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The Notebook of Thomas Shakshaft – Part Two

Thomas Shakeshaft

His Book

1751

His pockit book

Thos Thos

Thomas Bamptons Bill

(Entries all crossed out and repeated below)

Thomas Bamptons Bill

October the 19 I was a sawing – £ – s – d

At 14d a day — 0 – 1 – 2

& the 21 — 0 – 1 – 2

& the 22 — 0 – 1 – 2

and the 23 — 0 – 1 – 2

It Comes to — 0 – 4 – 8

The True Sum

Note: This page clearly belongs to the start of the notebook and yet it is found here near the middle. The next page is dated 11 years later. It is further evidence that the 1946 rebinding did not keep the pages in the correct order.

Thos bampton

The 14th of May 1762

My father and me Raling & Stomping 3 day

4 day more

Aprill the 26th 1762

On Monday We had

Little Samull Aldridge

To Nurss at 3s per week

1 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 17 – 0 = 3 = 0
2 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 18 – 0 = 3 = 0
3 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 19 – 0 = 3 = 0
4 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 20 – 0 = 3 = 0
5 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 21 – 0 = 3 = 0
6 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 22 – 0 = 3 = 0
7 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 23 – 0 = 3 = 0
8 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 24 – 0 = 3 = 0
9 – 0 = 3 = 0 —— 25 – 0 = 3 = 0
10 – 0 = 3 = 0
11 – 0 = 3 = 0 —– total 3 = 15 = 0
12 – 0 = 3 = 0
13 – 0 = 3 = 0
14 – 0 = 3 = 0
15 – 0 = 3 = 0
16 – 0 = 3 = 0

Note: In spite of their skills it seems that from time to time the Shakeshafts had to turn to anything to secure a living. It might be assumed that this was a Middleton Aldridge and not the one in Shenstone

What it Cost me Lately

September the 30 in a 1751

1 bought at Fasley (Fazeley?) Fair — s – d

A Shirt Cloth 3 yards & 3 quouters — 5 – 0

A hat — 2 – 0

A handkitcher — 1 – 10

And 3 stocks — 1 – 5

& a pair of bockels — 0 – 10

bought at Tamworth Fair

A Cote Cloth at 2s & 3d the yard — 9 – 0

Cloth for wastcot 1s& 9d the yard — 5 – 0

A Lode of Coles — 8 – 0

A Seal an pencel and ink — 0 – 7

Note: At this time Thomas was probably three months past his 20th birthday. He was baptised on 30th August 1731 but his birth date is unknown. Other Shakeshaft births recorded 6-weeks prior to baptism so we might guess the age of Thomas on that basis. That this page is near the middle of the book supports the view that the pages were rebound in the wrong order during the 1946 restoration.

There is a very similar entry on page 7

Benjamin Woodshaw

May the 7th, 1762

My father one day and

half mending the barn

Door — 0 = 1 = 6

both of us before Setting

Up the hovell – one day Each — 2 = 0

My Self one day and quarter

making a ladder — 0 = 1 = 3

one day & 2 half days both — 0 = 4 = 0

june ye 4th 1763 a Coffin for

benjamin Woodshaw. — 0 = 7 = 6

August the 23rd 1763 A Coffin ‘

for Joseph Woodshaw — 0 = 5 = 6

february the 7″” 1765 ‘

Oak box — 0 = 9 = 0

Work done by Benjamin Woodshaw

Coles = 12 hundred at 7 per hun — 0 = 7 = 0

& load of kids Left unpaid

the Carrage — 0 = 4 = 0

Load of Coals — 0 =12 = 0

Note: Was this a bill for work done for the Woodshaws, who then suffered bereavement before payment had been made while the Shakeshafts also owed them money for supplying coal etc? The coffin was probably not actually for Benjamin Woodshaw as he is recorded as supplying further coal to Shakeshafts in January, 1764. Possibly there was a father and son both named Benjamin. The coffin supplied for Joseph Woodshaw was probably smaller for a child as it costs less than the other coffin.

October the 30 – 1751

I Come to James Colins on Wend

I bought a 3 peny Loaf — 0 – 0 – 3

I workt 3 days

I was 3 day the next week

& he found me with Vittels

my father receved 3s & I had 2s- 6d

Wee was 5 days the next week

I finished a pair of bedstids & made

another pair and setting up mangers

at the Swan my father receved 2s

and 4s and 1 had 2s of my father

I went on Wensday January the 29th

workt 3 days & _ father receved 4s & 2s

1 receved 1s at Litchfield fair

& 1 Shilling the 26 of February

Mrs. Barker’s 1762

May ye 4th My father

one day and half — 0 = 1 = 6

it was making Gates

2 peneyworth of Nails — 0 = 0 = 2

Note: The dates on this page seem to be very odd with the 1762 lower part being written eleven years after the upper part

To renew old worn letters

take of the best Galls (oak apples) beat

them grosly and lay them to steep one day

in good wite wine this don distil

them with wine & with the distild watter that comes of them wet

the Letters and thay’l seem fresh and new

A Rule to know thy fortune

When thou enterest out of thy house

the first that you meet if his or her name

begin with these Leters A,E,O,V,C,L that

doth betoken good fortune that day but if

their names or name begins with

S, D, T, J ill success

To know if a woman be with Child

of a boy or a girl take the Letters of

the proper names of its father & mother

add 25 then devide by 47 & if even tis a

male if odd a female by The same you

may know whether a sick person shall

live or die or one fled is return

A way to take fish

Get nettles and house leek, bruise `em

and take the juice and put in a pond so

the fish will gather thither and

if your hands be anointed therewith

you may take `em at pleasure

To Break bands

Take the heart of a mole or wart

Make powder thereof and therewith rub

The bands and they will break

To Lay Gold on Glass

Take chalk and red Lead of Each

alike Grind them together & temper

them with Linseed oyl lay it on

& when it is dry almost dry Lay

Leaf Gold upon it let it dry Then polish it.

What it lies me in

one 3d

—————-

An Agreement made between

my father & me august the 16th

1756 – I must Maintain the house

and receive and pay all and Every

day my father works at the Hall I must

Give him 10 pence and every day he

works at the farmers I must give him

6 pence and he will pay the Rent

out of his wages.

August the

Munday the 16

1756

Note: The last six lines are crossed out which makes reading them very difficult indeed. Even so these lines seem to be part of the document. The rather strange words at the top of the page have something to do with the cost of living as indicated on another page where some similar words do clearly refer to living costs. Thomas had married four weeks earlier on 15th July so presumably adjustments were being made to the housekeeping arrangements to take account of this.

August the 19 – 1756

We ware Both at Mr. Alldridges

20 my father at Mr. Gilberts

21 Both at Mr. Aldridges cost me 3s 3d

To lay Gold on Iron or other Mettels

Take liquid Varnish one pound

Oyl of Linseed & turpintine of each

one ounce mix them Well together

Strike this over any Metal & then

lay on the Gold or Silver & when it is

done polish it.

To Gild Wood or Stone

Bole armoniack oyl of Benjamin

beat & Grind them together with

this Smear the wood or Stone when

it is almost dry lay on the Leaf Gold

let it dry & then polish it

The Eldest Daughter of Thos and

Sarah Shakshaft Born

Friday August 19th

att half an hour past Eight

at Eight in the morning

in the 5th day of the Moon 1757

Chistned September the 21

on St. Matthews day – Mary –

on Wendesday

Note: There is no ‘e’ in the middle of Shakeshaft as written here. Mostly, but not entirely, parish records did not use a middle ‘e’ either at this time. Very few years later Thomas was signing his name with a middle ‘e’ and it became generally used. His grand-daughter used an ‘e’ about 70 years later in a tapestry dated 1826. By the end of the eighteenth century a middle ‘e’ was invariably used in parish records and tombstones and all records spell the name with a middle ‘e’ thereafter. By usage the adoption of a middle ‘e’ became correct. Indeed the spelling became quite exceptionally consistent It was also a reversion to an earlier practice as in the time Thomas’s father, Robert, and also his grandfather John, long before the birth of Thomas, the middle ‘e’ was also generally in use.

To Make a Mehogane Stain

Get the Spirits of Wine and and

dragons blood & red alckany

root & boile them together

red sanders pound em altogether

For a Good black

Get Log Wood boyle it in Crab Urine*

Steel filings Mix them altogether

Let them stand for a Considarble

Wile Coller yor frame 2 or 3

Times then it will com a good

black

Dubble agafortis

Take wood soot old stale & boyl them together Littel aquafort

To Stain Walnut**

Malleber Rub’d on a Cock’s head

keeps another from mouthing

* This seems unlikely

** There is no text under this heading. What is written is a disconnected note which could have been written years later and seemingly has to do with poultry damaging each other. Although the notes written by Thomas were generally logically ordered, illogically placed jottings are also a feature of Thomas’s Notebook.

