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Sloane: Part of the Family

By Alice Marples

When thinking about famous figures in the history of science, it can sometimes be easy to forget that they were not working in isolation. A lot of recent research has focused on exploring the domestic contexts of scientific production, and paints a picture of kitchen table-top experiments and hoards of curious visitors mucking up the carpet. Men of science were the heads of households, supported (and, likely, just about tolerated) by their families and servants, who were often called in to help.

Yet, when I first began reading through Sloane’s correspondence, I was still surprised by the extent to which wives and children featured in the letters. The broad geographical shape and intellectual form of the international Republic of Letters, linking scholars who had often never met, necessitated a certain contractual form of conduct in epistolary exchanges: elevated, polite and very, very formal. Though the letters in Sloane’s collection are polite, the business discussed within them flows easily from formal to familial,Ā with the knowledge exchanged alternating between the scientific and the social.

John Smybert, The Bermuda Group (1728-1739), Yale University Art Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

The first letter from John Ray (1627-1705) ā€“ a naturalist-parson and patron of Sloane’s, easily the single person with whom he corresponded the most ā€“ concludes his discussion of the state of the scientific community with the request that Sloane should come visit Ray in Black Notley, as he and his wife would love to see him. There is a great deal of affection communicated through these letters, giving the impression that Sloane was very much part of the furniture within the Ray household.

Sloane’s increasingly long absences as he became busier and more successful as a physician and collector are mourned by Ray, his wife, and their daughters. After a relatively big gap in their communication in which Sloane is almost entirely taken up with administering to the rather-troublesome Lady Albermarle and her frequent health issues, we have this from Ray:

Monday last I received your kind letter attended with a rich Present of sugar to my Wife: They were both very gratefull & acceptable…. You have so highly pleased & obliged my Wife, that she is much in commendation of your generosity, & returns you her humble service & hearty thanks; wishing that you were here to partake of some of the effects of your kindnesse.

This present of sugar to the Ray family to make up for his absence was one which Sloane returned to again and again:

My little family are, I thank God, at present all in health…. We often tast of your kindnesse, & as often remember you, & talk of you. My wife salutes you with the tender of her most humble service. (Sloane MS 4036, f. 256)

Certainly lots of letters were written by current or future members of the Royal Society on account of the health of their family, such as Sir Godfrey Copley’s wife or William Sherard’s mother. Similarly, Sloane’s wife is present in many of the letters, with doctors, botanists and lords courteously asking after her whenever she is ill.

But networks built by demonstrable medical expertise and social power did not exist within a void. They were supplemented by personal connections maintained through everyday exchanges among friends and associates, and their families, all of whom were present within the learned community. For example, Sir Godfrey Copley felt compelled to beg on behalf of his wife that Sloane send her the reciept of Making Bacon like that of Westphalia.ā€ (Sloane MS 4036, f.188)

Wives swapped housemaids, passed on recipes and recommendations, and actively sought positions for friends and servants through the epistolary exchanges. Sons began working for individuals and companies after being recommended to them by those who knew their parents. Daughters were introduced to improving elder ladies, and written about fondly in letters between fathers. All these interactions appear in the letters as part of the scientific and scholarly information. These letters offer rewarding traces of domestic life, friendship, the role of women in patronage, and the familial world of natural history.

Sloane existed at the centre of a world-wide network of letter-writers, yet it is important to remember that often Sloane’s correspondence was not quite the same sort of exchange as that of the virtuous Republic of Letters. Time and again, there is evidence within the letters of the personal, informal and integrated worlds of families and friends behind this polite language and professions of worthy enterprise.

On this note, I leave you with the warm but exasperated postscript written along the edges of Sir Arthur Rawdon’s letter to Sloane, dated 30th March 1692:

My wife has made me open my letter agen to tell you that she is much troubled that you should write word that you were afraid the cause of my silence was that you had disobliged either her mother or her, she hopes you have a better opinion of them. (Sloane MS 4036, f.115)

Sloane was sometimes so deeply involved with the extended families and friends of his correspondents, that even his patron’s mother-in-law (assisted by his wife) was able to tease him.

