation problems, etc. Kent local authorities represented include Broadstairs, Deal, Faversham, Gravesend, Herne Bay, Hythe, Lydd, Margate, New Romney, Ramsgate, Sandgate and Sittingbourne. On Oyster Culture in Relation to Disease is an important survey, providing the scientific evidence for a link between the sewage contamination of oyster beds and outbreaks of cholera and typhoid in the population. Extensively illustrated with plates and maps. Very scarce. [ref: 19459 ] £300

1295. WHITSTABLE HISTORY - GOODSALL, ROBERT H. WHITSTABLE, SEASALTER AND SWALECLIFFE. The History of three Kent Parishes. By Robert H. Goodsall, F.R.I.B.A, A.R.P.S.

Canterbury Cross and Jackman, Ltd 2 and 3 Orange Street. 1938First Edition. Large 8vo. 6.25 x 10 inches. xi + [i] + 326 pp. Half title. Illustrated by 37 plates, including frontispiece and two others coloured and maps and by 12 drawings in text, also including maps. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt. Spine slightly faded but a very good copy. This copy was from Folkestone library reference collection and apart from a few neat stamps is in near mint condition.The scarce standard work on the three parishes. A well-compiled and superbly illustrated work which has never been reprinted and is now difficult to find.We have a second copy with unfaded spine and without library stamps. Kent Bibliography [ref: 19171 ] £85

SIGNED COPY1296. WHITSTABLE RAILWAY - HART, BRIAN. THE

CANTERBURY AND WHITSTABLE RAILWAY. Wild Swan Publications, 19914to. [6] + 186 pp. with photo illustrations throughout. A fine copy in original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. Signed by the Author.

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The now standard history of this historic branch line, the largest collection ofpictures of the line ever published. Only a small number were printed and the book is now scarce. [ref: 19650 ] £60

1297. WIDDOWS, NICK. FERRIES OF THE BRITISH ISLES AND NORTHERN EUROPE 2000.

Ferry Publications, Narberth. 20008vo. 223 pp. illustrated throughout in colour. Original laminated pictorial boards. Very small split at head of spine, otherwise fine.A comprehensive look at the ferry operators of the British Isles and NorthernEurope with full details of companies, routes and vessels. [ref: 19521 ] £10

1298. WILKS, GEORGE. THE EARLY HISTORY OF HYTHE. The Early History of Hythe. By George Wilks, Town Clerk.

[London] [Printed by McCorquodale]. [1889]4to. 8.75 x 10.5 inches. 27 + [1] pp. Text in Latin and English. Stiff card wrappers. Title in ink. This was Part I, but no further parts were published. A compilation of early charters and grants, from 732 to 1257, relating to Hythe and Saltwood. At this period the borough of Hythe was part of the manor of Saltwood. The charters are given in full in Latin, including a list of the signatories, followedby an English translation. Other documents include the Domesday entries for the manors of Lyminge and Saltwood and the Right to Wreck. A scarce item; COPAC lists only three copies, all held in London, The Guildhall Library, the Society of Antiquaries and Lambeth Palace. The Kent Bibliography indicates a copy held by Folkestone Public Library. Kent Bibliography. [ref: 21063 ] £45

1299. WILLIAMSON, J.A. THE ENGLISH CHANNEL. A HISTORY.Collins. 1961381 pp. with maps and photo illustration throughout. Original cloth in dustwrapper. A very good copy of the first edition.The scope of this book is the English shore of the Channel and the activities upon it of nature and man, from the shaping of the coast in ancient times to the making of the modern holiday resorts. [ref: 10904 ] £18

1300. WILLIS, A.J. CHURCH LIFE IN KENT, BEING CHURCH COURT RECORDS OF THE CANTERBURY DIOCESE 1559-1565

London and Chichester Phillimore. 19758vo. 9 x 5.5 inches, vii + 97 pp. Original cloth with dust wrapper. A very good copy with Kent historian Elizabeth Melling’s ownership signature.Now out of print. [ref: 21140 ] £12

