Philip Norman
9 July 1842 – 17 May 1931
38 works on record
Biography
Works

London signs and inscriptions

London vanished & vanishing

Crosby Place
Cromwell house, Highgate

A reader's companion to The hobbit and the lord of the rings

East Acton Manor House

Shout!
St. Mary Abchurch
Further discoveries relating to Roman London, 1906-12
St. Olave's, Hart Street
The Eton Ramblers' Cricket Club from its foundation in 1862 until 1880
The church of St. Stephen, Walbrook
No. 17, Fleet street
Scores and annals of the West Kent Cricket Club, originally the Prince's Plain Club
Additional notes on London sculptured and carved signs, coats-of-arms, and inscriptions
Inns and taverns of old London
The church of St. James, Garlickhithe
(Collection of newspaper cuttings, etc., relating to London topography, c1860-1890)
Recent discoveries of medieval remains in London, communicated to the Society of Antiquaries
On the destroyed church of St. Michael Wood street in the city of London, with some notes on thechurch of St. Michael Bassishow
Church of St. Sepulchre without Newgate
Notes concerning various 17th and 18th century writers in London topography
The churches of St. Mary Aldermary and St. Mildred, Bread Street
The church of St. Magnus the martyr
Church of St. Giles Cripplegate, on the south side of Fore Street
The church of St. Peter upon Cornhill
All Hallows, Barking
On the white conduit, Chapel Street, Bloomsbury, and its connexion with the Grey Friars' water system
St. Benet Paul's wharf
St. Mary-Le-Bow
The church of St. Martin Ludgate (and) the church of St. Michael Paternoster Royal
The accounts of the overseers of the poor of Paris garden, Southwark 17 May 1608 to 30 September 1671
The church of St. Lawrence Jewry
Catalogue of books, drawings, oil paintings
The bastion of the Roman wall at Newgate Street
(Collection of newspaper and other cuttings relating to London inns, taverns, coffee houses, clubs, tea gardens, music halls, c1885-1900)
Catalogue of drawings of old London by Philip Norman, LL.D., F.S.A
The Tabard Inn, Southwark, the Queen's head, William Rutter, and St. Margaret's Church