Some of his better-known works are: •
View of Boston (Lincolnshire), engraved by J. S. Muller in 1751—This is his earliest known work. •
A view Newport Arch, Lincoln (1751?) is in the
Usher Gallery, Lincoln •
The South East View of the City of York was engraved on copper by
Charles Grignion and published in 1756 under the title
The Prospect of a Noble Terras Walk—This work has been called "undoubtedly the most ambitious graphic representation of York produced in the middle years of the eighteenth century". Two original paintings of this scene are in the
York Art Gallery. •
Francis Drake (1756), was engraved in
mezzotint by Valentine Green in 1771—
Francis Drake (1696–1771) was an antiquarian and remote relative. The painting is in York Art Gallery. John Ingamells states that "After [1756] Drake then ‘met with little encouragement and was more successful in miniature’ and a miniature signed ND (now in York Art Gallery) of an unknown man is probably by him". His topographical subjects, such as
The Newport Arch, include groups of figures recalling
Canaletto or
Samuel Scott. Drake's portraits are only few, but there is a small signed oil of a Sportsman (London,
Apsley House, Wellington Mus.). Several of his views, as well as his illustrations to
James Thomson's
The Seasons, were engraved. ==Family==