1301. WILLMOTT, FRANK G. BRICKS AND 'BRICKIES'.

401

Privately Published. 1972.x + 78 pp. with numerous photographic illustrations. Bound in the original illustrated boards, a very good copy.The history of Eastwoods Ltd., Brickmakers and Bargeowners. At the same time it is the story of some of the people of Lower Halstow, Conyer, Rainham etc. Interesting insight into Thames and Medway bargemen. The work was privately printed and the run was quite restricted, hence its scarcity. [ref: 18838 ] £35

1302. WINCHELSEA - COOPER, WILLIAM DURRANT. THE HISTORY OF WINCHELSEA, ONE OF THE ANCIENT TOWNS ADDED TO THE CINQUE PORTS.

John Russell Smith, Old Compton Street, Soho. Hastings: Henry Osborne, 55, George Street. 1850First edition. vii + 264 pp. illustrated with a folding map of Winchelsea and 5 steel-engraved plates, (four with double views), 3 tinted lithographs and 2 wood-engraved plates. Original blind-stamped green cloth,

gilt. This copy was a reference library copy but seems to have been little used, and is in good condition. Apart from a blind-stamp on the upper cover and signs of stamp removal from front free endpaper, it has survived unscathed.Still a fundamental book on the history of Winchelsea. scarce. [ref: 19509 ] £100

1303. WINN, CAPTAIN GEORGE. SAILING BARGE MASTER. TheStory of a Victorian Bargeman.

Chaffcutter Books, Ware. 2009166 pp. with b/w illustration throughout. Original laminated pictorial card wrappers. A very good copy.[ref: 20802 ] £15

1304. WINN, JEAN. Edited by. RINGWOULD. A SMALL VILLAGEIN KENT.

Ringwould History Society. No date but 1999102 pp. with illustrations. Original coloured pictorial card wrappers. Near fine.[ref: 18471 ] £10

SIGNED PRESENTATION COPY1305. WINNIFRITH, Rev. A. THE FAIR MAIDS OF KENT, BY A

MAN OF KENT.Folkestone. F.J. Parsons. No date but 1921.

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8vo. 5.5 x 8.5 inches. 110 pp. with portrait frontis and 8 other photo illustrations. A presentation copy from the author to Miss Hedgeland, inscribed and dated July 19 1921. Original red cloth, gilt. Spine and top of front board faded, as is usual.A fascinating survey of the famous historical women of Kent. [ref: 21756 ] £30

1306. WINNIFRITH, Rev. A. MEN OF KENT AND KENTISH MEN.BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF 680 WORTHIES OF KENT, WRITTEN BY A MAN OF KENT. ByThe Rev. A. Winnifrith, M.A., Oxon., Late Rector of Mariansleigh, Author of ‘Continental Travels,’ ‘Poems,’ etc.

Folkestone F. J. Parsons Ltd., Printers, The Bayle. 19138vo. 5.75 x 8.5 inches. 562 pp. with folding map and frontis. portrait and illus. in text. Illustrated by portrait frontispiece, with facsimile signature, folding map at end and black and white illustrations in text. Bound in original red cloth gilt, with vignette of county arms on front board. Spine and edges of boards faded and some water stains on front, but a good interior.An important and impressive work of reference unlikely to be surpassed. Includes index of professions and birthplaces at end. Kent Bibliography Supplement. [ref: 21679 ] £40

1307. WINSTANLEY, MICHAEL J. LIFE IN KENT AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY.

Dawson, Folkestone 19788vo. 236 with photographic illustrations and text figures. Original cloth gilt indust wrapper. Small neat bookplate on front paste down.Based on material collected for an oral history project at the University of Kent from August 1974 to August 1977. Sections cover rural life, fishermen and town dwellers with select bibliography. [ref: 19018 ] £15

