By JOSEPH GANDY, Architect, A.R.A.
Author of “Designs for Cottages,” &c.
PRINCIPAL CONTENTS.
Cottages of the most simple form and economical construction—House of Business, or Office, as suggested by Mr. Marshall.—Dairies—A mill—Group of thirteen Cottages, designed for the neighbourhood of a Manufactory—Gardener’s Cottage—Bath—Several double Cottages—Cottages for three, four, and five Families—Ornamental Cottages—Plan of a Manufactory and Work-shops—Groups of Cottages, designed upon a principle of exciting emulation and rewarding meritorious exertion—Habitation for an Overseer of Labourers—Arable, Dairy, and Grazing Farms—An Inn—Villas, and small Country Dwellings—Entrance-gates—Single and double Lodges, &c. &c. &c.—A Rural Institute, or National Establishment, for the advancement of Agriculture, on Mr. Marshall’s plan.
In the Press,
- An AGRICULTURAL EXCURSION in IRELAND, with an Account of Two Years successful Farming in that Country. By Richard Parkinson, Author of the “Experienced Farmer,” and “Farmer’s Tour in America.”
- A TREATISE on WOOL, comprising a particular Account of its essential Qualities and Defects, and pointing out the Objects to be attended to by the Grower, with a view to the Improvement of the British Fleece. By John Luccock, Woolstapler.
- A CATALOGUE of BOOKS on AGRICULTURE and RURAL ECONOMY; including some Authors on POLITICAL ECONOMY, and the ARTS, more immediately relating to RURAL AFFAIRS.
Printed by B. McMillan, Bow-Street, Covent-Garden.
Agricultural Books lately published for J. Harding, London.
- ALDERSON’s ESSAY on the IMPROVEMENT OF POOR SOILS. 8vo. 2s.
- SIR JOSEPH BANKS’s SHORT ACCOUNT of the DISEASE in CORN, called, by Farmers, the Blight, the Mildew, and the Rust; with a Plate. Price 2s.
- BARTLEY (Secretary to the Bath Society) on the Conversion of PASTURE LAND into TILLAGE—on the MANUFACTURE of POTATOES into STARCH—and on the utility of applying POTATOES as FOOD for SHEEP. 1s. 6d.
- BARTLEY’s LETTERS on Extending the GROWTH of FINE CLOTHING WOOL, by INTERBREEDING with SPANISH RAMS and BRITISH EWES. 2s.
- BARBER’s FARM-BUILDINGS, or RURAL ECONOMY; containing a minute Description of the Mode of Building in Pisé. 4to. 6 Plates. 10s. 6d.
- CULLEY’s OBSERVATIONS on LIVE STOCK, with Directions for choosing and improving the best Breeds of Domestic Animals, with Plates. 8vo. New Edition. Price 6s.
- The EARL of DUNDONALD’s TREATISE; shewing the intimate Connexion that subsists between Agriculture and Chemistry: addressed to the Cultivators of the Soil. 4to. 10s. 6d.
- GARRARD’s PLATES, descriptive of the Improved Breeds of British Cattle, folio.
- HARRISON on the ROT in SHEEP, and other Animals. 8vo. 2s.
- MARSHALL’S RURAL ECONOMY of the WEST of ENGLAND. A new and enlarged Edition, 8vo. 2 vols. 15s.
- PARKINSON’s EXPERIENCED FARMER, embracing the whole SYSTEM of AGRICULTURE, BREEDING, &c. 2 vols. 1l. 1s.
- PARKINSON’s TOUR in AMERICA, in 1798, 1799, and 1800, giving a particular Account of the American System of Husbandry, &c. &c. 2 vols. 8vo. 15s.
- A PRACTICAL and EXPERIMENTAL INQUIRY into the NATURE and PROPERTIES of the DIFFERENT KINDS of MANURES. 2s.
- STICKNEY’s OBSERVATIONS respecting the GRUB. 8vo. 2s.
- The GAME BOOK; enabling the Sportsman to keep an Account of Game, when and where killed, and other Particulars, in the manner of a Journal. 7s. 1l. 1s. or 2l. 2s.
Lately published by J. Harding, in Royal Quarto, with 43 Plates, price 2l. 2s.
DESIGNS