To Silver Luking Glas

Get quick Silver & tin file

——————

Quick silver in Sides of Globes

Take 2 ounces of quick silver – one

Ounce of bismuth of Lead and tin half

an Ounce Each First put the Lead and

tin into fusion then put in the bismuth

Let that infuse too Let it Stand till

all most Cold then pour in the

quick Silver then make a paper funnel

to power it in by

—————

Varnish

Spirrit of turpintine & gum

Shop Dore 3 foot by 5

Shop Dore 3 by 5

Closcet 5=4 by 2 foot 3

Chamber 3_ by 2 foot 2I[nches]

Street Door 5 foot by 2 – 101[nches]

Shop Door 4f 91[nches] by 2 – 10

Closit Door 5 – 3 by 2 – 3

Chamber 3 – 4 by 2 – 9

Lord Middletons

one day both helping the men in the

Upper plantation to keep a tree out

of the pit ——————– 0 – 2 – 6

both of us Mending ye fleakes

and helping the men 0 – 2 – 6

we put up 2 Rails below the pool

mended the fleaks & Maid

2 Spitting boxes 0*

july 25 1763 both of us Making

a Stile at the hungreen

Close 0 = 2 = 8

There is a note written vertically here which reads:

‘Here

the beetch pd for’

1757 November ye 30 at Robt. Aldridg

December ye 1 falling a tree Cleving

and hewing Crib `feet and bars

my father and me — 0 – 4 – 0

December 5 My father

and me one day Each

mending Cribs — 0 – 2 – 0

The7th 8th 9th Both — 0 – 6 – 0

june ye 12th 1762

Boards for Mrs Owin

popler at 2d per foot for Doors

at hill 55 foot for Doors

and the Ledges — 0 = 9 = 2

26 foot of Square Stuff

at one peney per foot — 0 = 2 = 2

8_ foot popler for Caseing

the Door Caseis — 0 = 1 = 5

Total* — 2 = 19 = 9

Receved — 0 = 10 = 6

Remains Due to me — 2 = 9 = 3

* Clearly this does not add up so Mrs. Owin may have already have owed £2-7-0. Mr. Owin was Overseer of the Poor in 1762 but the Overseer’s accounts prior to 1800 are lost so any connection cannot now be found.

October the 14th 1762

I bought a Pig at —– £ – s – d

Birmingham price — 1 = 4 = 0_

My Charges — 0 = 1 = 0

Bran — 0 = 0 = 3

3 Strik of Acorns of

My Aunt lety* — 0 = 3 = 0

1_ Strik of bran — 0 = 1 = 3

1 Strike of bran — 0 = 0 =10

12 Strike of Acorns of

our Own — 0 =12= 0

Bran — 0 = 0 = 2

2 Strike of peas — 0 = 9 = 0

* Aunt lety is Lettice, the sister of Thomas’s father Robert, who married Joseph Boyce of Birmingham in 1736 (see page 121). She is mentioned elsewhere in the notebook. The name Lettice is used in the next two generations finally becoming Letticia

Note: 1 Strike = 2 Bushells

1 Bushell = 4 Pecks

1 Peck = 2 Gallons (dry measure)

Mr. John Gillbard — december 6 – 1764

My father and me one day Each

mending Cribs — 0 – 2 – 0

My father & me Carraing in

the hungreen Close — 0 – 2 – 0

My father one day making

the Court Gate — 0 – 1 – 0

Both of us Caring Harvest home — 0 – 2 – 0

My self one day at the Cunne

berre barn — 0 – 1 – 0

Both of us 2 days mending

making Cribs — 0 – 4 – 0

Both of us 1 day making Cribs — 0 – 2 – 0

My father one day panting* the

Chamber — 0 – 1 – 0

1765 my father one day

Setting Stomps** & pales — 0 – 1 – 0

Mending the Jack*** against ye Road — 0 – 0 – 6

My Self 1 day & _ taking the

Wood out of the barn End and making

a pitchin hole — 0 – 1 – 3

* Perhaps ‘panting’ should read painting?

** Stomps (or stumps) were vertical posts i.e. gate-stomp = gate-posts and fencepost = fence stomp. More information on page 104

*** A jack was for lifting heavy vehicles (as now) but seemed to be part of the road equipment rather than be carried by a vehicle at John hickmans

Axes = 2 Sawes = Squares= 3

Chisels = Mallit gouge hammers

Gageis = Smoothing planes =

Jack planes = fore planes =

jointers = Moulding planes =

Line Rub-Stones = Gluepot =

November ye 16th 1762

both of us about the Scruto

two days Each — 0 = 4 = 0

Next Week 5 days Each — 0 = 10 = 0

1 day More Each — 0 = 2 = 0

Glew 1 pound, Spriges

200, Oyle 3d , Nails 6d — 0 = 1 = 9

Note: Above is a list of woodworkers’ tools apparently a t the house of John Hickinan It seems to be a list made before visiting Hickman’s premises perhaps as a check that items were found and counted and not overlooked.

What or where is the scruto?

Mr Gilbird — March ye 23

2 days Each

Cleeving Gate Bars & hewing

24 Setting up a Stile & hewing

Rails both of us — 0 = 4 = 0

June the 15th 1763 Railing

hungreen* close

Stumping & pailing 5 days — 0 = 10 = 0

20th 4 days Each — 0 = 8 = 0

28 all day 29 half day 30 My Self — = 3 = 0

All day father half day — 0 = 1 = 6

july ye 1 st both of us 2 days — 0 = 4 = 0

4th My Self 6 days

My father 5 days — 0 = 11 = 0

Left unpaid — 0 = 3 = 6

Totall — 2 = 1 = 0

* Hunts Green

November ye 15th 1762

William booths junear

both of us Setting up Cribs

one day — 0 = 2 = 0

ye 29th both of us Mending

the Chamber floor making

a Stile Setting up posts in

the garden — 0 = 2 = 0

February the 23rd 1764

both of us one day & t/4

Making a Cirb for the Well — = 2 = 6

August ye 11th both of Us

2 days taking a hovel down

and Setting it Up again — 0 = 3 = 9

I was off 3 hours

Note: In this, as in other entries, is to be found evidence of scrupulous honesty. Above Thomas states he was off for three hours so the bill is reduced by 3d. That is 3s 9d and not 4s. Above that is a reference to a quarter day and a charge to reflect that. Taking three hours off might not even be recorded nowadays

Yallow Ink

Mix a little allum to Some Saffron

and Water Another of the Same

the Leaves of yallow cowslips Squeeze

out the juice and mix with allum

Blue Ink

Take elder berries, press the juice

there-of into a Glass and put powdered allum to it add to it about its forth part

of Vinegar and a little Urine then dip

a rag into it and try Whether the

Colour is to your Liking you may if it

is too pale add a Little more of the juice

and if too dark of the vinagar to it.

Ebony Wood Imitateed

Take cleane and Smooth Box boil it in

oil until it turns black ———————– or

Strike your wood over with Spirit of vitriol hold it over a Cole fire and again till it is black anough then polish it or iron filings steeped in beer and urine will make a good black —–

polish with wax

For Staining Wood Black

put 2 ounces of iron filings into a new

earthen pan add to it one ounce of Sal-armoniac dissolved in a quart of vinegar and Let it stand 12 days the Longer the Better then take

Rasped logwood and three ounces of gallnuts pounded fine infuse this in a quail of Lee made

of Lime Let this also Stand the same time as

the above When you have occasion to

use it Warm both these liquors over a

Slow fire and with the Lee first Strike the Wood over you desire to dye and then

with vinegar: repeat this untill you

see the Wood Black enough to your Liking after witch wax and rub it with a wolen

rag and it will Look brite and fine

Bees Wax for all*

To Marble Wood

Whites of eggs beat them and draw where

you will When dry mix quick lime Well

With Wine With a brush or pencil paint

the wood over rub with a linnin rag Smooth

then Varnish

* Does this mean that bees wax should be applied to all the stained wood described on this and the previous page?

To etch Figures upon Wood

Take Melted tallow, Form there-

with flowers or What else you pleas

upon it then a Coloured Water

boyled With Vittrol, Saltpetre and allum

in Standing Mist Water, With Witch

Cover the board over with tallow and let

it Stand or Repeat it till the Collour

pleases you in this manner you may

Marble or Cloud your Wood as you

please your Self

Walnut tree Colour

Take the barks of Walnuts trees or the

green shells of Wallnuts dry them in

the Sun Mix as much as you have

Occasion for with Nut oil, boil it up

And rub the Wood over therewith

A Violet Colour for Wood

Take 4 ounces of brazil, and one

ounce of indigo infuse them together

in a quart of Water and boil your

Wood therein

Glue

Common glue Mix’d up with linseed

oil or varnish Will Stand Water

or isinglass Common Glue soakd in

brandy over night and mixt with a

little fine powder & chalk

Note: The break through of ink from the other side of the page is particularly bad here.

