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Test Bank For Physics A Conceptual World View 7th Edition
Test Bank For Physics A Conceptual World View 7th Edition
Test Bank For Physics A Conceptual World View 7th Edition
7. A train covers 60 miles between 2 pm and 4 pm. How fast was it traveling at 3 p.m.?
A. 15 mph
B. 30 mph
C. 60 mph
D. Not enough information is given to be able to say.
8. Car A travels from milepost 343 to milepost 349 in 5 minutes. Car B travels from milepost 493 to milepost
499 in 5 minutes. Which car has the greater average speed?
A. Car A
B. Car B
C. Their average speeds are the same.
D. There is not enough information to be able to say.
9. A yellow car takes 10 minutes to go from milepost 101 to milepost 109. A red car takes 10 minutes to go
from milepost 11 to milepost 21. Which car has the higher average speed?
A. the yellow one
B. the red one
C. Their average speeds are the same.
D. Not enough information is given to be able to say.
10. In Aesop's fable of the tortoise and the hare, the "faster" hare loses the race to the slow and steady tortoise.
During the race, which animal has the greater average speed?
A. the tortoise
B. the hare
C. Both have the same average speed.
D. There is not enough information to say.
11. Pat and Chris both travel from Los Angeles to New York along the same route. Pat rides a bicycle while
Chris drives a fancy sports car. Unfortunately, Chris's car breaks down in Phoenix for over a week, causing the
two to arrive in New York at exactly the same time. Which statement is true?
A. Pat and Chris had the same average speed.
B. Chris had the higher average speed.
C. Pat had the higher average speed.
12. In a cycling race, a rider covers the first 50 miles at a constant speed of 21 mph, and covers the second 50
miles at a constant speed of 19 mph. The average speed of the rider for the entire race is
A. exactly 20 mph
B. slightly greater than 20 mph
C. slightly less than 20 mph
13. On a trip to Helena, you stop for a 15-minute coffee break in Three Forks and arrive in Helena two hours
after leaving Bozeman. If you assume that it is 100 miles to Helena, your average speed would be 50 mph.
Which of the following statements about this trip is correct?
A. To average 50 mph the car must have gone 100 mph for 15 minutes of the trip.
B. The average speed is not 50 mph but what was indicated on the speedometer.
C. You cannot average 50 mph if the speed is zero for any part of the trip.
D. The car must have traveled faster than 50 mph for part of the trip.
14. A cruise ship covers a distance of 80 miles during the watch that lasts from midnight to 8 am. How fast was
the ship going at 4 am if the speed of the ship was constant during the watch?
A. 80 miles/hour
B. 80 miles
C. 10 miles/hour
D. We don't have enough information to be able to say.
15. If a woman walks at a speed of 2 miles/hour for 3 hours, she will have walked
A. 2 miles.
B. 5 miles.
C. 6 miles.
D. 9 miles.
16. If a marathoner can run with an average speed of 10 mph, how far could she run in 2 hours?
A. 5 miles
B. 10 miles
C. 12 miles
D. 20 miles
17. How many hours are required to make a 4400-km trip across the United States if you average 80 km/h?
A. 45 h
B. 50 h
C. 55 h
D. 60 h
The Barley Mow Tea House and Gardens were on the west side
of Frog Lane, now Popham Road, Islington. They are first mentioned
in 1786.[158] About 1799, the Barley Mow was kept as a public-
house by a man named Tate, and George Morland lived there for
several months, indulging in drinking and low company, but finding
time to paint some good pictures which he generally sold for small
sums. He often borrowed for sketching purposes old harness and
saddles from a farm-house opposite, and was wont “to send after
any rustic-looking character” to obtain a sitting. The Barley Mow has
been used as a public-house to the present time, and is now No. 31,
Popham Road, but it has been modernised, or rebuilt, and the
garden has disappeared.
