3 edition of tour of the Grand Junction Canal in 1819. found in the catalog.
tour of the Grand Junction Canal in 1819.
J. Hassell
Published
1968
by Cranfield & Bonfiel Books in London
.
Written in
Edition Notes
Contributions | Cranfield, John. |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | DA670.G7 H3 1968 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | vi, 86 p. |
Number of Pages | 86 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL4030677M |
LC Control Number | 79377167 |
Samuel LEWIS: The Book of English Rivers - An Account of the Rivers of England & Wales ( London) Samuel SMILES: Lives of the Engineers () 'BUMPS': A Trip Through the Caledonian Canal and Tour in the Highlands ( PP) J B DASHWOOD: The Thames to the Solent by Canal and Sea (). A Tour of the Grand Junction Canal in London: Cranfield & Bonfiel Books, vi + 86pp, index, 2 appendices, 25 illustrations. Card covers, reading wear, marks to rear.
The building of the canal was authorised by Parliament in , and in it joined the Grand Junction Canal at Paddington Basin. Illustration by Thomas Hosmer Shepherd (cc) from 'London and its Environs in the Nineteenth Century' (London, ). In a series of letters, William Darby (), who describes himself as a member of the New-York Historical Society, chronicles his journey up the Hudson, across New York to Ogdensburg and Sackett's Harbor (on Lake Ontario), and on to Buffalo and Detroit. Along the way, he spends time in Rhinebeck, Utica, Geneva, Niagara Falls, and other points of scenic or economic interest.
Find [HASSELL'S DRAWING MAGAZINE OF RURAL SCENERY ] by Hassell, John - Find [HASSELL'S DRAWING MAGAZINE OF RURAL SCENERY ] by Hassell, John - Book Description [ London: Published by Thomas Tegg, Seventy parts, disbound folded signatures, comprised solely of images and captions. The Grand Junction Canal (later part of the Grand Union Canal) was begun in as a link from London to existing canals passing through the Midlands, and the Paddington Arm and basin had opened in Despite the ‘Pastoral’ classification of the subsequent Liber print, Gillian Forrester has drawn attention to Turner’s emphasis on the.
Tour of the Grand Junction Canal in London, Cranfield & Bonfiel Books, (OCoLC) Online version: Hassell, J. (John), Tour of the Grand Junction Canal in London, Cranfield & Bonfiel Books, (OCoLC) Document Type: Book: All Authors / Contributors: J Hassell; John Cranfield.
COVID Resources. Reliable information about the coronavirus (COVID) is available from the World Health Organization (current situation, international travel).Numerous and frequently-updated resource results are available from this ’s WebJunction has pulled together information and resources to assist library staff as they consider how to handle.
Musings,reviews and articles on old canal and waterway related books and ephemera in my collection. Tuesday, 20 November A Tour of the Grand Junction. () John Hassell ( – ) was a Georgian artist, illustrator, author and publisher earning his living principally by producing what would now be termed a travel guide book.
Book digitized by Google from the library of Harvard University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user : Title: A Tour of the Grand Junction Canal in Author Name: Hassell, John / Notes and Introduction By John Cranfield Categories: Topography - London & the South-east, Canals, History - UK, Edition: Reprint Publisher: London, Cranfield & Bonfiel Books: Binding: Soft Cover Book Condition: Good Jacket Condition: No Jacket Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
A Tour of the Grand Junction Canal inJohn Hassell Other than curing the leakage, the Apsley deviation was to prove of benefit to Dickinson’s business in another way, for the Canal now passed immediately adjacent to his mills, thereby providing a ready transport link to other of his canal-side factories and depots in London, and to the.
Head of the Grand Junction Canal with the Small Reservoir at Braunston by J. Hassell. Steel engraving on image to enlarge it. InCharles Kingsley suggested that urbanites should go into the countryside as a desirable escape from the city (Letters, ), but inthe artist John Hassell () had already suggested in his Tour of the Grand Junction that.