Chuse any number & set it down & the

number of the day under it then take

the number you Shall find under the

first letter of your Christen name add

them all together in one Sum

continues on next page

My Lord Middletons

thursday Aprill ye 8th 1762

My self and father

Wating on the Surveyor –

3 days Each — £0 – 8s – 0d

the 12th My Self all day

My father half day — 0 – 2 – 0

the 19th & 20th My Self — 0 – 2 – 8

the 22d, 23d, 24th both of Us — 0 – 8 – 0

My Self half day and both of us

one day of old Making baicons — 0 – 3 – 4

Monday ye 26

both of us Cleving & hewing

fleakes two days — 0 – 5 – 4

My father one day Mending the Reals against the

Cuningro pool — 0 – 1 – 4

July 12, 8 foot of dale

to make a box for the

Surveyors at 2d per foot — 0 – 1 – 4

half day Making it

& going to tamworth

for hinges — 0 – 0 – 8

Note: The Middleton estate accounts for 7th August, 1762 show Thomas being paid 1s. Od. for two boxes for the surveyor’s maps. The rate of pay here is Is. 4d. per day as it is for all extant entries in the estate accounts. Most estate accounts for this period are lost. Middleton papers that survive are at the University of Nottingham., Mostly there is no mention of the cost of materials for work done anywhere in the notebook -just cost of labour

presumably this follows on from the previous page

19th My self Mending the — — s – d

Watter Lagg by ye plantation — 0 = 8

And 29th Making Up

tow packing boxis for

Wollerton* — 0 = 0 = 8

for Mending beecons

and Staffs for the Surveyors

Sprigs Glue & WorkmariShip

and Shueing them — 0 = 1 = 4

father one quarter of

A day Mending Gates — 0 = 0 = 4

august 7th 10 foot

of dale to Make another

Box for the Surveyors — 0 = 1 = 8

half day Making it — 0 = 0 = 8

august the 22d 1763

both of us Making Up the Little

bridle Gate att Gilbirds pound

and Sawing posts another gate

in the Common one day — 0 = 2 = 8

* The Willugby (otherwise Willoughby) family came to Middleton from Wollaton in Nottingham where they had their principal estate at Wollaton Hall. Although they never left Wollaton their main home for some time in the 18th century seems to have become Middleton Hall before reverting again to Wollaton. Clearly Thomas did not know how to spell Wollaton. Thomas worked a great deal for Lord Middleton at Middleton but no evidence has been found that he ever went to Wollaton and this is the only mention of it to be found in his notebook.

july ye 25th 1763 both of Us

Making a Stile at the — — £ – s – d

hungreen Close — — — 0 = 2 = 8

august ye 22d both of Us

Making up the Little bridle

gate in the pound and

sawing posts for Another

gate in the Corner one day — 0 = 2 = 8

Septr ye 5th both of us Mending the boat Next day

finising the boat & Setting up Some Rails & Stomps at the

top of ye Upper plantation

2 days — 0 = 5 = 4

Sept the 20th both Sawing

4 Orris Rails — 0 = 2 = 8

and half day Sawing

pales — 0 = 1 = 4

— — — 0 =14= 8

Receved the full

Contents of this bill the 5th day

Septr 1763 – – I Say Receved by me

Thos Shakeshaft

Note: This must all be work on Lord Middleton’s estate. It is noticed that Thomas by this time was spelling his name with the middle’e’ and does so here in one of very few signatures we have. He was a few weeks past his 32nd birthday.

Capt. Aldridge

April the 25 – 1764

My Self and father 2 days

Each Making 2 gates and — — £ — s — d

hanging and mending more — 0 = 4 = 0

for Leenseed Oil — 0 = 0 = 6

for one quarter of a day Each — 0 = 0 = 6

july ye 24th 1765 falling

timber for a barn floor — 0 = 1 = 6

we have had 2 Strike of Weat

at 5 Shillings per Strike — 0 =10 = 0

he has Drawd 2 Load

of turf — 0 = 5 = 0

Note: This entry for 1764 is one of the last and suggests that pay rates may have gone back to Is. Od. per day whereas earlier dates in the notebook and the Middleton estate papers consistently give a rate of 1s. 4d. Also Captain Aldridge was in Shenstone so a long journey must have been made to get this work. Maybe times were rather harder in 1764 than they had been a short while earlier

The Desire to Know

How many heads & tails are

There in 30 thrave* of Dogs &

A Cut tail’d bitch

Solution

– 721 heads

– 720 tails

– 1441 total

If 20 dogs for 30 groats go one

Whole year to grass

How many hounds for 60 Pounds** May be Winterd in that place

Solution – – 2400 dogs

* By deduction a thrave must be 24. The term was used for

quantities of thatching materials where one thrave equaled 24 sheaves and one half a thrave equalled one kiver.

* * The word pounds used here is simply guesswork

A piece of Clock Work Shewing

Minits & Seconds – 8 days

the watch part — — — — the Clock part

8) 96 — — 8) 78

8) 60 – 48) 48 – 6) 72 — 6) 48 8 pins

7) 56 — — — — — — 6) 48

30 — — — — — — — 6) 48

Or — — — Another Way

4) 48 (12— — — — 4) 28 (7

4) 30 (7_ — — — — 5) 55 (11

4) 32 (8 — — — — 5) 45 (9

— — — — — — 5) 40 (8

(30)— Crown Wheel — (17)

an Old 12 hours Clock

4) 48 — — — 48

7) 56 — — or — 56-4

6) 54 — — — 54-7

Crown (19) — — — 19-6

Note: Thomas was clearly fascinated by clocks and clock mechanisms. Mavbe this has its roots in the fact that fellow carpenter John Harrison (1693- 1776) was at this time working on his chronometer aiming to win the Board of Longitudes £25,000 prize and in 1763 was awarded the part prize of 5,000. Harrison was made to wait until 1773 when intervention by George III led to the full prize being awarded. Harrison had earlier used wood for cog teeth and this may have encouraged Thomas’s interest.

A piece of 32 days With 16 or 12 turns

the Watch-part

With 16 turns —- – With 12 turns

16) 96 —- —- —- 12) 96

9) 72 —- —- —- 9) 72

8) 60-48) 48-6) 72 —- 8) 60-48) 48-6) 72

7) 56 —- —- —- 7) 56

30 —- —- —- 30

or

thus – 16 – turns —– 2 Months

12) 72 —- — 9) 90

8) 54 —- —- 8) 76

8) 60 — — 8) 60-48) 48-6)

7) 56 —- —- 7) 56

30 —- —- 30

To prepare a black Colour

for Staining Wood

put 2 Ounces of Iron filings into

a new Earthen pan – 1 Ounce of

Sal-armoniac Dissolved in a quart

of Vinegar & Let it Stand 12 days

the Longer the better; then take

Rasped Logwood & 3 Ounces of

Gallnuts pounded fine Infuse this

in a quart of Lee Maid of Lime;

Let this also Stand the same as above

When Usered Warm both those

liquors over a Slow fire and with

the Lee first Strike the Wood over

& then With Vinegar; Repeat

this till the Wood is black Enough

to your Likeing; then Wax it

over & Rub With a Woolen Rag

or

Iron filings Steeped in beer and

Urine Will Make a Good black

Note: Another page (74) is almost identical to this but why it is repeated is not clear. The use or capital letters is particularly random and apparently meaningless.

Walnut tree Colour

Take the bark of Wallnutt

trees or the Green Shells dry

them in the sun Mix as much

as you have occation for

Nut Oyl boil it Up and Rub

the Wood therewith

An Exceeding fine Cement to

to Mend broken China or Glasses

Garlick Stamped in a Stone

Morter and the juice aplide

to the broken places

A Water Cement

Take Mastick, incense, resin, & fine

Cut Cotton of Each alike Melt

& with Some powderd quick-lime

Mix them into a Mass

A Cement as hard as Iron

Melt pitch then take Ground

Sand Worn off from Grindstones

Stir them well together boil it up

and it is fit for Use

The

Laboratory of School of Arts

by G. Smith*

*Note: This book was first published in 1738 and went through several editions during the next 50 years. Copies of a number of the editions including those of 1750 and 1755 which are those most likely to be relevant are at the British Library. Was this a book Thomas owned or had access to? If so, was it a book Thomas used for some of his recipe for wood stains, cements etc?

