- Blenheim, Oxfordshire, 1715
- Wanstead, Essex, 1719 (cir.)
- Seaton Delaval, Northumberland, 1720
- Moor Park, Hertfordshire, 1720
- Stoneleigh Abbey, Warwickshire, 1720 (cir.)
- Mereworth, Kent, 1722
- Houghton, Norfolk, 1723
- Glastonbury Hall, 1726
- Villa at Chiswick, 1729
- Rothwell Manor House, Northamptonshire
- Rectory, Burford
- House in Whitehall Gardens
- Heale House, Middle Woodford, Wiltshire
- House at Horsham, Sussex
- Ironwork at Carshalton House, Surrey
- Ironwork at Eaton Hall, Cheshire
GEORGE II.—1727–1760.
- House in Hatton Garden
- Woburn Abbey, Bedfordshire, 1747
- Prior Park, Bath, 1750 (cir.)
- Holkham Hall, Norfolk, 1754 (cir.)
GEORGE III.—1760–1820.
- Harewood House, Yorkshire, 1760
- Cumberland House, 1760–67
- Kedlestone, Derbyshire, 1761
- Lansdowne House, 1765 (cir.)
- House in Mansfield Street, London, 1770 (cir.)
- House in St James’s Square, London, 1772
- Somerset House, Strand, 1776
- Baddow House, Essex
- House at Faversham, Kent
- House at Colchester
GLOSSARY.
Aisle.—The wing of a church, at the side of the nave or choir.
Arabesque.—Ornamentation enriching flat surfaces.
Ashlar.—Hewn or squared stone, as distinguished from that which is rough or unhewn.
Ball-Flower.—A mediæval ornament resembling a ball placed within a globular flower.