1308. WISEMAN, GORDON. HISTORY OF THE WAKERING AND BARLING BARGES.

Exton Society for Sailing Barge Research, ‘The Holt,’ Exton, Exeter, EX3 0PN. 19998vo. 5.75 x 8 inches. [8] + 63 pp + [1] pp. Illustrated by black and white photographs and maps. In pictorial card wrappers. Slight wear to extremities; otherwise fine condition.This book is an account of the barges serving the brickfields north east of Southend (in the villages of Barling and Great and Little Wakering), which also carried agricultural cargoes. It includes systematic lists of the owners, crews, and of the barges themselves, many being constructed in Kent shipyards. [ref: 21131 ] £12

1309. WITNEY, KENNETH, Editor. THE SURVEY OF ARCHBISHOP’S PECHAM’S KENTISH MANORS 1283-85. Translated, Edited and with an Introduction by Kenneth Witney. Foreword by Dr Joan Thirsk. (Kent Records. Volume XXVIII).

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Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 20008vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. [2] + lxxxiv + [2] + 390 pp. Serial title. Illustrated by frontispiece, two maps and figure in text. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with the Society’s device on front board, in dust wrapper. Fine condition. A comprehensive survey of the Kentish manors of Archbishop Pecham (1279-1292), carried out in 1283-85 and translated from the Latin of a fifteenth century copy held in Canterbury Cathedral Library. The seventeen manors described are Wingham, Reculver, Westgate, Maidstone, Gillingham, Teynham, Boughton under Blean, Charing, Aldington, Saltwood, Lyminge, Petham, Bishopsbourne, Otford, Wrotham, Northfleet and Bexley and their associated dens in the Weald. They comprised 16-17% of Kent’s total acreage,or 21-22% of the well-settled area. The survey was transcribed and translated with an introduction, by Kenneth Witney (1916-99), a distinguished historian of early medieval Kent and author of The Jutish Forest and The Kingdom Of Kent. It was further checked and proof read by by Dr Joan Thirsk, who also wrote an introduction to the Lambeth Summaries (Appendix D), which supplies an alternative and more succinct survey of the same manors. Witney’s introduction analyses the survey and sets it in its historical context. It covers the farming of the Archbishop’s own demesne lands, including the arable, meadow, pasture, upland woods, the dens, mills and employed manorial staff. The other half of the land of the manors was let out in tenancies and the different types of these, including theparticular Kentish custom of gavel kind, are discussed in some depth. The final section analyses the economic condition of the husbandmen. A valuable account of Kentish farming practice and landholding as it it reached its peak of productivity before the disasters of the first half of the fourteenth century. [ref: 21204 ] £35

1310. WITNEY, K.P. THE JUTISH FOREST A STUDY OF THE WEALD OF KENT FROM 450 TO 1380 A.D.

University of London, The Athlone Press, 1976First Edition, 8vo. 9 x 5.5 inches xvi + 339 pp. with illustrations in text. Original cloth, gilt, in the scarce dust wrapper. A fine copy.This exemplary work was only issued in a small edition, and has not been, and is unlikely to be reprinted. Much in demand.

[ref: 21162 ] £100

1311.WITNEY, K.P. THE KINGDOM OF KENT. Phillimore. 1982.First Edition, 4to. 292 pp. with illustrations. Original cloth in dust wrapper, a good copyNow out of print, the Dark Age in the Kingdom of Kent. A classic study. [ref: 17448 ] £35

CROSS CHANNEL SWIMMING.1312. WOLFFE, JABEZ. THE TEXT-BOOK OF SWIMMING. By

‘Jappy’ Wolffe.Ewart, Seymour and Co. Ltd., 12, Burleigh Street, Strand, London, W.C. [1910]