May the 31st 1763

an Agreement Maid With

Mr Dakin before Mr Brown

For the Use of My Ld Middleton

fleaks, oak heads Sawd, bars Cloven

of one shilling per fleak = 1 = 0

Dito heads Sawd of Oak

and bars Sawd of ash at

one Shilling and four pence = 1 = 4

Each fleak —————-

Note: A fleak is a hurdle or a short element of a fence

july the 26th 1763

We begun to Cleeve fleakes

Cleeving, hewing & sawing 9 Days

half day More

Sept 21 both of Us 2 days Making fleakes

We Maid 8 fleaks Each day that is 16 fleaks

father one day More

both of Us one day More Maid 9 fleaks

both of us one day More Maid 10 fleaks

We Maid 19 fleaks the two days Each

both half day more Sawing heads for fleaks

both 1 day & half Each Sawing heads

we have maid 76 fleaks the

bars Cloven & the heads Sawd all paid

at one Shilling Each

Benjamin Woodshaw

brought us a Load of Coles

in January 1764 price 0 = 10 = 0

february the 9th we maid 2

Ladders We finding Rounds

at one halfpeney apice and

flatons 1 peney Each

1 of 18 Rounds

the other 22 0 = 6 = 2_

june ye 16

I Maid a Ladder

of 28 Rounds I found them

6 flatons 22 Roundons 0 = 4 = 4

Sam,l Hilton

May the 23d 1764

I maid a Grotto

£0 = 5s = 0d

Note: Most of this page has been cut out and we shall never know why. Was it perhaps a bill given to a customer?

“I had of William Booth Jnr 1765

13 foot & _ half Inch Oake board*

At 3d _ per foot______ 0 = 3 = 11_

to Make a box for, Benjamin

Woodshaw

* Note: The half inch refers to the thickness of the wood but no indication is given here of its width. However, this would be unnecessary if the board was a standard width. A board was 9″” wide whereas a plank was 10″” or more wide and 2″” or more thick. A board was 1_ inch thick or thinner such as _ inch in this case.

March the 18th 1765

My father 2 days 0 = 3 = 0

My Self 3 days 0 = 4 = 6

getting Windings &

Diging Clay Winding

Walls & Daubing them

For a Dresser

the Leaf 13 foot 0 = 4 = 4

Drawer faces,

End pannils 0 = 2 = 4

13 foot for framing 0 = 4 = 4

Note: It is not stated who the customer was in this case but reasonably it was almost certainly Lord Middleton. The charge per day here is Is/6d. Two months later the charge to Lord Middleton was back to Is/4d.Every payment made to Thomas Shakeshaft and his father Robert found in the Middleton Estate papers was at the rate of Is/4d per day but much of the estate records is lost Even so it seems odd that the estate papers never show any variation in the rate of payment whereas Thomas does show variations in money received. We do not know for whom the dresser was being made. Possibly Lord Middleton.

Mrs Gilbird 1765

My father one day Setting Setting

Stumps & pales against ye Road* 0 = 1 = 0

Mending the jack 0 = 0 = 6

My Self one day and quarter

taking the Wood out of the

barn End and Making a pitchen**

hole 0 = 1 = 3

july

My Self and father one day Each Mending Gates and Making

a pitchen hole Door 0 = 2 = 0

* In “”Historical & Descriptive Notices of Droylsden”” by John Higson, published 1859, reference is made to road repairing and he quotes ‘ “” the town’s book of a century ago [c1750] reveals the following curious items – viz.—filling, leading & setting up stumps””, then deemed indispensibe in road affairs’. Droysden is now part of Manchester.

In the context of Thomas’s notebook (of about the same date) the phrase “”setting up stumps””, which occurs several times, seems to relate to fencing. Perhaps the two views are not in conflict as fencing may be used to define the edges of roads in some places.

** A pitchen is presumably a pigeon

Lord Middleton

May the 11 – 1765 £ s d

5 days 0 = 6 = 8

16th 9 days 0 = 12 = 0

july 2nd 3 days 0 = 4 = 0

Septr 25th 2 days Mending

the Wood gates 0 = 2 = 8

8 Dozn & half of floats

at 9d the Dozn Comes to 0 = 6 = 4_ 4_ 41/2

Nov the 4th for Cleaning

the Clock & putting a Sucker

on the pump 0 = 2 = 8

December ye 16th half Day

falling a tree for Rails

Next day Loading them &

falling a tree for Stomps

Next day herding & Mortising 0 = 6 = 8

A New buckit for the

Cellor plump 0 = 1 = 4

settled this Account the

31 of December

Note: Payment was made nearly 8 months after the start of this series of jobs which seems an unfairly long time for a working man to have to wait for payment. Perhaps he survived by payments for work done for other customers in this period.

For any Sprain Swelling or

Stretching of Sinews or Nerves

Cummin Seeds 3 ounces boil them

in a point of Oil of Cammomile

yellow bees Wax _ pound let them

boil to the thickness of a Sare-Cloth Spread it on Sheeps Leather Very hot apply it to the place Repeat till

it be Well

For the Scab or itch in Sheep Camelian noir and the herb

bears foot boiled in Water and applied Warm to the places

For the itch and Maggots in Sheep Brimstone & tar Well Stirred together over a slow fire is an Exelent Remedy when the Wool is Sheared off anoint

the sore place. Likewise powder of brimstone Mixt With Wax is

good for the Scab

Nancy Livsey

To William Stringer Maltster

at Shackson* Neer Bosoth

. Licestershire

To

John Stringer at

Nobut in the parrish

of Lee** Neer Utssitter or Utoxeter

. Staffordshire

* Presumably Shackerstone near Market Bosworth

** Now known as Leigh

Note: Nobut is an area to the east of the hamlet of Leigh near Uttoxeter in Staffordshire containing a few farms. There is a Nobut Hall still existing and lived in. Was this the home of the Stringers? It seems possible, perhaps probable, that as the next two pages show designs for furniture, the two Stringers were customers for whom these designs were produced. This view is supported by the book being turned on its side to offer a larger page area. The top of this larger area contains the names and addresses and the lower part the designs for furniture. The quality of Thomas’s extant work is far too high for him to have just been a local village carpenter. He would have attracted customers from a much wider area. Note the breakthrough from the other side of the paper of the bureau.

The side view of a four drawer

Bureau. The front view is on

the next page. The two views

are projected one from the other

by third angle projection.

The left side of the page seems

to be a drawing of the wooden

inlays proposed for use on the

Bureau

Front view and dimensions of the

bureau referred to on the previous

page.

3 foot 3 inches high – 10 inches wide

at the top Slope 13 In

3 foot wide

19 inches backward

front 2 foot 6 In high

drawer depths, 6 _ , 5 _ , 4 _ , 3 _ in

bought of peeter brown

at 2 pence per pound

2 bee hives Weaighing 52 pound

the honey Weaighing 24 pound

the wax Weaighing 2 pound & _

Sold of honey 22 pound £ s d

at 3d _ per pound Coming to 0 = 6 = 5

the Wax sold for 0 = 2 = 7_

0 = 0 = 9_

I gave 0 = 8 = 0

I gain 0 = 1 = 0_

3 pound of honey

we kept besides

Note: The drawing on the other side of the notebook page has shown through. Perhaps the ink was too thin. The transaction described here shows that Thomas had an eye to business

Designs for a Gate

Design for a Hatch.

Design for a Gate.

Note: At 6 feet this is far too high and ornate for a field gate. Possibly the design was for Middleton Hall.

The Notebook of Thomas Shakshaft – Part One

Notebook of
Thomas Shakshaft
of Middleton, Warwickshire
Lived 1731 – 1821
(Written during the period 1751 – 1765)

Summary

Thomas Shakeshaft or Shakshaft (1731-1821) was a carpenter who lived in Middleton, Warwickshire. His notebook in Birmingham City Archives is a very rare example of written record produced by a skilled working man in the late eighteenth century. A selection of images with transcripts by Bob Whorwood, a descendant of Thomas Shakeshaft has been placed on the Revolutionary Players website. A limited edition of the notebook has been published. It contains detailed introductory material by Bob Whorwood based on research into Thomas Shakeshaft’s life. The text below is selected from this material.

—- —- —-

The Notebook was donated to Birmingham City Archives in 1944 by Mr. E. T. Griffiths, manager of the Ritz Cinema in Cheltenham, and was rebound in 1946. This front sheet was clearly written at that time. The Birmingham Library accession number is 55664711R41.