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Page 1 of 532

Robert Millar

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Robert Millar wrote letter Letter 4199 to Sloane advising him of an opportunity he has been given by Mr. Palmenter to go to Panama in search of plants to be cultivated in Georgia (Sloane was one of the Trustee’s for the establishment of the colony of Georgia)’ Millar was the son of Robert Millar, Minster… Read more »

May 8, 2019


Mr. Larkham

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An Apothecary known as Mr. Larkham was mentioned in letter 4494 from Mary Grey (nee Tufton)Ā to Sloane.Ā  Grey refers to ‘Mr: Larkham (ye Apothecary at […]ond)’, no other information about them is available.   Refererences: Mary Grey (nee Tufton) to Hans Sloane, ????-08-14, Sloane MS 4066, f. 301, British Library, London.  

March 13, 2019


Mrs. Hales

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Mrs. Hales is mentioned in letter 4523 from Stephen Hales to Sloane as being a sent a ‘favour’ which Sloane had sent onto Stephen. No other information about them is available, this Mrs Hales is not however the wife of Stephen or Thomas Hales (also mentioned in the letter), as both of the brother had… Read more »


Sir Thomas Hales

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Thomas Hales (b. 24 February 1666 d. 07 January 1748) was the 2nd Baronet of Beakesbourne in KentĀ  and oldest brother of clergyman and natural philosopher Stephen Hales F. R. S.Ā .Ā  He is descended from John Hales, who was a baron of the exchequer under Henry VIII and his grandfather Sir Robert hales was knighted… Read more »


Mr. Hodges

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A person known only by the name ‘Mr Hodges’ is mentioned in Stephen HalesĀ letter 4523 to Sloane. He is described as ‘so very unkind to his poor Grand children who have never offended him’ and Hales refers to ā€˜the notorious injury he did their [Hodges grandchildren] parents in not settleing the promised Ā£500 per annum’…. Read more »


Denis Perronet

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Denis Perronet wrote letter 3834 to Sloane and letter 3972 to Thomas Robe. He may also be the Mr. Perronet mentioned in letter 4526 from Clemina Pemberton to Sloane. According to the letters, Perronet is a collector of Asian manuscripts that he shares with Sloane and Robe. Perronet states that he had ‘livā€™d in asia… Read more »


Jacobus Theodorus Klein

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Jacobus Theodorus Klein (b. 15 August 1685 d. 27 February 1759) was a German botanist, historian, jurist, mathematician, zoologist, paleontologist and diplomat in service of August II of Poland. In 1718 he set up a botanical garden and built up his natural history collection including fossils.   Reference: Armin Geus, ‘Klein, Jacob Theodor’ (1977), <https://www.deutschebiographie.de/sfz41363.html#ndbcontent_zitierweise>…. Read more »

March 12, 2019


Mr. Schacher

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A person known only by the name ‘Mr. Schacher’ is mentioned in letter 4512 to Sloane. He is the son ofĀ Lord Schacher, Dean of the Medicinal Faculty at Leipzig. No other information about them is available.   Reference: Thomas LediardeĀ to Hans Sloane, 1735-08-25, Sloane MS 4054, f. 94, British Library, London Ā  Ā     


N. N.

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A person known only by ‘N. N.’ wrote letter 4513Ā to Sloane. No other information about them is available.   Reference: N. N. to Hans Sloane, 1735-08-28, Sloane MS 4054, f. 95, British Library, London


Letter 4551

Dr. Hans Sloane to Mr. John Ray - January 31, 1684/5

The Correspondence of John Ray: Consisting of Selections from the Philosophical Letters Published by DR. Derham and Original Letters of John Ray, in the Collection of the British Museum
pp. 159 - 160


February 23, 2019


Page 1 of 532

Letter 3455

Thomas Dereham to Hans Sloane – May 22, 1728


Item info

Date: May 22, 1728
Author: Thomas Dereham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4049
Folio: ff. 165-166