[Color Plate] Tour of The Grand Junction, illustrated in a series of engravings; with an Historical and Topographical Description of those parts of the counties of Middlesex, Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire and Northhamptonshire, through which the canal passes [John (d.
) HASSELL] on *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. A Tour of the Grand Junction. () John Hassell ( – ) was a Georgian artist, illustrator, author and publisher earning his living principally by producing what would now be termed a travel guide book.
The book was published in soon after the canal was opened throughout. Priced at £1 with uncoloured plates and £1. Open Library is an open, editable library catalog, building towards a web page for every book ever published.
Author of The camera, Tour of the Grand Junction, A tour of the Grand Junction Canal inTour of the Isle of Wight, The speculum, Memoirs of the lifeof the late George Morland, Picturesque rides and walks, Aqua pictura. Tour of the Grand Junction with an Historical and Topographical Description of Those Parts of the Counties of Middlesex, Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, and Northamptonshire, Through which the Canal Passes, first edition, 24 hand-coloured aquatint plates, some offsetting, contemporary green straight-grained morocco gilt, g.e., extremities lightly rubbed, upper joint.
He also published: 1. 'A Tour of the Isle of Wight'2 vols. 8vo. A Picturesque guide to Bath, Bristol Hot-Wells, the River Avon and the adjacent Country: illustrated with a set of views taken in the Summer of by Messrs. Ibbetson, Laporte, and J. Hassell, and engraved in aquatint,' 3.
Available in the National Library of Australia collection. Author: Tatham, William, ; Format: Book, Online; 15 p. Canal books galore in Oxfam shop We walked in to Berkhamsted this morning, accessing the high street via the Waitrose car park.
One of the first things I saw was a display of waterways books in the window of the Oxfam charity : Halfie.
Tour of the Grand Junction, Illustrated with a Series of Engravings, with an Historical and Topographical Description of Counties of Middlesex, Hartfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, and Northamptonshire, Through Which the Canal Passes.
Tour of the Grand Junction Canal, John Hassell. 01 Aug Paperback. unavailable. Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts. Longer titles found: Dimes v Grand Junction Canal () searching for Grand Junction Canal 29 found ( total) alternate case: grand Junction Canal Adderley ( words) case mismatch in snippet view article find links to article Salop, 4 miles to the N.W.
of Market Drayton. Tour of the Grand Junction Canal () Rides and Walks Round London (; 2 vols) The Camera; or Art of Drawing in Water-colours (). Excursions of Pleasure and Sports on the Thames () Graphic Delineation: a Practical Treatise on the Art of Etching (). References. South Oxford Canal - Claydon Lock 17 - 21 (Water Control) 7th Oct am onwards.
Reservoir holdings in the South Oxford Canal are lower than usual for this time of year. We had a very dry winter and some of the Oxford reservoirs have not shown any refill. Bridge Drinkwaters Lift Bridge, Oxford Canal.
15th Oct pm onwards. Tour of the Grand Junction, Illustrated in a Series of Engravings, with an Historical and Topographical Description of Those Parts of the Counties of Middlesex, Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, and Northamptonshire, Through Which the.
Illustration from JB Dashwood's The Thames to the Solent by Canal and Sea, The above illustration, from the frontispiece sets the tone of the volume.
Three Locks at Stoke Hammond (Soulbury), Bucks from J Hassell's Tour of the Grand Junction Canal, Old Battersea Bridge, from oil painting by Walter Greaves. A comprehensive collection of canal memorabilia, including books, engraved plans, canal posters, postcards, share certificates Author: JOE ARMSTRONG.Full text of "Journal of a tour in Scotland in " See other formats.The land on which the spoil was dumped in the early 19th century, was then owned by the Duke of Grafton.
The tunnel spoil features dramatically as a grey serpentine blot-on- the-landscape in the illustration of the northern entrance to Blisworth Tunnel, which appeared in J. Hassell’s book entitled Tour of the Grand Junction Canal.