Two points arise. Firstly the spelling of the name here does not have a central ‘e’. There is an inconsistency in this regard in what Thomas wrote as he included this ‘e’ rather erratically. However, there seems to be total consistency elsewhere. The tombstone of his son Robert junior, a tapestry produced by his granddaughter Elizabeth, parish and census records as well as records of work for the Middleton Estate all use the central ‘e’. Further, records of Thomas’s father Robert, also a carpenter of Middleton and his grandfather John predating this notebook by many years, consistently show use of the middle ‘e’. It seems reasonable to assume that we should do so now and use the name Shakeshaft. Thomas himself signed his name with the central ‘e’ when he was a witness to a marriage in October 1764.

The dates on the frontispiece, obviously inserted in 1946 during rebinding, are misleading. Certainly entries in the book cover the period 1751 to 1828 but Thomas died in 1821 and entries after that date are not in his handwriting. These “rogue” entries represent less than 5% of the whole so the title given is quite valid. Thomas was baptised on 30th August 1731 and died in February 1821. Estimates made of the age of Thomas in the following pages assume he was born about 6-weeks before baptism. The book was started in 1751 and the last entry by Thomas was in 1765. There is nothing after that date except for the .rejected material which is dated 1827 & 1828 long after the death of Thomas.

Very probably further notebooks were written by Thomas over the 56 years he was yet to live after 1765 but presumably they are lost. It seems implausible that he wrote no more after the age of 34 when he achieved almost three times that age.

————————————————————

Notebook of

Thomas Shakshaft

of Middleton, Warwickshire

Lived 1731 – 1821

(Written during the period 1751 – 1765)

Summary

Thomas Shakeshaft or Shakshaft (1731-1821) was a carpenter who lived in Middleton, Warwickshire. His notebook in Birmingham City Archives is a very rare example of written record produced by a skilled working man in the late eighteenth century. A selection of images with transcripts by Bob Whorwood, a descendant of Thomas Shakeshaft has been placed on the Revolutionary Players website. A limited edition of the notebook has been published. It contains detailed introductory material by Bob Whorwood based on research into Thomas Shakeshaft’s life. The text below is selected from this material.

—- —- —-

Young woman if you will draw
near a while ill sing you a Ditty
Will make you to Smile and
you that have covetous parents
draw nere this story as true ever you hear
as in fair London city there lived of late
a miser that had worldly riches so great
he had a fair daughter that all did adore
but he kept her single for the sake of his store

A charm sator

for a mad dog ` arepo

to be writ on tenet

cheese or bread opera

and given the rotas

Friday after

Thay be bit

Thomas Shakshaft

Receved of peter pittifull

the Sum of five pounds ? Say

Recieved by me John owin

the 7 day of july in a 1751

Right

Received the 7th of july 1751 of mr.

Charles Took five hundred pounds on Accompt

£500 – – mary at mr Renolds at

living in hoopton Street

in Cleary market*

in Cleary market*

For

mrs mary Vincent living at Mr. Renolds

in hoopton Street in Cleary Market*

with London

* Cleary Market might be Cherry Market

Note: This page is difficult both to read and interpret. There are three ways of spelling received in the first 25 words. Thomas was very near his 20th birthday (7th July could have been his birthday as he was baptised on 30th August) so sums of money such as on this page seem incredible. Was this an inheritance due on becoming 20? This seems most unlikely but must be a possibility. There was an affluent Shakeshaft family in Shenstone, a few miles away, leaving numerous sums of money of a similar size but no evidence of a relationship has been found. Thomas certainly visited Shenstone on a number of occasions but apparently to do work though not for the Shakeshafts. Perhaps Charles Took was a lawyer?

A Barn at Sautley

Bread – 800 – – 6 pound loaves

Beef – 2600 – – pound wt

peas – 28 – – bushels

Beer – 20 – – hogsheads

the prisnirs Consumd Every day at

Winchester

Thrashing Floor

Note: Was this at Saltley now a part of Birmingham?

The field gate

A gardin

gate

Tew days at thomas regerses 0 – 2 – 0

1 day at judleys 0 – 1 – 0

1 day at Mr Firkins

Note: The sketch at the bottom is probably of Middleton Hall where Thomas seems to have worked for about a quarter of his time. No date is given but he seems to have found work at I/- a day whereas his pay as a skilled craftsman was more generally Is. 4d. a day. Presumably Thomas Regeres and Judley were yeoman whereas Mr. Firkins was a gentleman.

September the 30 in a 1751

bought at Fasley (Fazeley? ) Fair — s – d.

a Shirt Cloth 3 yards & 3 quowters — 5 – 0

A hat — 2 – 0

A handkitcher (handkerchief) — 1 – 10

and 3 stocks (socks?) — 1 – 5

a pair of bockels (buckles?) — 0 – 10

& a pennife — 0 – 3

Bought at Tamworth Fair

A Cote Cloth — 9 – 0

Cloth for a wastcote — 5 – 9

bought at Fasley Fair 1752

A pair of brichis — 5 – 9

& a Cote Cloth 4 yards and a _ — 14 – 0

Note: Thomas was aged 20 years and three months at the date given at the top of the page (assuming he was baptised six weeks after birth). We know his baptism date but not the date of birth. The column of figures probably refers to a list lengths of timber in stock as similar lists do elsewhere and possibly is a jotting made some years later.

Mr. Robt Alldridg his Bill Thomas Shakshaft 1751

july the 8th I begun and was all the week

——————————————– £ – s – d

only I went of one day at 3 a Clock — 0 – 5 – 0

2 more days — 0 – 2 – 0

3 more days — 0 – 3 – 0

my father receved ten shillings 6d for rent

2 half days — 0 – 1 – 0

And one wole day — 0 – 1 – 0

& one day more hay making — 0 – 1 – 0

4 days a reaping — 0 – 4 – 0

5 days more a reaping and this — 0 – 5 – 0

And one day I went off at ten of the clock

Another day reaping — 0 – 1 – 0

4 days & a half a baging peas — 0 – 4 – 6

5 days a Car[y]ing barley & baging peas — 0 – 5 – 0

2 days more — 0 – 2 – 0

1 day more Car[y]ing harvest home — 0 – 1 – 0

About 14 foot & a half and — 1 – 5 – 6

in my Great Box

It comes to 3s. 6d. at 3d. a foot

Note: Even highly skilled craftsmen had to labour in the fields

John Keeling his bill

Thomas

Shakeshaft

I was 5 days the first week — 0 – 4 – 0

& 4’/2 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 5 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 5 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 6 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 6 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

Another week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 5 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

Another week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 5 days the next week — 0 – 4 – 0

and 3 days the next week — 0 – 2 – 0

Another week — 0 – 4 – 0

Another week — 2 -14 – 0 — 0 – 4 – 0

Another week — 0 – 4 – 0

————————- £ — s — d

received April the 23 — 0 – 8 – 0

received May the 9 — 0 -10- 0

receved in may — 0 – 0 – 6

Receved in may — 0 – 2 – 0

receved in June — 0- 1 – 0

receved the 23 of June — 0-12 – 6

receved july the 1st one shilling

and lent Tom sixpence — 1- 14- 0

receved Ten shillings the 14th July 1751

There is an unreadable item on the top edge of the paper

The shoemaker’s bill

I paid for making & mending — 6 – 6

then I had a pair of pumps — 4 – 10

& A pair of shues in harvest — 5 – 0

november 20 a pair of shues sol[e]d

and hele peest — 1 – 6

the begining of April 1752 A pair of shoes sol[e]d

A pair of Shoes in may 1752

A pair of pomp soles & hole peest

A pair of pumps pd for — 5 – 0

Clark — 0 – 1 – 0

Spent — 0 – 0 – 2

Shoes — 0 – 1 – 3

Ax — 0 – 2 – 9

Pipe (?} — 0 – 0 – 3

Tobacko — 0 – 0 – 3

4} 48 (12 Another Sort this

7) 56 (8 for Eight days

6) 54 (9 8) 96

19 8) 60-6 )72

7) 56

30

Note: These calculations clearly have something to do with clocks and are similar to calculations elsewhere in the notebook

96 of these teeth in

Barrall

8) 96 ( 12 a Weel 8 In & _

8) 60 (_ minuets Deamiter

7) 56 ( 8 seconds 6 ) 72 hour Weel )

(30) Crown Weell

A piece of Clock work of Eight Days Shows

Minutes & Seconds

8)96

8)60-48)48 -6)72

7)56

30

Note: The column of 7s simply says 9 x 7 = 63 so there must be more to it than that!

Obviously various calculations in connection with clocks following on from the previous page.

“Clearly a 31 day calendar for one month.

