ALL ITEMS: 'Taylor--Joseph


 Thumbnail CreatorDateTitle / Author / Date / LocationPrice  Description
8019Land Travelers Pocket Compass of Winds and Weather. Taylor. 1814.DetailsTaylor, Joseph1814
Land Travelers Pocket Compass of Winds and Weather
Taylor, Joseph
1814
LOC:
$550.00Taylor--JosephLand-Travelers-Pocket-Compass-of-Winds-and-WeatherEarly 19th-century "Land Traveller's Pocket Compass," engraved and issued by Joseph Taylor. This is only the second example of this work by Taylor we can locate. No example of the item is found in WorldCat. <br><br>Taylor prepared these pocket compasses for travelers, surveyors, and outdoorsmen who needed a simple guide for direction finding and basic weather prediction. The circular diagram is built from several engraved rings of text explaining how rainbow color, phase of the moon, and compass bearing of specific meteorological phenomena (wind, clouds, rain) were believed to signal approaching changes in the weather. These ideas reflect the early folk-meteorological rules that Taylor promoted in his printed work: "A rain-bow in the morning is the Shepherd's warning; but a rain-bow at night is the shepherd's delight." <br><br> Published for J. Taylor in 1814. With a manuscript dedication at bottom right: "From your lonely husband in Britain. 1943." <br><br> The piece blends practical instruction with decorative engraving. The central compass rose is surrounded by Taylor's explanatory text, while two ribbon panels carry short rules for reading clouds and winds. Although inexpensive and meant for everyday use, few examples survive because they were handled, carried, and eventually discarded. This sheet is therefore a rare artifact of early American scientific engraving and an unusual example of Joseph Taylor's work at the intersection of silversmithing, printing, and popular science.