AN ENGLISH 2¾-INCH POCKET GLOBE
AN ENGLISH 2¾-INCH POCKET GLOBE

NATHANIEL HILL, 1754

Details
AN ENGLISH 2¾-INCH POCKET GLOBE
NATHANIEL HILL, 1754
A NEW Terrestrial GLOBE by Nath Hill 1754 made up of twelve hand coloured engraved gores and two polar calottes, New Holland, Dimens Land and New Zealand part delineated, North-West America as Unknown Parts, each interior hemisphere twelve hand coloured engraved half gores and a polar calotte, the exterior of the case covered with fishskin.
2 7/8in. (7.5cm.) in case

Lot Essay

Nathaniel Hill was apprenticed to globe-maker and surveyor Richard Cushee, working from the Globe and Sun at 128 Chancery Lane (Cushee's old address, and the future address of the Newton family firm). Hill was succeeded by his apprentice Thomas Bateman. He in turn was succeeded by John Newton (see lot 125) who, with minimum revisions, used the Hill plates as the basis for his own first pocket globe (dated 1783). Hill's globes appear to have been amongst the more popular of the mid-eighteenth century pocket globes, perhaps because they undercut those offered by the competition: Senex, Martin and Dudley Adams sold theirs for 10 shillings each, whereas Hill's were 7 shillings and 6 pence

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