[Nelson’s Islington, 128, 197; Cromwell’s Islington, p. 194, ff.;
Lewis’s Islington, 154, ff.; Walford, ii. 262; Morning Herald, 22 April,
1786.]
CANONBURY HOUSE TEA GARDENS
VIEWS.
Exterior of Canonbury Tavern (north view), a small engraving
published in 1819 by R. Ackermann (W. Coll.); Crace, Cat. p. 602, No.
174.
COPENHAGEN HOUSE
VIEWS.
1. Copenhagen House, Islington, as it appeared in 1737, sepia
drawing by Bernard Lens. Crace, Cat. p. 604, No. 191.
2. South-east view of Copenhagen House, printed for R. Sayer and
J. Bennett, 20 March, 1783 (W. Coll.); the woodcut in Lewis’s
Islington, p. 283, is derived from this.
3. Copenhagen House, Islington. J. Swaine del. 1793; J. Swaine,
sculp. 1854. Woodcut (W. Coll.).
4. There are several views of Copenhagen House in the nineteenth
century, see e.g. Hone’s Every Day Book, i. 858; Cromwell’s Islington,
p. 204; Crace, Cat. p. 605, Nos. 194, 196 (views of 1853).
5. “The Grand Meeting of the Metropolitan Trades’ Unions in the
Copenhagen Fields on Monday, April 21, 1834.” Coloured engraving
by Geo. Dorrington (W. Coll.). This shows Copenhagen House and an
enormous concourse in the fields.
HIGHBURY BARN
Highbury Barn Tavern with its gardens is, like the Canonbury
House Tavern and gardens, rooted in a respectable antiquity, for it
stood on the site of Highbury Barn[172] which formed part of the farm
attached to the old country seat[173] of the Prior of the Knights of St.
John of Jerusalem.
Highbury Barn (the tavern) was originally a small cake and ale
house which was in existence at least as early as 1740[174]. It was
occasionally (about 1768) honoured by a visit from Oliver Goldsmith
on one of his Shoemaker’s holidays. Goldsmith and three or four of
his friends would leave his Temple chambers in the morning and
proceed by the City Road and through the fields to Highbury Barn,
where at one o’clock they enjoyed a dinner of two courses and
pastry, at the cost of tenpence a head including the waiter’s penny.
The company then to be met with at the inn consisted of Templars
and literary men, and a citizen or two retired from business. At about
six, Goldsmith and his party adjourned to the White Conduit House
for tea, and ended the day with supper at the Globe or Grecian.
The trade of the place greatly increased under the management
of Mr. Willoughby, who, dying in December 1785, was succeeded by
his son. The younger Willoughby (landlord 1785–1818?)[175] laid out
the gardens, bowling green and trap-ball ground.[176] A large barn
belonging to the neighbouring Highbury Farm (or Grange) was
incorporated with the premises and fitted up suitably for a Great
Room. Here a monthly assembly subscribed to in the neighbourhood
was held in the spring and winter and monster dinner-parties of clubs
and societies were accommodated. In 1800 a company of eight
hundred persons sat down to dinner, and seventy geese were to be
seen roasting on the fire. Three thousand people were
accommodated at the Licensed Victuallers’ Dinner in 1841.
About 1793 the garden commanded an extensive prospect, and
as late as 1842 Highbury could be described as “a beautifully
situated hamlet.”
HIGHBURY BARN IN 1792.
In 1818 the property was purchased by the former proprietor of
the Grove House, Camberwell, and Highbury Barn was much
resorted to as a Sunday tea-garden (circ. 1823–1830). The place
then passed (before 1835) into the hands of John Hinton (previously
landlord of the Eyre Arms, St. John’s Wood) who with his son
Archibald Hinton, ultimately the sole proprietor, gave new life to the
place and made Highbury Barn a kind of North London Cremorne.
By about 1854 the number of monster dinner-parties and bean-
feasts had much fallen off, and on Whit-Monday of that year Hinton
opened his establishment for musical entertainments with a
performance by the band of the Grenadier Guards.
A license for dancing was granted in October 1856, and in July
1858 a Leviathan dancing platform, with an orchestra at one end,
was erected in the grounds. It was open to the sky with the exception
of one side, which consisted of a roofed structure of ornamental
ironwork. The whole platform occupied four thousand feet. A
standard of gas lamps in the centre of the platform and lamps placed
round its railing lit up the place in the evening, when the gardens
were frequented by large masses of people. In a more secluded part
of the gardens was an avenue of trees, flanked by female statues,
each holding a globular gas lamp. About 1858 the admission was
sixpence, and at this time Highbury Barn was much frequented on
Sunday evenings, when little parties might be seen on the lawn
before the Barn or in the bowers and alcoves by its side. The
gardens occupied five acres.
Archibald Hinton gave up possession in 1860; and in 1861
Edward Giovanelli opened Highbury Barn, after having improved the
grounds and erected a spacious hall for a ball and supper room. In
1862 Miss Rebecca Isaacs and Vernon Rigby were the principal
singers, and Leotard the gymnast was engaged for the summer
season. On 20 May 1865 the Alexandra Theatre was opened in the
grounds, but the entertainments in the gardens were also continued.
“The splendid Illuminations” were boldly advertised, and Blondin
(1868), Natator the man-frog, and the Siamese Twins were engaged
(1869). The riotous behaviour, late at night, of many frequenters of
the gardens caused annoyance to the neighbours, who regularly
opposed the renewal of the license. In October 1870 the dancing
license was refused, and next season Mr. E. T. Smith took the place
of Giovanelli as manager, but the license being again refused in
October 1871, Highbury Barn was finally closed. The flowerbeds
became choked with grass and weeds, and nightshade luxuriated
around the dismantled orchestra. By the spring of 1883 the place
had been covered with buildings, and a large public-house, the
Highbury Tavern (No. 26, Highbury Park N.), on part of the old site,
alone commemorates this once popular resort.
[Nelson’s Islington; Cromwell’s Islington; Lewis’s Islington;
Tomlins’s Perambulation of Islington; Kearsley’s Strangers’ Guide;
Walford, ii. 273. ff.; Forster’s Life of Goldsmith, bk. iv. chap. 2; Picture
of London, 1802, 1823 and 1829; Ritchie’s Night-side of London
(1858); Era Almanack, 1871, pp. 3, 4; M. Williams’s Some London
Theatres, 1883, p. 33, ff.; newspaper cuttings and bills, W. Coll.]
VIEWS.
1. Highbury Barn (gabled buildings), an etching from a drawing by
B. Green, 1775 (W. Coll.).
2. Highbury Assembly House, near Islington, kept by Mr.
Willoughby, 1792, print published in 1792 by Sayer (W. Coll.; also
Crace. Cat. p. 603, No. 182).
3. “Highbury Barn, Islington,” engraving published May 1, 1819, for
R. Ackermann.
4. Highbury Barn (exterior) (circ. 1835), engraving in Cromwell’s
Islington, p. 247, J. and H. S. Storer, del. et. sc.
5. “The Leviathan Platform, Highbury Barn,” woodcut in Illustrated
London News, July 1858.
6. Two views of “The Gardens, Highbury Barn Tavern” (circ. 1851),
in Tallis’s Illustrated London, ed. Gaspey.
THE DEVIL’S HOUSE, HOLLOWAY.
VIEWS.
1. A view of the house, gardens and bridge appears in Walford, v.
378, “Claude Duval’s House in 1825.”
2. Devil’s or Du Val’s House, Holloway, a sepia drawing by C. H.
Matthews (1840); Crace, Cat. p. 604, No. 190.
HORNSEY WOOD HOUSE.
VIEWS.
1. An engraving of old Hornsey Wood House &c., in Lewis’s
Islington, p. 282.
