This beautifully presented volume is a faithful reproduction of W. F.
Pocock's book of 1819 and a major landmark in the publication of
architectural facsimiles. It is probably the most important Georgian
pattern book not hitherto reprinted. This remarkable work is of
fundamental importance in understanding the dynamic story of church and
chapel building in the period after Waterloo, and was the only book ever
produced on this subject before 1836. The 44 model designs were
enthusiastically copied, especially by Nonconformists, and the
letterpress provided sound, practical suggestions for those
contemplating building. It also had enormous influence in North America
where countless buildings can be traced back to Pocock's manual, a
compelling chapter in the story of transatlantic architectural history.
The original work of 87 pages is accompanied by a scholarly,
well-illustrated introduction by Christopher Webster, the leading expert
on churches of this period, who sets the book in its wider context.