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8vo. 4.75 x 7 inches. 90 pp. + [6] pp. advertisements. Illustrated by numerousblack and white photographs and other plates. Original pictorial stiff card with unlettered cloth spine. Extremities a little worn but otherwise fine condition.‘Probably the unluckiest Channel swimmer in history’ (Dover Museum), Wolffe made over twenty attempts on the crossing from 1906-13, failing by only about 100 yards in 1911. Jabez Wolffe (1877-1943) held a number of marathon swimming records as well as being a walker, cyclist and rower, being able to complete a triathlon in these events. Unsuccessful himself, he coached other successful cross Channel swimmers, although he failed with Gertrude Eberle (1906-2003) in her 1925 attempt, after he ordered her to be pulled from the water when she was merely resting. The following year, using a different trainer, she became the first woman to achieve the swim. Chapter IX of thisbook describes Wolffe’s preparations andhis first seven attempts, using ‘Wolffe’s ‘own’ stroke.’ His half-hourly feeds included chicken sandwiches and broth, biscuits and jam, Oxo, chocolate, weak tea and cocoa, which were either handed to him from the boat by his trainer, Brickett, or in the case of rougher seas, passed to him in a water-tight vessel attached using a fishing rod. One version of this book (1908) bears the title page imprint of the weekly Health and Strength (whose publications, owned by Ewart Seymour, are listed at the back of the volume).It was reprinted several more times, with a seventh (undated) edition appearing after 1923. Wolffe also published Swimming Short and Long Distance (editions 1926-38). A scarce source on cross Channel swimming; COPAC notes only three copies of the 1908 version and two of this 1910 edition (British Library and Liverpool). [ref: 20856 ] £150

CROSS CHANNEL SWIMMING1313. WOLFFE, JABEZ. THE TEXTBOOK OF SWIMMING. By

Jabez Wolffe. Seventh edition.London Link House, 54 and 55, Fetter Lane. [n.d.] but after 19238vo. 5 x 7.25 inches. 79 + [1] pp. advertisements. Half title. Illustrated by numerous black and white photographs and other plates. Original blue pictorial stiff card. Extremities a little worn, but otherwise fine condition.‘Probably the unluckiest Channel swimmer in history’ (Dover Museum), Wolffe made over twenty attempts onthe crossing from 1906-13, failing by only about 100 yards in 1911. Jabez Wolffe (1877-1943) held a number

of marathon swimming records as well as being a walker, cyclist and rower,being able to complete a triathlon in these events. Unsuccessful himself, he coached other successful cross Channel swimmers, although he failed with Gertrude Eberle (1906-2003) in her 1925 attempt, after he ordered her to be pulled from the water when she was merely resting. The following year, using a different trainer, she became the first woman to achieve the swim.

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Chapter IX of this book describes his first seven attempts, Wolffe also published Swimming Short and Long Distance (editions 1926-38). The Textbook is a scarce item, first published around 1908; COPAC records only one copy of the seventh edition (in St. Andrews). The sixth edition appeared in 1922, according to the British Library, so this seventh, and possibly last, must date from a few years later [ref: 21340 ] £75

1314. WOOD, WALTER. NORTH SEA FISHERS AND FIGHTERS. With colour and pencil illustrations by Frank H. Mason and Photographsby the Author.

Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner and Co., Ltd., 19114to. 366 pp. Illustrated with 6 colour plates and numerous black and white illustrations. Bound in the original pictorial decorated cloth, gilt. A very good copy.A handsome production, reminiscent of the best of A. and C. Black’s colour books, documenting the end of sail and the early days of steam. Includes chapters on the Channel and Goodwin Sands etc. [ref: 20900 ] £60

1315. WOODCOCK, JOE. REMINISCENCES OF OLD CRANBROOK.

Meresborough Books, Rainham. 198748 pp. Illustrated with b/w photographs throughout. Original laminated card wrappers. Useful history now out of print. [ref: 18665 ] £10

1316. WOOD-LEGH, KATHLEEN L. Edited by KENTISH VISITATIONS OF ARCHBISHOP WILLIAM WARHAM AND HIS DEPUTIES, 1511-1512. (Kent Records. Volume XXIV).

Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society. 19848vo. 5.75 x 8.75 inches. xvii +[i] + 343 pp. + [1]. Serial title. Text in Latin and English. Illustrated by portrait frontispiece. Bound in original blue cloth, gilt, with Society’s device on front board, with pictorial dust wrapper. In fine condition.In the English medieval church, visitations by diocesan bishops or their deputies were made at regular intervals to every religious house (seventeen monasteries, priories and collegiate churches are included) or church under their jurisdiction. In the deaneries section (covering the eleven deaneries of the diocese), complaints and defects were noted in the comperta list for each church visited and responses and actions taken, in the following Acta section. An interesting survey of the diocese of Canterbury carried out at

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the end of the medieval period by William Warham, the last pre-Reformation archbishop (1503-32). Appendix II records his 1511 itinerary, the proceedings for each deanery taking place in a principal church within it. [ref: 21187 ] £20

1317. WOODMAN, FRANCIS. THE ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY OF CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL.

Routledge and Kegan Paul . 19814to. xviii + 282 pp. Illustrated throughout. Small neat bookplate on inside of front endplate. Original cloth, gilt in dust wrapper. Fine condition.This has become the standard work on the subject, and is now out of print. [ref: 21386 ] £70

HISTORY OF THE KING’S SCHOOL1318. WOODRUFF, C.E. & CAPE, H.J. SCHOLA REGIA

CANTUARIENSIS : A HISTORY OF CANTERBURY SCHOOL. COMMONLY CALLED THE KINGS SCHOOL. By C.E.Woodruff, M.A., Hon. Librarian to the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury, Vice-President ofthe Kent Archaeological Society, and H.J.Cape. M.A., B.Sc., F.R.Hist. Soc., Assistant-Master in the King’s School.

Mitchell Hughes & Clarke, London 1908Royal 8vo., frontis. + xvi + 376 pp. [A-A8], B-X4, Y-BB8. Illustrated with 51 plates, including ground plan of the old school buildings. Original publisher’s deep navy blue buckram, gilt, with heraldic decoration on spine. Top edges gilt. Inscription on front free endpaper.The standard history of the King’s School. A finely produced account, copiously illustrated. [ref: 19173 ] £100

1319. WOODS, T.P.S. PRELUDE TO CIVIL WAR. 1642. MR. JUSTICE MALET AND THE KENTISH PETITIONS. With an introduction by Ivan Roots.

Michael Russell, Salisbury 1980Large 8vo. 6.5 x 9.5 inches. xi + 244 pp. Illustrated with 8 pages of plates and petition reproduced in text. Original cloth, gilt, in dust wrapper. Fine clean copy.‘Tom Woods, in providing a fresh and meticulous account of the Kentish petitions of 1642, has made a perceptive contribution to our understanding of the immediate circumstances in which the English Civil War broke out. As a study, too, of a notable lawyer, Sir Thomas Malet, this book illumines much else besides - not least the minutiae of judicial procedure and the conduct of assizes.’ [ref: 19618 ] £25

WOODWORTH, FRANK. EAST KENT A HISTORY OF EAST KENT ROAD CAR COMPANY LTD.

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Capital Transport Publishing, Harrow Weald. 1991Folio. 88 pp. with b/w illustration throughout. 75th anniversary souvenir poster loosely inserted. Original pictorial card wrappers. A near fine example.Interesting pictorial history. [ref: 18668 ] £15

1320. WOOLDRIDGE, S.W. and FREDERICK GOLDING. THE WEALD.

Collins. 1962 8vo. 276 pp. with maps and photo illustration. Original cloth, gilt, in very good dustwrapper.A fine modern survey of the geology, archaeology, natural history and economic and social history of the Weald, constituting an important volume in the New Naturalist series. [ref: 9019 ] £35

