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[Bookplate for Charles Manby by Suffield]
[Bookplate for Charles Manby by Suffield]
Title[Bookplate for Charles Manby by Suffield]
CreatorSuffield
Date Created1820
Sort Date1820
DescriptionIn black ink, this bookplate consists of an escutcheon divided per pale, with a stylized bordure. The dexter quadrant, gules (red), is charged with a lion rampant and a chief, argent (silver), with three martlets. The sinister quadrant, gules, is charged with four etoiles, two over two, and contains a canton, coloured ermine (white powdered fur with black tufts), in the dexter chief of the quadrant, covering two-thirds of the etoile in that location. The canton represents the banner of the ancient Knights Banneret, which is an honourable order which has become extinct. It was on order conferred upon persons, recognized by a king or general, that had perfomed some heroic act on the battlefield. The escutcheon is crested by a straight wreath and a lion passant guardant, holding what appears to be a millrind, sable (black) in its dexter paw. The millrind is placed in the centre of a grindstone to protect the hole in the centre from the action of the axis ; it is a charge frequently used by persons connected with agriculture. Below the escutcheon is a banner containing the Latin motto.
Extent1 bookplate : steel engraving ; 5.9 x 8.5 cm
SubjectHeraldry
Subject - GeographicLondon (England)
Personal NamesManby, Charles
GenrePrints
TypeStill Image
Formatimage/jpeg
LanguageLatin
NotesCharles Manby (1804-1884) was an English civil engineer. He was born on 4 February 1804, at West Cowes, Isle of Wight, the eldest son of Aaron Manby (1776-1850), also an engineer, and Juliana, née Fewster. After an early education in a Roman Catholic seminary, and a stint at the semi-military college of St. Servan at Rennes in Brittany in 1814, Charles Manby joined his father at the Horseley ironworks, Tipton, in 1815. Here he assisted in building the first iron steamboat, the Aaron Manby. Around 1823, Manby went to Paris to take charge of the gasworks established there by his father, and he subsequently superintended his father's foundry at Charenton. Later, he was employed by the tobacco department of the French government, and also received a commission in the French military engineers. After returning to England, and taking on management of the Beaufort ironworks in south Wales in 1829, he married Ellen Jones in 1830. Charles Manby established himself as a civil engineer in London in 1835, specializing in the heating and ventilating of buildings. He was appointed secretary to the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1839, where he served for seventeen years. He retired from the institution in 1956, and from then on was the London agent for Robert Stephenson & Co. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1953, and was a member of the international commission which met in Paris to consider the feasibility of constructing the Suez Canal. He also helped to establish the engineer and railway volunteer staff corps in 1864. In 1858, he was married a second time, after the death of his first wife, to Harriet, daughter of Major Nicholas Willard of Eastbourne, and widow of W. C. Hood, formerly a partner in the publishing house of Whitaker & Co. No children were born from either marriage. Charles Manby died in London on 31 July 1884. Charles Manby is noted as the editor of Frederick M. Kelley's, "On the junction of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and the practicability of a ship canal, without locks, by the valley of the Atrato, " which can be found on microform in the UBC Library catalogue. Below the escutcheon is the artist's mark: "Suffield sculpt". The bookplate has trimmed corners.
References:
1) H.W. Fincham, "The Artists and Engravers of British and American Bookplates, " (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co Ltd, 1897), 94.
2) Biography of Charles Manby found at: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, "Manby, Charles, " (2008) http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/17918?_fromAuth=1 (4 February 2008).
Access IdentifierBP MUR ENG P M363
Digital IdentifierBP_MUR_ENG_P_M363
Is Part OfRBSC Bookplates
SourceOriginal Format: University of British Columbia. Library. Rare Books and Special Collections. Thomas Murray Bookplates Collection. BP MUR ENG P M363
Date Available2008
Publisher - DigitalVancouver : University of British Columbia Library
RightsImages provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from Rare Books and Special Collections: http://rbsc.library.ubc.ca
TranscriptBONA FRUI MALA PATI Charles Manby.
TranslationThe good are rewarded, the bad suffer.
DOI1.0215361
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