1643. State Papers Domestic, Car. I, Nov. 20.
Letter from Privy Seal to treasurer & under Treasurer of Exchequer to pay Wm. Legg Master of the Armoury £100 by way of imprest upon account to be employed in building a mill at Woolvercote near Oxford for grinding swords & for building forges providing tools & other necessaries for sword blade makers to be employed to make swords for our service.
1644. State Papers Domestic, Car. I, D, Feb. 26.
Warrant of the Privy seal to Exchequer.
By our special command Legg has caused to be erected a mill for grinding swords at Woolvercote co Gloucester & forges at Gloucester Hall, you are therefore to pay upon account to Wm. Legg Master of the Armory a sum not exceeding £2000 for grinding swords and belts in the office of the armory the same to be made at the usual price and according to pattern as by us appointed also to provide tools and other necessaries for sword blade making employed by the said Master of the Armory.
In the second of these extracts “co Gloucester” is a slip of the pen due to the close proximity of “Gloucester Hall.” It should of course read “Oxford.” The mill was originally owned by the nuns of Godstow, who received it from Henry I. It is now used by the Clarendon Press for paper-making. Gloucester Hall is now Worcester College. There are no records either in the city or university to throw more light on these entries.
1649. Parliamentary Survey, Feb., No. 30.
The Armory Mill consisted of two little rooms and one large one in which stood two mills, then lately altered. The mill with stables stood in an acre of ground abutting on Lewisham Common and was used till about twelve years before the above date for grinding armour and implements for the King’s tilt-yard.
The mill is described in the rental of the manor, 44 Edw. III, 1371, as one for grinding steel and valued at 3s. 4d. per ann.
1660. Harl. MSS. 7457.
A view and Survey of all the Armour and other Munitions or Habiliaments of Warr remayneing at the Tower of London.[53]
Armorers Tooles.
Small bickernes, Tramping stakes,[54] Round stake,[55] Welting stake,[56] straite sheres,[57] fileing tonges, Hamers, Old tew iron,[58] Great square anvill, Bellows, Smiths vices, Threstles.
The entry which refers to the loss of the “Great Bear,” a large anvil formerly at Greenwich, is given in full in Appendix M.
Before leaving the subject of tools and appliances, some notice should be taken of the picture by Jan Breughel (1575–1632) entitled “Venus at the Forge of Vulcan” (Kais. Friedrich Mus., Berlin, No. 678), which measures 54 cm. by 93 cm. Here all the various operations of the armourer and gun-founder are shown, with a large quantity of armour, weapons, bells, coins, and goldsmith’s work. The details of especial interest are the grindstones and “glazing-wheels,” and the “tilt-hammers” worked by water-power, which were probably the machines used in the “battering-mills” more than once alluded to above. These water-turned hammers continued in use in England up to the first quarter of the nineteenth century,[59] and are still found in Italy at the present day. They are raised by wooden cams or teeth set round the axle of the water-wheel, to which a handle is fixed on the near side for use when water-power was not available. The chisel-edge of the hammer is for stretching the metal by means of a series of longitudinal hammerings. Of the grindstones actuated by the same water-power, the larger would be for rough work, the second for finer finish, and the smallest, which is probably a wooden “buff,” would be used for the high polish at the end.
It is impossible here to give a detailed description of this very interesting picture, which has been considered elsewhere by the present author.[60] At the same time the tools shown in this workshop are worthy of notice as being part of the stock-in-trade of the armourer of the seventeenth century.
PLATE IX
To the left of the tilt-hammers, in the foreground, are a pair of large bench-shears, and above them, on a cooling-trough, just below the magpie, is a long-handled swage for stamping grooves and edgings on metal plates. Tongs, pincers, and hammers are found in many parts of the picture, and dies for stamping coins or medals are seen immediately below the bench-shears. Directly under the right foot of Vulcan is a tracing-wheel, similar to that shown on Jost Amman’s engraving of the “Compass Maker” in his Book of Trades. A small bench-vice lies near the lower margin of the picture under the figure of Cupid, and a hand-vice and repoussé hammer on the three-legged stool to the left. In the distance, over the figure of Venus, is the primitive contrivance for boring a cannon, the mould for casting which is seen close by in the floor. The most interesting detail is to be found in the machine which lies at the foot of the small anvil at Cupid’s right hand. This bears a strong resemblance to the modern burring-machine or “jenny,” used for turning up the edge of thin metal plates (Fig. 17).
The armour shown, with its strongly marked volutes and decoration, is of a type very common in the Madrid and Turin armouries, some of which has been ascribed to Pompeo della Chiesa. We have no clue as to whose workshop this picture represents, but if taken from life, it must certainly have been that of some master like Bartolomeo Campi, who, besides being an armourer, was a bronze-founder and goldsmith as well (see Frontispiece).
[8] The present writer is commissioning research to this end in Syria, where the craft still survives.
[9] Arch. Journ., XI, 380.
[10] Anvils.
[11] Bickiron.
[12] Sledge-hammer.
[13] Pincers and tongs.
[14] Tools for closing rivets.
[15] Shears.
[16] Bellows.
[17] Rammer (bellows?).
[18] Grindstone.
[19] Spindles (?).
[20] Bucket-hoops.
[21] Winches.
[22] Stone water-trough.
[23] Hearth-stick, poker.
[24] Cutting-iron, shears or cold-chisel.
[25] Marking-iron.
[26] Archæologia, XIV, 123; also Meyrick, Antient Armour, II, 119.
[28] Rivets.
[29] Round-horned anvil for making tubes.
[30] For beating up a helmet-crest.
[31] For visors.
[32] Uncertain.
[33] Helmet-stake.
[34] For the cuirass.
[35] Shears.
[36] Heavy hammers.
[37] hammers for greaves.
[38] (?)
[39] Riveting-hammer.
[40] Embossing-hammer.
[41] Files.
[42] Poker.
[43] Reprint (Clar. Press, Oxon, 1911), edited by Charles ffoulkes.
[44] Mém. rel. à l’hist. de France (Paris, 1866), p. 191, col. 1.
[45] Archæologia, XVIII, 305.
[46] Cott. MS., Vit. c. 10, fol. 154.
[47] Archæologia, LVII, also Arch. Journ., IV, 226.
[48] Antiquarian Repertory, IV, 367.
[49] Pumice-stone.
[50] Expenses of Sir Edw. Guilford, Master of the Armoury.
[51] See also Appendix F.
[52] Arch. Journ., XI.
[53] Given in full, Meyrick, Antient Armour, III, 106.
[54] A pick? (Eng. Dialect Dict.)
[55] Bottom stake.
[56] For turning over edges of iron.
[57] This shows that curved shears were also used.
[58] Possibly a nozzle for bellows (N. E. Dict.).
[59] Cabinet Cyclopædia, “Manufacture of Metals,” Lardner, 1831.
[60] Burlington Magazine, April, 1911. Zeitschrift für Historische Waffenkunde, V, 10.