1321. WORLD WAR II PHOTOGRAPH. MESSERSCHMITT Bf 109 OF JG 26 SHOT DOWN, KENT 1940.

[1940]Photograph. 6.5 x 4.5 inches. Original monochrome photograph. Fine condition.The photograph shows a downed German Messerschmitt 109 guarded by two British soldiers. The plane has demolished a small building and come to rest by a domestic building with a hipped roof (with Kent peg tiles), and a chimney. The plane bears the unit marking of JG 26, which was based at airfields in the Pas de Calais until being sent to the Mediterranean theatre for several months in February 1941. The lack of foliage on the trees indicates that the season was winter, and there is a strong probability that this plane was the 109 which crashed at Abbey Farm on the Leeds Castle Estate on 12 December 1940. It was shot down by a Hurricane over Leeds and the pilot, Fw. Rudolf Lindemann, was taken prisoner. The aircraft is recorded as a Bf 109 E-4 (Werk Nr. 3708) with black 2 markings, as carried by the aircraft in the photograph. Jagdgeschwader 26, or JG 26, was perhaps the most formidable and successful German fighter wing that faced the RAF across the Channel, from the Battle of Britain onwards. The identification of this print is not, however, certain and there is still scope for more detailed research. Caldwell, The JG 26 War Diary Volume One 1939-1942. Aircrew Remembrance Society. Luftwaffe Losses. 1940. website. [ref: 20859 ] £60

1322. WORSSAM, B.C. and others. GEOLOGY OF THE COUNTRY AROUND MAIDSTONE.

HMSO. 1963Part of Memoirs of the Geological Survey of G.B. series. Now only published in paperback. [ref: 16824 ] £30

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1323. WRIGHT, DAVID. EAST KENT PARISHES: A guide for Genealogists, Local Historians and other Researchers in the Diocese of Canterbury

By the author 1991 106 pp. including double-page map of the parish boundaries of East Kent. Original printed card wrappers. A near fine copy. Scarce resource for genealogists and local historians. [ref: 17333 ] £ 15

1324. WRIGHT, NICHOLAS. THE BUMP. BATTLE OF BRITAIN 40TH ANNIVERSARY REUNION ROYAL AIR FORCE BIGGIN HILL

RAF Biggin Hill 1980Oblong. 76 pp. with b/w illustration throughout. Original colour pictorial cardwrappers. An interesting potted history of the famous fighter airfield published to markthe 40th anniversary of the Battle of Britain. [ref: 18672 ] £10

1325. WYE - HUBBARD, G.E. THE OLD BOOK OF WYE BEING A RECORD OF A KENTISH COUNTRY PARISH FROM THE TIME OF HENRY THE EIGHTH TO THAT OF CHARLES THE SECOND.

Pilgrim Press Ltd: Derby. 1951First Edition. 166 pp. + frontis, 2 plates and endpaper maps. Original cloth in a very good dust wrapper. A very good copy.Exemplary study showing just how much information early records contain - if you can interpret them. [ref: 14706 ] £35

1326. WYLLIE, W.L. AND M.A. LONDON TO THE NORE. London A. and C. Black, Soho Square. 1905

4to. 6.5 x 9 inches. ix + [i] + 259 + [1] + [4] pp. advertisements. Half title. Illustrated with 60 colour plates and black and white title page vignette and 28 head and tailpiece vignettes. Bound in original pictorial brown cloth, gilt. Top edges gilt. Extremities worn and water stain on inside edge of title page; otherwise a very good copy.

