CHAPTER VII
FIREWORK MANUFACTURE
The manufacture of fireworks in this country, as an
industry distinct from mere firework making, dates
from the early part of the eighteenth century. Before
that period displays appear to have been generally carried
out by the military, or at any rate under the control of artillery
or engineer officers. At that time the art was considered to
have two distinct branches, civil and military pyrotechny,
the latter class naturally attracting most attention during a
period when Europe was almost continuously at war, and when
firearms had made little progress from the early types.
As has been previously mentioned, Jones complains that when it was required to carry out a display of fireworks on a large scale, recourse was always had to foreigners to conduct it. One reason was that, apart from the actual making of the firework units, a display depends far more for its success on the experience and skill of the pyrotechnist in arranging and composing both the form and sequence of the pieces. The firework makers capable of carrying out a display on a large scale were very few; there were fewer, if any, in this country. The whole of the trade was illegal; under the statute of the 9th and 10th of William III it was illegal to make, sell, or let off fireworks:
"By the 9th and 10th of William, Chap. 7, it is enacted:
That if any Person shall make or cause to be made, or
sell, give, or utter, or offer, or expose to sale any Squibs,
Rockets, Serpents, or other Fire-works, he shall forfeit
Five Pounds. And that if any Person shall permit the