Presumably it was usable in any month if one knew which month it was and also which day of the week was the first day of that month. The calendar then showed the days for the whole month. Very rarely does Thomas name the day of the week. He gives the month and the number of the day of the month and sometimes, but not always, the year. He often does not record the date at all. It is very easy to forget that he was writing for himself at that time and not for later generations 250 years later.

for a Good Salve

black-pitch, black-Resin;

bees-wax fresh May butter

of Each an Eaquall quantity

boyld altogether about half

a quarter of an hour and

scumd if accation

(This item is upside down)

Astma or Shortness of breath

Take of Turmeric, Liquorice

brimstone & Elecampain Roots

of each – 2 penny worth mix them

with treacle or rather honey

Swollow some morning and night


“In 1470 George Negil Brother to the Earl

of Warwick Archbishop of York made A

prodigious feast for the nobility clergy & gentry

in his Dioosis Wherein he spent

300 quarters of wheat 330 tons of Ale

104 tons of wine

1 pipe of spiced wine

80 fat oxen 6 wild bulls

1004 sheep 300 fat hogs 3000 Calves

3000 Geese 2000 Capons 300 pigs

100 peacocks 200 Cranes 200 kids

2000 Chickins 4000 pigeons

4000 Rabbitts 204 Bittours 4000 ducks

400 herons 200 pheasants 500 partridge

4000 woodcocks 400 plovers 100 Curlews

100 quails 1000 Egrets 200 kees above

400 bucks does & Roe bucks

1056 hot Venison pastys 400 Cold ones

5000 dishes of jelly 6000 Custards

300 pik[e]s 300 Breams & Seals

4 porpasses & 400 tarts

1000 Sarvitors – 62 Cooks – 519 Scullions

Thos Shakshaft

Note: George Negil above should read George Neville (1433 – 1476) so Thomas clearly made a mistake here.

Canting Words

Abram-love – naked or poor man

Autem Church, – also married

Bass – kisse or the lower [lip]

Bayen – to bark

Beam – a wood also a Child

Bely-cheat – an apron

Bener nar – better

Betty – an instrument to open doors

Bing awast – go away

Bint – bound

Bate – a cheat also to steal

Blot the Skrip – enter into bond

Bluffer – an host or landlord

Bellen – Swelted

bounsing

Note: Why does the list end here? Presumably the task of going on to Z seemed too daunting to carry on!

A is the bellfry

B is the beams

C is the lacis that go from the pillers to the beams

D is the pillers

it is a belfry at Notingham

Note: The other main seat of Lord Middleton was at Woollaton in Nottingham but no evidence has yet been found that Thomas ever did any work in Nottingham except for this notebook entry.

John Shakshafts bill

2 days at mr butlers making a table 0 – 1 – 8

1 lent him Sixpence for ale 0 – 0 – 6

1 days work at mr parkers house at Sutton 0 – 1 – 0

A Coat he had on me 0 – 3 – 6

due to????? more left impair 0 – 1 – 6

3 days more at mr farins 0 – 2 – 6

half day more 0 – 0 – 5

one day a making bedsteds 0 – 0 – 10

I lent him sixpence at booths 0 – 0 – 6

1 days work William Greenhods 0 – 0 – 10

November the 20, 1753

4 days and a Half at greenhoods 0 – 3 – 9

I have Two yards of linen at 18d the yard 0 – 3 – 0

a pound of black wool at 8d the pd 0 – 0 – 8

Note: John Shakeshaft, the elder brother of Thomas, was also a carpenter. It seems that Thomas is doing work on behalf of John for several customers of John. Thomas was about 22_ years old. John was seven years older and will have established a customer base whereas Thomas is just out of his apprenticeship. Mostly, Thomas worked with his father Robert and brother John is rarely mentioned. The last two items in the bill seem to be domestic giving credibility to the assumption that this is an internal family financial transaction.

For Measuring Timber boards

Let There be A board 8

Foot Long 9 Inchis broad. Set

8 the Length to the upper Senter

12 then Look against 9 and you

will find 6 upon the Slide whitch is

the Content of Such a board in feet

For Flooring 10 is the center

Let there be A Floor 16 foot

Long and 5 foot wide, Set 16 to the

upper 10 then Look against 5 and you

have 8 uppon the Slide whitch is

the Content of such a floor in feet

J Is The Center for paving, plastering

or winscot Let there be a room –

plastared of 18 foot Long & 4 foot high

Set 18 to the Center – g – u – Look

Against and you ? uppon the Slide

Whitch is the content in yards

November the 19 1753

Thomas Keeling bil (at mr Gibson’s hovil)

2 days and a half 0 – 2 – 1

John Shakeshaft his bill 1754

2 days Croscuting

1 day more 0 – 4 – 2

2 days A making A Corner Cobard

6 days. at Charles Rotherams 0 – 5 – 0

5 days and _ more 0 – 4 – 7

4 days framing kings 0 – 3 – 4

Receved — 0 – 2 – 6

3 days at John hosfords 0 – 2 – 6

1 day more 0 – 0 – 10

1 day at Charles 0 – 0 – 10

1 day at the barn 0 – 0 – 10

3 more days at Charles 0 – 2 – 6

1 day a making a box 0 – 0 – 10

1 day at Mr Terres 0 – 0 – 10

Note: At this time pay was 10d a day. It is to be noted that no monetary value is attached to the time spent on the comer cupboard. This may have been for Thomas himself and possibly is the cupboard known to have been made by Thomas still in the possession of his descendants. Again, Thomas seems to have been working for the customers of his elder brother John as possibly h e was also doing on 20th November

Sunday November – the 13 = 1757

Set streaght with Joseph Short

Set Streaght with Joseph Short

due to Joseph Short 0 – 1 – 0

November ye 21st

A pair of shouse 0 – 5 – 4

A fomentation for a Sweling

to aswage it = Rosemary = Wormwood = Chickweed = Elder-buds =

all boyld together in Some

ale Grounds

Note: The use of = seems rather odd both here and elsewhere. It appears to be no more than a dash or a comma

Mr John Gilbirds bill

3 days and a half work 0 – 3 – 6

I receved one shilling out of it

An Account of Charles (Rotharams)

Barn

John Heafeilds Bill

I lent him 1-shilling at Wittington Races = 1 = 0

6d one Dancing Night at Booths 0 – 0 – 6

Something at tamworth 0 – 0 – 4

2s Left unpaid for ye Dresser 0 – 2 – 0

for a Box 0 – 8 – 0

for making a Box 0 – 2 – 0

For Crying the Sale at Wisshaw 0 – 0 – 4

Note: Thomas was obviously a man of many interests and talents. This entry indicates that acting as a ‘town crier’ was among them.

November the 20th 1751

on Wednisday night I dreamed of

A beast with seven heads

April ye 1 in a 1752 Ann Biddle dreamed of

Seing hir decesed father all in wite who said

do not greve for there will be 2 or 3 of

you with me in a Little Time

Barley-flower, white salt

Honey and Vinegar mingled

Together: taketh away the Itch

Speedily and Certainly

The powder of Celandine root

laid uppon an acking hollow tooth

will cause it to fall out

Friendly Planets

Sol is a Friend to Jupiter & venus

Luna is a Fr[iend] to Jup = venus & Saturn

mars is a Fr[iend] to venus

mercury is a Fr[iend] to Jupiter venus & Saturn

To fire paper with phosphorus

Five days for Thos Keeling

Note: The two lower lines seem to be headings under which more was to be written but never was. The two columns of figures add up correctly to 81 & 74 as given.

How to make a plane A hollow or

a round with the compasses

according to the bigniss as sopose

it is an inch set ye Compasses an inch

and make a ring as below, devide it

into six parts take one of them to make

a hollow & the same to make a round

Likewise defines for hips

Note: Thomas was clearly much interested in ensuration

particularly as it affected carpentry and building.

It was of course his job but the interest seemed to be

greater than that and was a cultural as well as a practical matter to Thomas.

I begun to larn to dance in Aprill

I gave a Shilling Entrance and 3′ a night after

I have been 5 nights I have spent 8d — 2 – 11 (The sum)

1 night more I spent 1d and 1d

for candle 5

1 night more I spent 2d 5

1 night more ? ? ? ? 3

I have been about 4 nights more and spent & danct about 16

Names of Dances

The fox hunters jig hands a Cros on a round

and back again down the middle and Cros over and figer up right and left

Trip the hereford Set 3 and tourn with the woman

then with man Cros over and figer right and left

The bottle congarar the man casts off behind the man & turns his partner the woman the same then Cros Over and figer right and Left

Bottle Conjerar

For Womens Sore Legs or Legg

Make her a tea of Each of

those hearbs or simples, brucklime,

plantine & Elder buds red nettle buds

& let her take there of night and

morning

Then outwardly She must Get

2 quarts of Smyth Walter & Strain

it and biyle therein a handfull

of Common malloss & a handfull

of plantine and a handfull of

Checkweed & a halfpenny worth of

alume and when well boyld Let

her wash her Grevvence therein

Night & Morning

Pro batum East

Mr. Vyse his Bill 1757

for making too moulds for Casting

Pinions 0 – 5 – 0

for Glewing & mending 2 tables 0 – 1 – 0

for falling & Croscuting of Crabtree 3 0

for Loading of the Crabtree 0 – 1 – 0

Shekel of the Sanctuary

Containing 20 Gerahs

Every Garah Worth three-half pence

The Common Shekel

was but ten Gerahs

the first Containing 2s – 6d

the Second Containing 1s – 3d

Note: There was an iron works in Middleton owned by Lord Middleton and

perhaps Mr. Vyse was the manager or maybe he was a tenant. The word

‘too’ is presumably a misspelling and should be ‘two’ . Pattern making

for metal casting has always been (and still is) a skill near the pinnacle

of wood working skills.

