In 1881, Burne-Jones was asked to design the mosaics for St. Paul’s Within-the-Walls, the American Church in Rome. The church was designed in Byzantine style by his friend, the English Gothic Revival architect George Edmund Street (1824-1881). The drawings in the Museum’s collection are related to the mosaic in the dome of the apse representing Heavenly Jerusalem, completed in 1885. The design was inspired by the mosaic decoration at the early medieval church of San Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna, which Burne-Jones had visited some years previously. This series of drawings came to the Museum from Paul R. Miles via Henry Turner Bailey. Webb either sold or gave this series of drawings to Bailey, who was (among other things - see below) editor of "The School Arts Book," for which Webb wrote several articles. Henry Turner Bailey (1865-1931) was a graduate from the Massachusetts Normal Art School in 1887. He played a key role in the development of industrial drawing in Massachusetts schools. In 1901, Bailey becomes editor of School Arts, a valuable and resourceful journal. In 1992 the Museum was approached by the estate of J.M. (Josephine Maria Litchfield) Bailey, widow of Henry Turner. They were offered to the Museum for sale, but the price was quite high. Somehow Roland Elzea, then Chief Curator of the collection at Delaware arranged some sort of a deal by which they came to us as a partial purchase/partial gift with the latter somehow brokered through Paul R. Miles. Miles was local and involved at the time with the Museum, but it’s unclear how is support for this project was manifested.