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 165] Rome 22 May 1728 Sir Whereas I had caused to be sent a long time agoe to Leghorne to be shipt off those books & papers I mentioned to you in a former of mine , & that the shipp has delaied as usuall its departure, I have butt just received the Bill of Ladeing, which you will find herein, & hope it will come to your hands at the same time that you may hear the St Thomas coming up the River, so I entreat to recover the small case, & make acceptable unto the Royall Society the Collection I have made for them of the newest Philosophicalls Lucubrations of these parts. I suppose you will have received long before now the book of Rizzetti which I sent you by a person coming over hence directly for G. Britain, whom I changed also with a letter for you, & relating to the said book, I learn that at Bologna they try over again ye Optick experiments of Sr Issak Newton to confuse ye false suppositions of ye Author. Here enclosed you will find a small dissertation of a curious Apothecary of this Town, that has desired me to present it unto ye R. Society, & if his Hipothesis holds true, there might be found a true Antidote against the Gout. I am promised very soone the answers of the Professors of Padua to Dr Rutty, which I shall duely send him & Monsigr Bianchi is att work to send by my means his Observations upon the Jovial satellites unto Mr Derham, unto whom I entreat you to make my best compliments, & tell him tis the reason why I have not returned yett an answer into his last letter. At the mouth of the River Arno in Tuscany they caught a fortnight ago a Dogfish of 1100 pounds weight in whose belly they found the head of a young stagg with the horns 4 inches long, & all the skin of the body not yet saturated, by the length whereoff they judged [fol. 166] the Animal might have been of about 60 pounds weight & tis supposed that out of the forests of Pisa it went to drink in the river & was swallowd up by the sea monster, a thing that has never happened before in those parts. We have lately in this Town a Woman delivered of a Child by the Navel that is in a fair way of recovering, & you will find amongst the books an account of that by the Anus last year at Venice. I will not give you further trouble, butt Remaine with reall esteem, & trueth Sir Your most Obedient & most humble servant Thomas Dereham

Sir Thomas Dereham (c. 1678-1739) was a British expatriate and Roman Catholic who lived in Italy. He had a close association with the Royal Society (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27dereham%27%29).




Patient Details

Letter 3719

Philip Henry Zollman to Hans Sloane – February 11, 1730


Item info

Date: February 11, 1730
Author: Philip Henry Zollman
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 274-275



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 274] Paris 11th February 1730 n.s. Sir I received the honour of your Letter of the 5th past O.S. no sooner than the 5th instant n.s., and senr the enclosed immediately to Mr Woolhouse; His answer went last night by Avison the Messenger, who was dispatched for England; but as I would not return thanks to your very kind Letter to me in such a hurry as I was in all that day, I beg leave to do it by this day’s Post. However I recommended particularly to Mr Avison to take on the road the Packet of Physical Disputations for You, which by Gollen the Messenger’s death had been so long detained with his other things, but is safe and will be delivered to by Mr Avison. As for another Packet since from Mr Woolhouse, containing a month of the Journal of Trevaux, and a Physical Treatise, I have sent it likewise some time ago by a Messenger, who being dispatched from this Exc’y Mr Walpole’s House, I do not perfectly remember his name. I think it was Mr Randal, who having been very ill soon after his arrival in England, might have neglected to, and probably has since his recovery delivered it. It is the greatest satisfaction to me to hear that my endeavours to serve You and the Royal Society have been acceptable. As I am conscious that my own stock would be too poor to supply so learned a Body, I laid hold of any thing that putt itself as it were in my way, and made use of all other Opportunitys that offered, to shew my zeal for the society’s service, in which I am greatly encouraged by the approbation You are pleased to give it. I shall think myself very happy in receiving for the future Your particular orders [fol. 275] and Directions, You being the best Judge how far and in what particular way I may be employed. I had gathered some more very curious fossils at Hautefontaine, which I left in the hands of Dr Petit at Soissons. I shall gett some of them back again, and send them by a proper Opportunity. I am with the greatest zeal and Respect Sir Your most humble and most obedient servant P.H. Zollman.

