Old English glassesAn account of glass drinking vessels in England, from early times to the end of the eighteenth centuryWith introductory notices, original documents, etc . ortant series ofJacobite glasses in the kingdom, but because it is known that they belongedto Henry Jones of Chastleton, a zealous Jacobite, who died in 1761, and weremade for the use of a Gloucestershire Jacobite club, which, doubtless, met at hishouse on the Oxfordshire borders. It would seem from the emblems that theSociety was in union with the Cycle, but upon the associative aspect of Jacobitismin this respect there i
Old English glassesAn account of glass drinking vessels in England, from early times to the end of the eighteenth centuryWith introductory notices, original documents, etc . ortant series ofJacobite glasses in the kingdom, but because it is known that they belongedto Henry Jones of Chastleton, a zealous Jacobite, who died in 1761, and weremade for the use of a Gloucestershire Jacobite club, which, doubtless, met at hishouse on the Oxfordshire borders. It would seem from the emblems that theSociety was in union with the Cycle, but upon the associative aspect of Jacobitismin this respect there is no further evidence.^ The Rev. W. Walker Woolcombe Anecdotes of Painting, vol. i. p. 20i, Edit. Oaks, and in deference to his own principles, planted 1782. Scotch firs, still standing in the formal gardens of - Notes and Queries, 5th S., vol. viii. p. 328. Chastleton ; it is believed that this was a practice * See pp. 352, 358. often carried out at the time. Trees are said to ?* Henry Jones, the Jacobite, following the have been beheaded in many parts of England custom of his ancestor, the planter of the Restoration in token of grief, and in memory of Charles I.;.
Size: 1274px × 1962px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectglassmanufacture