The history of the Cliveden album and its rediscovery was given in the last issue oi Architectural History, when the twenty-one architectural drawings relating to the ist Earl of Orkney’s garden buildings and proposed alterations to the house were catalogued and illustrated. The remaining twenty-seven drawings discussed here fall into three main groups: nineteenth-century designs for Cliveden itself (by Charles Barry, Robert Edis and, possibly, Henry Clutton), to which have here been added, for the sake of continuity, Burn’s drawings for the rebuilding of 1827 (in the RIBA Drawings Collection); second, some drawings for Taplow Court made about 1743 for the Earl of Inchiquin by Stiff Leadbetter; and third, a small number of schemes for other houses – a plan related to Duff House, Banffshire, in the style of Roger Morris, four ground plans related to Chicheley Hall in Buckinghamshire, here attributed to Thomas Archer, c. 1719-23, and a set of designs for a small villa commissioned by Sir George Warrender from James Gillespie (later Gillespie Graham) in 1819.