Philip Henry Zollman (c. 1680-1748) was the Royal Society’s first Assistant Secretary for Foreign Correspondence, a post he assumed in 1723. He first landed in England in 1714, was trained in several foreign languages, and regularly corresponded with Leibniz (Derek Massarell, ‘Philip Henry Zollman, the Royal Society’s First Assistant Secretary for Foreign Correspondence’, Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 46, no. 2 (1992), 219-234).




Patient Details

Letter 3508

Thomas Dereham to Hans Sloane – October 9, 1728


Item info

Date: October 9, 1728
Author: Thomas Dereham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4049
Folio: ff. 246-247



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 246] Rome 9 Oct. 1829 Sr Acknowledging your favour of ye 30 Aug. last past just as you supposed the first parcell of Books deliverd to Mr Green had been duely transmitted to me by his correspondent of Leghorne, as in a former of mine I have had the honour to acquaint you; now I am in expectation of those newly deliverd to said Mr Green by Dr Rutty as a gracious present to me from the Royall Society, for which I earnestly entreat you to render acceptable my most respectfull anticipated thanks to them. I have been very glad to understand that the experiments repeated by Mr Desaguliers have succeeded according to expectation, so that Rizzetti will have the shame of a blundering fellow as the experiments made at Bologna, whereof I have given you an account, had already made him appear, & having occasion to write to severall Professors to convey Dr Ruttys letters it shall be known speedily all over this part of the World that Sr Isaac Newton’s glory is highly vindicated. Where Dr Valisnieri acquainted me he had sent to Florence two copies of his last works de Corpi marini che sopra i monti si trocano, one for the society, & one for the secretary, I have orderd them to be sent to Mr Green’s correspondent at Leghorne directed to you hoping he will take care of them, & have added these unto a dissertation of Monsigr Fouquet, formerly a Jesuit, now a Bishop, upon the Chronology of the China Empire, which he has done at my request/ having been a long time in the Mission there/ whereas one day talking with him on that subject I told him it was ridiculous it was they appeared to be Antidiluvians, & that nobody yet had truely rectified this fabulous fancie of those people: accordingly he has succeeded wonderfully well in the matter as you will be able to judge upon perusing the said dissertation, & is about publishing a great Cronological Table to be hung upon a Wall of a Chamber, with the Cicles of the Empire from its foundation to ye present times with ye Aera Christiana therein to be found as far as it goeth, & thence upwards the times of the Romans &c. Butt being in low circumstances & finding no Mecanate to carry tim through his undertaking I have advised him to do it by subscription, & we have calculated that for every subscription importing seventeen, or eighteen shillings according to ye exchange hither a subscriber will have seven or perhapps eight Tables for his share, wherefore as you are a great Patron of all manner of Learning I presume you will be so compleasant as to be a subscriber your self, & procure the concurrence of others to promote so curious, & usefull a work, [fol. 247] and [it] shall be my care to have the Proprietors duely satisfied in there expectation that will be readily fulfilled. I have another great work at hand, for which I have formed a society at Florence, being the Printing of all the Musaeum Medicieu… the name of Musaeum Florentinum, the present G. Duke having granted me leave upon the condition, whereas he ought to do it at his own charge for his honours, & of his Ancestors, however I hope it iwll be done in a few years time being now upon sending thither the best designers & engravers I could pick up here & others I have of ye last coming from Paris, & the first thing to come out will be all the Painters own Pictures, then the statues, after that the most famous pictures, the Jools, the Medals Intaglio’s and Cammeo’s, whereupon Senr Buonarroti, & several; other good Antiquaries shall make disputations. If the fund of the ye society will not do, we shall recurr to subscriptions, which in time you shall know. I hear Monsgr Bianchini is lately returnd to Albans, where I intend to visit him in a few days, & shall endeavour to hasten him about ye new mapp of Venus. I Remaine your most Obedient servant Thomas Dereham I take the liberty to enclose to you ye answers unto ye letters you have sent me.