One of Black’s famous colour books. A very desirable copy of a rare title, packed with Wyllie’s highly evocative paintings of the Thames and its shipping and craft. [ref: 21668 ] £120

1327. YALDING - AUCTION PARTICULARS. YALDING, KENT. WITHIN EASY REACH OF TONBRIDGE, PADDOCK WOOD AND MAIDSTONE MARKETS. PARTICULARS, PLANS AND CONDITIONS OF SALE OF THE VALUABLE FREEHOLD HOP AND FRUIT FARMS KNOWN AS CROWPLAIN, GAINHILL AND HILL FARMS IN THE PARISH OF YALDING AND A CAPITAL SMALLHOLDING IN THE PARISH OF NETTLESTEAD, KENT, HAVING A TOTAL AREA OF

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ABOUT 306 ACRES ALL LET AND PRODUCING A RENTAL OF £608 16s. 4d. PER ANN. WHICH MESSRS. FAREBROTHER, ELLIS and CO. WILL SELL BY AUCTION, AT THE ‘ROYAL STAR HOTEL,’ MAIDSTONE, ON THURSDAY, THE 23rd OF OCTOBER, 1913 AT THREE O’CLOCK PRECISELY IN FOUR LOTS. Particulars and Conditions of Sale, with Plans, may be had at the Place of Sale; of Messrs.COWARD AND HAWKSLEY, SONS AND CHANCE, Solicitors, 30, Mincing Lane, E.C.; of Messrs. ELAND, NETTLESHIP AND BUTT, Solicitors

‘Estates Gazette,’ Ltd., 34-35, Kirby Street, E.C. 1913Large folio. 12 pp. particulars, etc. + 2 large, coloured lithographic folding plans of the Yalding and Nettlestead properties in rear pocket. Heavy paper wrapper with laid paper text block. A trifle dusty externally with occasional light foxing otherwise a very good copy indeed. The number 227 has been neatly written in blue pencil in the top left corner of the front wrapper.Scarce survivor from a pre-first world war sale [ref: 17576 ] £125

1328. YATES, N. AND GIBSON, M. Edited by. TRAFFIC AND POLITICS THE CONSTRUCTION AND MANAGEMENT OF ROCHESTER BRIDGE AD 43 - 1993.

The Boydell Press / Rochester Bridge Trust, 1994xviii + 390 pp. Well illustrated. Original cloth in dust wrapper, as new.First in the projected 10 volume ‘Kent History Project’ covering aspects of thehistory of Kent. Very impressive and detailed history of the bridge. [ref: 18933 ] £45

1329. YATES, NIGEL. Edited by KENT IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.

The Boydell Press, Woodbridge/Kent County Council. 20018vo. 418 pp. + 56 b/w plates and 5 maps, of which 2 are large folding maps, with 11 figures to the text and numerous tables. Original black cloth. As new, in like dust wrapper.This volume, the sixth in the Kent History Project, complements those already published on the economy of Kent and religion and society in Kent. Comprising ten chapters, each chapter begins by evoking a picture of Kent on the eve of the First World War and looks at changes that have taken placebetween then and the present, with particular attention to the impact of the two World Wars on the county. [ref: 18888 ] £65

1330. YATES, NIGEL. Edited by. KENT IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. Edited by Nigel Yates. With the assistance of Alan Armstrong, Ian Coulson and Alison Cresswell.

(Kent History Project. 6).Woodbridge The Boydell Press/Kent County Council. 20018vo. 6.5 x 9.5 inches. xxiv + 418 pp. Series half-title. Illustrated by 56 black and white plates, 5 maps, of which 2 are large, folding and 11 figures and 45 tables in text. Bound in original black cloth, gilt As new, in like coloured dust wrapper.

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This volume, the sixth in the Kent History Project, complements those already published on the economy of Kent and religion and society in Kent. Comprising ten chapters, each chapter begins by evoking a picture of Kent on the eve of the First World War and looks at changes that have taken placebetween then and the present, with particular attention to the impact of the two World Wars on the county. The subjects covered are population, the economy, agriculture and rural society, transport, politics, housing, health and social welfare, popular education, religion and culture and leisure. The three appendices include an account of the General Strike in Kent, 1926. [ref: 21242 ] £65

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