The Shekel was originally a Jewish unit of weight (1/30 of a mina

or 1/3000 of a talent) and later a coin of the same weight. The light

shekel weighed 210 grains and the heavy shekel twice that much

corresponding to 1s. 4_d and 2s. 9d in English silver. The Hebrews

divided the Shekel into 20 parts called gerah. See articles in Ency. Bibl.

Samuel Walkers bill

June the 2d ye 4 ye 5 ye 6 ye 7 0 – 01 – 0

Receved 2s and a Neck of mutton

6 days more I receved 3d from my father

I was 3 days at harvist work 0 – 3 – 0

John Walkers bill

My Self and father one day

a falling a tree and mending

of Gates 0 – 2 – 0

One Day Each amending

of Gates & Sacking 2 beds 0 – 2 – 0

My Self half a day a Cording

& mending the fellows bed 0 – 0 – 6

one day Each a Croscuting

2 stomps and seting them &

hanging the Gate 0 – 2 – 0

The Names of Dances

The 29 of may Hands a Cros and

and back again Cros over F – R & L

Feet Lass S. 3 & turn C over f-R & L

The merry dancers S 4 R & L half round

L & R & L Back again hands a C & back again

C-over & F-R&L

The Rebells march o’er the moon

hands a C & back again hands Round

& backagain Cast off & Cupple Lead up Cast off R & L

A box for tomas at Owins 0 = 6 = 4

Middleton, Birmingham

Monsfield (Monkspath), Boxstreet (Box Trees), Packwood

Lapworth, Henley, Walls Uton (Wootton Wawen)

Stratford, Auscut (?), Alderminster

Sir Harry Parker of talken

New Vaul upon Sour (Newbold upon Stour), Hawford (Halford), Strefenton (Tredington), Shipstone (Shipston), Barstone (Barcheston), Abington (Wellington), Long Compton, Little Rowidrake

(Little Rollright),

Lord Archer

Llckstone (Lidstone), henstone (Enstone), Woodstock, Oxford

Hath 20 Colleges, 13 Churches, 6 Halls

Weatley (Wheatley), Tatsworth (Tetsworth), Dostcum (Postcombe)

Stoken Church, West Wickam (Wycombe), Sir

Frances Dashwood, High Wickam (Wycombe), Loudewater (Loudwater), Holsston Common, Uxbridge, Hillinton (Hillingdon), Southan (Southall) Starts Green, Shaperds (Shepherds) Bush

London, August ye 17

Note: (modern names in brackets)

Elsewhere he writes that he left Middleton on Wednesday August 13th 1755. Hence his journey took 5 days including the days of departure and arrival and follows the road now known as the A34 as far as Oxford and the A40 after that. Presumably he took a stage coach. He lists the names of three titled persons among the places he passed through and it is puzzling why he did so. Certainly Sir Francis Dashwood was very prominent at that time as a leading member of the Dilettanti Society and founder of the Hellfire Club. The other two names are now obscure and possibly they were names of Inns and not people.. Why did he go to London? As a young furniture maker did he go to visit Chippendale who had published his book of furniture designs in 1754? Did he do some work in the Chippendale workshops? He certainly worked somewhere in London for a period presumably to gain experience The few pieces he made still extant show his work was of a very high standard indeed Some of his designs are shown in his notebook. He was within a week or two of his 24th birthday.

For Thos Keeling at Langley

April ye 25

My Self and father

one day each — 0 – 2 – 8

May ye 2d

My Self 5 days and half — 0 – 6 – 8

My father 4 days and half — 0 -13 – 4

May ye 9th

My Self 3 days

My father 2 days — 0 – 6 – 8

An Experement betwects

the English and french by – 10

110111000001100111101000100110

2 1 3 5 2 2 4 11 0 1 2 2 1

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Note: An attempt has been made to delete the sum of 6s. 8d. on 2nd May as the correct amount for 10 man days at 1s. 4d a day is 13s. 4d. as shown.

Modem digital transmission was patented in 1937 by Dr. Alec Reeves (an Englishman working in the Paris laboratory of a U.S. company) and is based upon the use of series of ‘1′ and ‘0’ to represent values rather than use the values themselves. It is fanciful to wonder if Thomas’ mind was working somewhat on the same idea almost 200 years before.

It is worthy of note that Alec Reeves was also responsible for the OBOE system which was introduced in 1942 enabling the RAF to bomb targets accurately for the first time. Clearly a genius without recognition

January the 2d

What it Lies us in in the year

1758

A Strike of blencorn — £0 – 6s – 0d

Spent — 0 – 1 – 3

Spent — 0 – 0 – 4

Wort — 0 – 0 – 3

Spent — 0 – 0 – 8

Sope & thrid — 0 – 0 – 23/4

Cheese — 0 – 4 – 6

Gin — 0 – 0 – 2

Oyls — 0 – 0 – 3

Wort — 0 – 0 – 3

Shuger — 0 – 0 – 2_

Beef — 0 – l – 2

Bread — 0 – 0 – 8

Spent — 0 – 0 – 10

Quartern of soap — 0 – 0 – 13/4

Manna & Spanish juse — 0 – 0 – 1_

Oatmeal — 0 – 0 – 2

Wort — 0 – 0 – 3

Salt — 0 – 0 – 3_

Candles —0 – 0 – 2

A Strik of blencorn — 0

Note: A Strike = 2 Bushells = 16 Gallons

No Ft In — Ft In

1 – 18 – 11 — 18 – 11

2 – 25 – 8 —- 25 – 8

3 – 28 – 2 —- 28 – 2

4 – 29 – 4 —- 34 – 10

5 – 14 – 7 —- 29 – 4

6 – 15 – 10 — 14 – 7

7 – 22 – 4 —- 15 – 10

8 – 29 – 9 —- 22 – 4

9 – 23 – 1 —- 29 – 9

10 – 24 – 2 —- 23 – 1

11 ————- 24 – 2

12 ————- 20 –

13 ————- 25 – 5

14 ————- 27 – 4

15 ————- 41 – 10

16 ————- 23 – 11

The sum of ———- 405 – 2

Mrs. Aldridges

Allder at

Shenstone ———– at 4 pence per foot

5 – 0 – 0

1 – 0 – 0

0 – 10 – 0

0 – 3 – 4

0 – 1 – 8

6 – 15 – 0

Note: The right hand columns list some lengths of wood provided to Mrs. Aldridge in Shenstone. The total length is 405 feet and 2 inches so 405 feet is probably near enough. At 4d per foot the total cost of 405 feet comes to £6 – 15 – 0 as shown. The left hand column is not really understood as it merely contains some of the lengths in the right hand column.

To Cure the Worms

1- peneworth of the Scraping

of pewter boyld in a quart of ale

till it comes to a pint and drink

a tea-dish full Night & morning

Last and first

To Cure the tooth acke

Take a Little Alegor* & A

pane of glass heate it in

the fire put it in the

alegor til it be hot Wash

your Mouth till it be Cold

Over & over

* Sour ale or malt vinegar

“William Booths bill

Croscuting and drawing one day — 0 – 1 – 0

Takeing down a summer* and

putting up a new one — 0 – 1 – 0

2 days and a half about the chimney — 0 – 3 – 0

I received one shilling

October ye 12 we borded the klin*and

Laid the grise and bords in the malthouse — 0 – 2 – 0

November the 25 1763

Mending the pump —- 0 – 2 – 6

December the 11 1764

for opening the Well and

putting a bucket Leather

and Clack -0 – 3 – 0 june the 4 – 1765 My Self

and father taking the pump up — 0 – 3 – 0

ye 6 from before 3 o’clock to 6

at night Laying the Well — 0 – 3 – 9

for Setting ye pump Down — 0 – 3 – 0

* Note: A summer is a key floor joist and a klin is probably a mis-spelt kiln

Thomas Bamtons bill

October

1) one day we made 2 door Cases

and a window frame

2) The next day wee made 2 Window

frames and one door Case

4) We made 2 door cases & 1 window

8) Wee made 1 door Case & 1 window

11) Wee was drawing timber half day

and made a mantletree after

13) Wee framd summer and gise 170 foot

and made 2 frames for the Chimney

Wee framd the other summer

and gise – 142 2 = 2 Coberd frames

Door Cases at one shilling Each

Making the front Door Case 1s 6d

Window frames at 6p the Light

Note: We are given the month and the days of the month but no indication of the year. It is clear what was earned on the first four days listed but not on the other days. The vertical writing on the right hand side merely repeats the last three lines above.