Sir Thomas Dereham (c. 1678-1739) was a British expatriate and Roman Catholic who lived in Italy. He had a close association with the Royal Society (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27dereham%27%29).




Patient Details

The Twelve Days of Christmas

Inspired by the season, I started playing with my database of Hans Sloaneā€™s correspondence to see how many items from The Twelve Days of Christmas to my wondering eyes should appear. Although some substitutions were required, all twelve days are representedā€”and, in turn, hint at the breadth of Sloaneā€™s collections, medical practice and epistolary network.

Above, a partridge (perdix californica); below, a pigeon (columba cruenta). Engraving by Manceaux after E. TraviĆØs. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Above, a partridge (perdix californica); below, a pigeon (columba cruenta). Engraving by Manceaux after E. TraviĆØs. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to meā€¦ an account of the King hunting partridge from 8 in the morning until four in the afternoon in August 1724. It is unspecified whether any partridge was also in a pear tree. In a stunning twist for the song, George was also hunting rabbits and the trip had to be cut short because of a storm. Safetyā€”and partridgesā€”first, everyone. In any case, the King and his party were very tired after such a long day.

For the second day of Christmas, I found no turtle doves, but there are pigeons. And they are just as good, maybe even better, since Iā€™ve never heard of anyone eating dove. Thomas Hearne, in an undated letter, reported that he was coughing up blood and receiving medical help from the Duchess of Bedford. All he was able to eat was milk and pigeon. Not my usual choice of dinner, but to each oneā€™s own.

For the third day of Christmas, I was unable to locate any foreign hens. There was, however, an odd pheasant hen sent by John Hadley in 1721. He thought that Sloane might enjoy dissecting the hen because her feathers had changed several years previously from the usual hen colours to that of a cockerel.

I hoped to find collie birds (blackbirds) or calling birds (song birds) for the fourth day of Christmasā€”and I found several of each in one letter! In 1721, Richard Richardson sent Sloane the eggs and nests of several types of birds, including larks, thrushes, crows and blackbirds. Thank you, Mr. Richardson for being so obliging.

Gold ring with container, supposedly--but unlikely--held poison. Swiss; undated, possibly 16th or 17th century. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Gold ring with container, supposedly–but unlikely–held poison. Swiss; undated, possibly 16th or 17th century. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

But what about five gold rings? I happily settled for one with a fancy, though indecipherable, inscription from Charles Preston in 1699. One ring to rule them all?

The geese, laying or otherwise, posed the greatest trouble. Goose does come up in the database, but only as a description. Mark Catesby in 1724 compared another bird specimen to a goose in size and Emelyn Tanner in 1727 described a deformed baby as having down like a goose.

The only swans mentioned in the letters are pubs, though the drinkers may or may not have been swimming in their drink. For example, Richard Richardson (1729) referred to a carrier from Preston who would be staying at the Swan in Lad Lane, London. Or Antony Picenini stayed at the Swan Tavern in Chelsea, hoping that a change of air would benefit him while he recovered from (unspecified) surgery on his thigh.

There were some maids mentioned in relation to milk, but only one maid doing any milkingā€”in this case, drinking milk rather than fetching it. In 1725, Matthew Combe was treating Sophia Howe, Maid of Honour to Queen Caroline, for a bad cough. The patient had been drinking assesā€™ milk, commonly given to people suffering from chest troubles.

Akan drum owned by Sloane and acquired beyween 1710 and 1745. Made in West Africa and collected from Virginia. Credit: British Museum, London.

Akan drum owned by Sloane and acquired beyween 1710 and 1745. Made in West Africa and collected from Virginia. Credit: British Museum, London.

Although there were no drummers drumming, there is at least a drum. In 1729, Elizabeth Standish of Peterborough was planning to send Sloane ā€œa Negro drumā€. No other details were given, such as where the drum came from or how Mrs Standish had acquired it. Could this be the same Akan drum still held at the British Museum?

