[20]. Hussey in The Picturesque lists many of these books and gives good examples of their illustrations.

[21]. First, that is, in this period. The columnar Monument in the City of London by Robert Hooke, commemorating the Great Fire, dates from the 1670s.

[22]. See Telford, T., An Account of the Improvements of the Port of London, London, 1801. Splendid later examples also survive in Liverpool, built by the Corporation engineer Jesse Hartley (1780-1860); see Waldron, J., ‘Measured Drawings of the Albert Dock Warehouses in Liverpool’, Architectural History, IV (1961), 103-16.

[23]. See Kimball, F., Thomas Jefferson and the First Monument of the Classic Revival in America, Harrisburg, 1915.

[24]. See Kimball, F., ‘The Genesis of the White House’, Century Magazine, February 1918.

[25]. See Brown, G., History of the United States Capitol, 2 vols, Washington, 1900-3.

[26]. See Kimball, F., ‘Origin of the Plan of Washington, D.C.’, Architectural Review (New York), VII (1918), 41-5; and Kite, E., L’Enfant and Washington, Baltimore, 1929.

[27]. See Davison, C. V., ‘Maximilien and Eliza Godefroy’, ‘Maximilien Godefroy’, Maryland Historical Magazine, March, September 1934.

[28]. See Alexander, R. L., ‘The Public Memorial and Godefroy’s Battle Monument’, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, XVII (1958), 19-24.

[29]. See Hislop, C., and Larrabee, H. A., ‘Joseph-Jacques Ramée and the Building of North and South College’, Union College Alumni Monthly, February 1938.