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Welcome to The Sloane Letters Project

sloaneA pilot of this project, Sir Hans Sloane’s Correspondence Online, was first launched at the University of Saskatchewan in 2010 to coincide with the 350th anniversary of Sir Hans Sloane’s birth. The project was renamed The Sloane Letters Project when it moved to this site in 2016.

The correspondence of Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753) consists of thirty-eight volumes held at the British Library, London: MSS 4036-4069, 4075-4078.  The letters are a rich source of information about topics such as scientific discourse, collections of antiquities, curiosities and books, patients’ illnesses, medical treatments and family history. Most of the letters were addressed to Sloane, but a few volumes were addressed to others (MSS 4063-4067) or written by Sloane (MSS 4068-4069).

So far, we have entered descriptions and metadata for Sloane MSS 4036-4053 and 4075, as well as several letters from each of the following: Sloane MSS 4054-4055, 4066, 4068-4069 and 4076. Several of these entries also include transcriptions. Further entries and transcriptions are being made available gradually.

Please, explore the website and database. You can search through the letters, learn about Sir Hans Sloane or the letters written to him, and peruse blog posts about interesting letters!

Random Letter

Author:
Recipient:

SIR,-I have lately seen a collection of petrifications

with Mr. Beaumont. Amongst the rest is the Lapis astroites, which is a sort of coral generated in the seas, between the tropics; and it seemed to be so clearly that, as nothing plainer. It is turned to flint, and the inter- stices between the starry pores are transparent. One of this kind he showed to me was half petrified, the other half remaining, like a common star-stone. He showed me likewise many impressions of several plants in slatt, as ferns, flags, &c. very fair and plain, with several stalks of plants petrified and inclosed in flint, which he talks of publishing, together with some figures of, and reasonings upon, them.

London, May 20, 1692


Read more- Letter 4557


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