We Set out of Middleton

for London on Wednesday August the 13 1755

first we went to Birmingham

next to monsfield (Monkspath) next Box Street (Box

Trees) packwood then Lapworth Next to henley.

Note: This, and the next page, are essentially a repeat of page 10 . There is no point in repeating it excepting that the odd word is to be found in. one version and not the other. This might prove useful. An example is the giving above of the day of week, in this case Wednesday. Thomas is not very good at recording dates and very rarely notes the day of the week. This and the next page seem faded so perhaps they were written in pencil and must have been very faint at the outset even in Thomas’s time as he has tried to overwrite in black ink. The faint and large writing suggests it was possibly written on the move and perhaps are notes made in the stagecoach while passing through places of interest. Writing in a stagecoach on rough roads must have been very difficult.

In effect a blank page.

See note on previous page and also page 30.

My Aunts Cheast drawing Birmingham

3 foot 1 inch and _ the fase of the cheast long

19 Inchis Back within – a – 8*

16 Inchis High

The Lenth and Width and Hight of ye frame

A Large Box

2 foot – 7 Inches – _ Long

1 foot – 6 Inches – _ Wide

Note: For centuries English carpenters used what we would now call a binary system for fractions i.e. a half, a quarter, an eighth, a sixteenth and so on. Possibly the term “”within a – 8″” meant within an eighth (of an inch)..

Square yards in a Acre

of land 12 ) 4840 ( 43

48

40

36

4

15 – 0 – 0

1 – 0 – 0

0 -13- 4

4840 yards at one — 3 – 6 – 8

peney ye yard — 0 – 3 – 4

Comes to — 20 – 3 – 4

Thos Hall

May ye 1 st 1762 he had a popler

board of me 6 foot Long

18 Inches broad at 2d per foot — – 1 – 6

August ye 3rd one popler

board 8_ Long 17 Ins broad — – 2 – 0

& dale dito 9 foot Long

11 Ins broad — 0 – 2 – 7

Note: It seems that Thomas was an occasional timber supplier as well as user. Many years later, after his death, his son Robert seems to have dealt in wood and was described as a woodman

Mrs. Aldridg[e]

January the 22d – 1762

I went to Shenstone for Mrs

Aldridge —- £0 – ls – 6d

27th Myself & father

Making Doors for Shenstone —- 0 – 2 – 0

28th both of us mending Gates —- – 2 – 0

29th both about 3 hours Nailing

boards on ye barn end

at heafields —- 0 – 0 – 6

Febr ye 10 we went to Shenstone

and was there 4 days —- 0 – 8 – 0

17th both of us parting ye

fold at home and mending Gates —- 2 – 0

March ye 17th both of us half day

mendingt Cribs at home

& Doors heafield —- 0 – 1 – 0

23d father mending the

Ston’d hors Stable —- 0 – 0 – 6

Aprill ye 3d Making a Door

at kerby’s and Stoping I window —- – 2 – 0

2 foot _ of popler to Stop

the Window —- 0 – 0 – 2

the 5th both of us half day

finishing at Kerby’s & mending

Gates at ye home farm —- 0 = 1 = 0

the 6th a New Warming pan

Stale & putting a foot in

a bench —- 0 = 0 = 6

14th I went to hill* to Look

at the house & went Shenstone

to Look at ye Alders for Spars —- 1 = 0

ye 16th Wee went to Measure

the Alders —- 0 = 1 = 0

ye 21st My Self Mending the

Role and Gates —- 0 = 1 = 0

May ye 9th My father half

Day Making a Stile —- 0 = 0 = 6

My father two days at —- 0 = 2 = 0

Shenston drawing alder

25th both of us finishing

at Shenston 5 days

Early & Late —- 0 =12= 0

* hill is part of Sutton Coldfield on the Shenstone side

Note: Mostly there is no customer named for any of these entries yet they may be guessed at. “”home farm”” implies Middleton Hall while Shenstone probably means Capt. Aldridge or Mrs. Aldridge was the customer. Shenstone was several miles away from Middleton so the Shakeshafts seem to have stayed for a number of days.

june 3’d both of us at hill

4 days from 3 O’clock to 8 —- 0 = 12 = 0

4 days More both of us

putting up Spars and Making

Doors —- 0 = 12 = 0

Augst 11th My father half day

mending ye Rick Frame —- 0 = 0 = 6

September 27th father 4 days and

My Self 1 day & half

Mending Gates and

at heafields —- 0 = 5 = 6

October 23rd Wee Maid

a Coffin for Old Sarah

bromley price —- 0 = 8 = 0

Mr. Owin Overseer of the poor then*

March ye 7 1762 Receved of £ — s — d

Mrs Aldridge ye Sum of —– 0 = 10 = 0

* then what?

Note: This line is so close to the entry of the coffin price that some connection looks likely. If the coffin was being paid for by the Parish was the Overseer of the Poor, Mr. Owin, objecting to the price.?

All the Overseer of the Poor accounts pre 1800 are lost so we shall never know.

Cost me After I Got Work at London

Note: Thomas Shakeshaft went to London in 1755 but why he did so is a matter for speculation. This notebook entry is the only indication that he went for work. It would not be the case that he needed work as he already had that in Middleton. It must be that his motive was self improvement and to increase his skills by working in a more sophisticated environment.

Thomas Chippendale (1718 – 1779) was a cabinet maker who made very little and employed others to actually make the furniture. He headed a large firm of cabinet makers in London and published designs in his “”The Gentleman and Cabinet Maker’s Director”” in 1754. A second edition was published a year later when Thomas Shakeshaft went to London.

Was Thomas attracted to work for Chippendale because of this book? Is this why Thomas went to London? Perhaps so as his writing comes across as that of an ambitious young man. He was then 24 years old. An informed opinion at an auction house has been expressed that the Shakeshaft work is very Chippendale like. On the other hand according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, contrary to present assumption, Chippendale was not the leading furniture maker of his day and his posthumous reputation is attributed to his book containing designs many of which were the work of employees such as Copland and Lock and not that of himself. Thomas may well have worked not for Chippendale but for one of the other fashionable London cabinet makers of the time in St. Martin’s Lane.

Given on this page is a list of 31 small sums of money ranging from a farthing up to one shilling and three pence, with a total of nine shillings, one penny and three farthings. There is no indication of what the money was spent upon.

Charges going to London — s – d

Note: A further list of 19 small sums of money totaling £1 – 9 – 9_ is given with no indication what each sum was for. Presumably the list was produced just as the list on the previous page was in 1755. It is obvious that some years later this page was over written.

25 Long bars, 2 Short ones

4 backs, 6 heads

4 hanging posts

2 Short ones

The 3rd Daughter of

Thos and Sarah Shakeshaft

born on Monday the 13th

of December betwext

8 and 9 Oclock at Night

the 26 day of the moon

Note: This was Ann who was baptised on Wednesday, 28th January, 1753. It is recorded here that she was born on Monday, 13th December, 1762 which gives an interval between birth and baptism of 6 weeks.

The Maid at Fivteen

Of all my Experience how was An

since Fivteen Long winters is fair lying

Was Ever poor Damsel so Sadly betray’d

To Live to these years and yet Still been

Still be a maid to Live to De

Ye Heros Trihumphant by Land and sea

Sworn Votaires to Love but unMindful

of Prowess approv’d of no Danger of

Can you Stand by Like Dastards and

Me a Maid & etc

Ye Coanselors Sage who with Eloquence

Carl Do what you Please both with Right

and with Rong

Can it be by Law or by Equity Said

That a comely young girl ought

To Die an old Maid & etc

Du an

Note: The edge of the paper is very frayed and fragments of the writing are missing. The missing fragments make interpretation of the poetry very difficult.

Learned Shisisions whose Excelent n

?ill Can Slave or Demolish can

?? or can Kill. To a poor

forlorn Damsel Contribute you

? who is Sick Very Sick of Rem??

? or a Maid &..

??haps I Invoke not To List to my

??ng Who answer no End and to

?? Sex belong, ye Echo of Echos

& Shadow of Shades for if I

?? you I may Still be a

???d

Note: The left hand 8mm of the paper has rotted away so it is quite impossible to read it. Going to the original notebook does not help in this case.