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... Sextants, quadrants, telescopes & all kinds of nautical instruments, stationary &c. Wholesale & Retail. Instruments cleaned & repaired.

... Sextants, quadrants, telescopes & all kinds of nautical instruments, stationary &c. Wholesale & Retail. Instruments cleaned & repaired.

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... Sextants, quadrants, telescopes & all kinds of nautical instruments, stationary &c. Wholesale & Retail. Instruments cleaned & repaired.

by NORIE, J[ohn] W[illiam]

  • Used
Condition
See description
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
London, United Kingdom
Item Price
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About This Item

London,: at the Navigation Warehouse and Naval Academy, 157 Leadenhall Street,, [1824-1840].. 150 by 680mm. (6 by 26.75 inches).. Prints,""I.W. Nories & Co (Sucessors to the late Wm. Heather) Chart and Map Sellers to the Admiralty & the Honble. East India Compy A trade card to inspire Dickens Engraved trade card, mounted on card. John Norie (1772-1843) was a London-based hydrographer, chartmaker, writer, publisher and merchant. He took over the Navigation Warehouse and Naval Academy in Leadenhall Street in 1813, having previously compiled and published 'A New and Complete Epitome of Practical Navigation'. This volume was dedicated to the Court of Directors at the East India Company, an act of flattery that paid off when he became an official chartseller to the Company in 1824. Alongside a great number of maps and charts, Norie sold a wide range of nautical instruments, including """"sextants, quadrants [and] telescopes"""", as stated on his trade card. Worms notes that globes were also available at the Navigation Warehouse, as well as sets of nautical tables, and that Norie operated from an additional property at 70 Cornhill from 1829. Furthermore, the 1834 electoral registers show that, besides these shops, he also had property by Regent's Park, and in Edinburgh. The present trade card was in circulation from the beginning of Norie's contract with the East India Company until his retirement in 1840. In the era before reliable street numbers or any widespread advertising media, the trade card had been a crucial means of publicising the name and location of one's business. Even after the development of more sophisticated systems, they continued to be a popular way of communicating with potential customers, and most merchants or shop-owners of the eighteenth century had some form of trading card. The map and navigation industry was no exception, and Robinson notes that 'in the case of nautical instrument makers, [the cards] were fixed in the boxes containing quandrants, compasses or other articles sold by the firm'. He goes on to explain that the same design 'frequently appeared as a bill-head on invoices, delivery notes, and similar documents' and that 'in those days, every merchant's shop had its distinctive sign, and this was naturally a prominent feature in the trade card'. Although Robinson uses Norie as a direct example of this iconography, there is no distinctive sign or symbol to be found on the present card, perhaps suggesting that he may have had another in circulation. The specific sign Robinson assigns to Norie is that of the 'Little Midshipman', which is also referenced by Kemp and Worms. This small figure had adorned the doorway of 157 Leadenhall Street throughout Norie's occupancy, and was immortalised by Charles Dickens in his 1846 novel, 'Dombey & Son'. The work centres around the eponymous shipping firm, and features a nautical instrument maker, Mr Soloman Hills, who operates 'under the sign of the Little Midshipman'. In his characteristic style, Dickens satirises Norie's Navigation Warehouse, describing its sign as one of the 'little timber midshipmen in obsolete naval uniforms, eternally employed outside the shopdoors of nautical instrument-makers in taking observations of the hackney coaches"""". Although commonplace at the time, the nature of Norie's trade card meant that it was frequently handled, and therefore often damaged or lost, making the present example a rare survival. Kemp, 'Some Notes on the Ward of Aldgate and Its Ancient & Modern History', (Eden Fisher, 1904); Worms, Baynton-Williams, 'British Map Engravers', (London Rare Book Society, 2011); Robinson, 'The artistic trade cards of the nautical instrument makers', (The Mariner's Mirror, 1911).

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Details

Bookseller
Daniel Crouch Rare Books Ltd GB (GB)
Bookseller's Inventory #
14875
Title
... Sextants, quadrants, telescopes & all kinds of nautical instruments, stationary &c. Wholesale & Retail. Instruments cleaned & repaired.
Author
NORIE, J[ohn] W[illiam]
Book Condition
Used
Publisher
at the Navigation Warehouse and Naval Academy, 157 Leadenhall Street,
Place of Publication
London,
Date Published
[1824-1840].
Keywords
trade card, Dickens, print, London, Leadenhall Street""
Size
150 by 680mm. (6 by 26.75 inches).

Terms of Sale

Daniel Crouch Rare Books Ltd

Any item may be returned if you are not happy with it providing we are notified within 7 days of your receiving it. This does not affect any statutory rights you may have under UK or EU law for returning the item outside this period. All we ask is that you return the item(s) by the same or similar method to that in which they were sent to you. Your postage costs and any payment already received will be refunded immediately on our receipt of the items in the same condition as you received them.

About the Seller

Daniel Crouch Rare Books Ltd

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2018
London

About Daniel Crouch Rare Books Ltd

Daniel Crouch Rare Books is specialist dealer in antique atlases, maps, plans, sea charts and voyages dating from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Our carefully selected stock also includes a number of fine prints and globes, and a selection of cartographic reference books.Our particular passions include rare atlases, wall maps, and separately published maps and charts. We strive to acquire unusual and quirky maps that are in fine condition. We are members of the following trade associations: The Antiquarian Bookseller's Association (ABA); The British Antique Dealers' Association (BADA); Confédération Internationale des Négociantes en Oeuvres d'Art (CINOA); The International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB); The Society of London Art Dealers (SLAD); and The European Fine Art Foundation (TEFAF). Daniel and Nick are also both members of The Company of Art Scholars, Dealers, and Collectors.

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A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
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