2. There are many views of the later Hornsey Wood House (or
Tavern), e.g. one engraved in Walford, v. 426, and there assigned to
the year 1800. This is substantially the same as one (undated) in
Hone’s Every Day Book, i. 759. Hone, ib. 761, also gives a woodcut of
the Lake. There is an engraving of the house of 1809, published by J.
Cundee (W. Coll.), and there are views of it of a later date; e.g. an
engraving in Cromwell’s Islington, p. 138.
THE SPRING GARDEN, STOKE NEWINGTON.
HAMPSTEAD GROUP
HAMPSTEAD WELLS
VIEWS.
1. The Pump-room, Well Walk (i.e. Great Room), since, the
Episcopal Chapel, in Baines’s Hampstead, from a drawing by Blanche
Cowper Baines, after E. H. Dixon.
2. The old Well Walk, Hampstead, about 1750 (Walford, v. 463).
3. A view of “Ye Long Room at Hampstead from the Heath.”
Chatelain del. et sculp. 1752 (W. Coll.).
4. Well Walk, engraving in Howitt’s Northern Heights, from a
photograph.
5. Well Walk in 1870 in Baines’s Hampstead, from a sketch by
Walter Field.
THE SPANIARDS
The old Spaniards inn, still standing on the north side of the road
between the upper and lower Heath of Hampstead, deserves a brief
mention, seeing that about the middle of the eighteenth century or
earlier, it had attached to it a curious garden laid out by one William
Staples, who was probably the keeper of the inn.[197]
A contemporary account describes how “out of a wild and thorny
wood full of hills, valleys, and sandpits,” the ingenious Mr. Staples
“hath now made pleasant grass and gravel walks, with a mount, from
the elevation whereof the beholder hath a prospect of Hanslope
steeple in Northamptonshire, within eight miles of Northampton; of
Langdon hill, in Essex, full sixty miles east,” and of other eminences,
the visibility of which was perhaps less mythical.
The walks and plats were ornamented with a number of curious
devices picked out with pebble stones of variegated colours. There
were over forty of these quaint designs, such as the sun in its glory,
the twelve signs of the Zodiac, the Tower of London, the grand
colossus of Rhodes, the pathway of all the planets, the spire of
Salisbury, Adam and Eve, the shield of David, the Egyptian
pyramids, and an Egyptian sphinx: an odd association of things
earthly and celestial.
Towards the end of the eighteenth century the Spaniards was
much resorted to, especially on Sundays.[198] During the Gordon
Riots of 1780, its landlord, Giles Thomas, is said to have arrested
the progress of the mob bent on the destruction of Caen Wood
House, Lord Mansfield’s residence, hard by, through rolling out his
beer barrels into the road, and setting them abroach, thus gaining
time to summon the military for the defence of the house.
SOUTH VIEW OF THE SPANIARDS, 1750.
In the present century, though the mount and the pebbled plots
had disappeared, the Spaniards gardens were rendered attractive by
a bowling-green, and by pleasant arbours and parterres: it was
resorted to by many a party of tea-drinkers like that of Mr. Raddle,
Mrs. Bardell and her friends.[199]
[Park’s Hampstead; Baines’s Hampstead; Walford, v. 445, ff.;
Thorne’s Environs of London, 1876.]
VIEWS.
1. The south view of the Spaniards (showing the garden as laid out
by Staples) near Hampstead (Chatelain del., J. Roberts sculp. 1750,
W. Coll., reproduced in Chambers’s Book of Days, ii. 71).
2. The Spaniards Tavern, Hampstead, Middlesex, drawn and
engraved for Dugdale’s England and Wales.
3. View of the inn as at present, Walford, v. 445.
4. “View of a skittle ground at Hampstead” (either the Spaniards or
Jack Straw’s Castle), Woodward’s Eccentric Excursions, coloured
print, pl. iv. p. 14 (1796).
NEW GEORGIA
VIEWS.
New Georgia is clearly marked in Rocque’s Survey, 1745, but there
appear to be no views.