1801 He left a list of the organs he built in an extant account book. They are those of: • St. George's Chapel; Portsmouth Common, 1788 •
St James's Church, Clerkenwell, and
Fetter Lane Chapel, 1790 • Adelphi Chapel, 1791 • Gainsborough Church, Lincolnshire, 1793 • Newington Church, Surrey, and Blandford Forum Church, 1794 • St Peter's, Carmarthen, 1796 •
St Margaret Lothbury, 1801 •
Sardinian Embassy Chapel, Lincoln's Inn, London, 1802 (demolished) •
Church of St. Mary Magdalene, Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, 1803 •
Sheffield Parish Church,
St. Philip's, Birmingham, and
St Martin Outwich, 1805 • Hinckley Parish Church, 1808 •
St Thomas' Church, Stourbridge; Richmond, Yorkshire;
Lancaster Priory, 1809 • Shiffnall, Salop, and Ulverston, 1811 •
St Mary's Church, Islington, 1812 The 1809 organ at St Mary the Virgin,
Bishops Cannings, Wiltshire is also attributed to him. England built an organ for
Salisbury Cathedral which proved to be insufficiently powerful, and in 1792 was reinstalled in
St Denys' Church, Warminster, Wiltshire. Its organ case is described by
Pevsner as "a delightful piece". For a short while before his death, Joseph William Walker (1802–1870) was apprenticed to him. Walker later founded the company of
J. W. Walker & Sons Ltd. ==References==