523 
Miller, Philip (cent*) 
J. Ardagh in the article quoted above says 
that ”A Society of Gardeners met at Newhall’s 
Coffee-house, and other convenient places, in 
Chelsea, for many years, and in 1724 Philip Mil¬ 
ler issued with their approval, his ’Gardeners 
and florists dictionary.' ... At the end of vol. 
2 is 'A Catalogue of Curious Trees, Plants, &c.’ 
which is, no doubt, a preliminary essay for the 
volume issued in 1730,” 
Dictionnaire des jardiniers, Paris, 1785; Supplement, 
Mets, 1789-90, See his The gardeners dictionary [Trans¬ 
lations] 
Das englische gartenbuch, Nurnberg, 1750-58, See his 
The gardeners dictionary [Translations] 
Essai sur les arbres d'ornement, les arbrisseaux, et ar- 
bustes de pleine terre. Amsterdam, Paris, 1778, See his 
The gardeners dictionary [Extracts] 
Figures of the most beautiful, useful, and uncommon 
plants described in the Gardeners dictionary, exhibited on 
three hundred copper plates, accurately engraven after 
drawings taken from nature. With the characters of their 
flowers and seed-vessels, drawn when they were in their 
greatest perfection. To which are added, their descrip¬ 
tion, and an account of the classes to which they belong, 
according to Ray’s, Toumefort’s, and Linnaeus’s method of 
classing them, London, Printed for the author; and sold 
by J, Rivington [etc,] 1760, 2 v, 300 col, pi, F*, 
(Dept, Agr,; Lib, Cong,; Arn. Arb,; Greene; Brit, Mus,; 
Linn, Soc, London) 
Published in nionbers, according to Lowndes, 
3:1551. No, 1 appeared in 1755, See also G6*tt, 
Gel. Anz. 1759, p.288, p.l008; 1761/62, p.752. 
1762, 
—London, Printed for the author, 1771, 2 v, 300 
col, pi, F*. (Lib, Cong,; Mass, Hort, Soc,; Bib, Nat, 
Paris) 
—— 1809, (Lindley Lib,) 