Travelling smoking set, Europe, 1815-1820. Credit: Science Museum, London, Wellcome Images.

Travelling smoking set, Europe, 1815-1820. Credit: Science Museum, London, Wellcome Images.

There is only one reference to a piper actually piping. In 1723, Timothy Lovett reported that he had been treating his long-standing phlegmatic cough (forty years) by smoking a pipe: ā€œI have used my selfe to smoking several years about 5 pipes a day but it is ready to make me short breathed. I find it opens and loosens ye body.ā€ Smoking as a cureā€¦ it worked until it didnā€™t, apparently.

Now, the Lords and Ladies were apparently too dignified to mention their leaps and dances to Sloane, but the subject of their exercise does occasionally come up. I offer you one Lord, the Earl of Derby, and one Lady, Lady Clapham. Derby suffered from swelling and bad breathing in 1702. He was ā€œmost pusled what to do about exercise, which is so necessary, but the least causes my legs to swell soā€. Lady Clapham was also ill in 1702 and her regular physician despaired of the elderly womanā€™s skin disorder, hard swellings all over her body. He wasnā€™t sure if ā€œthe cause of this disease may proceed from a great stomach & little exercise or a great surfeit of cherries in Londonā€. Tough oneā€¦

St. Giles is in the background of Hogarth's "Noon", from Four Times of Day (1736).

St. Giles is in the background of Hogarth’s “Noon”, from Four Times of Day (1736).

Since I clumped Lords and Ladies together, Iā€™ll end with an 1842 version of Twelve Days which has twelve bells ringing.Ā  After Sloane was elected President of the Royal Society in 1727, the bell-ringers of St. Giles-in-the-Fields honoured him by ringing the bells. St. Giles only has eight bells today and, in 1727, would only have had four bells. But no matter, itā€™s the thought that counts and a four-bell honour is pretty darned fine!

And on that (ahem) note, I wish a Merry Christmas to all.

Letter 1841

Henry Barham Sr. to Hans Sloane – May 10, 1712


Item info

Date: May 10, 1712
Author: Henry Barham Sr.
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4043
Folio: ff. 45-47



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 45] Worthy Sr. ever Since I had the Happiness to Read your first Volume (the Second I Never did See) I could not be contented without makeing you some Acknowlodgment of the great Benefit I have Received thereby and I think the Whole Island ought unanimously Joyne in their Thanks to you; for the great Pains, Industry and labor in Compileing soo usefull a work. Butt such is the ungratefulness of some men (and those that the Rest have an Eye or Regard too) because they are not Consulted with, or had not a hand in itt; under Values and exploads that. that they scarse gave themselves time seriously to Read or unprejudice to Consider some of these men who ar [sic] thought by the Rest to honore. Capable of Reading and Judging; belive what ever they say; soo that a book is oftimes Condemned in Generall before ever it is Particularly Read or Considered; Such misfortune your Laboring and usefull History hath mett with Here; for you shall not meet with one in Tenn that Spekes slightly of it that ever Read itt. Some are Dissatisfyed with putting names in your Observation of Diseases others that the Practis is very mean and Plaine (I am sure it is safe) Butt the main Objection is; that you have writt the Names and their severall kindes of Plants in Latin wch very few understands in this Island. Altho you have Described their groath in English yet they are to look for a Name, they also wish you had been larger in the virtues of them. To Rendir these if their were an Abstract writt of the Nature and as Plaine as Culpepers English Physitian and Referr them to the figure of the Plant: I Belive every Planter would have one of them in his House: I hope youl Pardon my great Presumption in offering to Prescribe Rules or Method to soo Learned and eminent a Person. My zeal and Sincear affection to soo usefull and Laborius work makes me I Cannot forbare Spakeing or writeing with sincerity what may be of use and service to have the book more [?]: wch att present seem to be slighted Here and if anything in my mean Capacity may be usefull I shall be ready to Communicate it with all Integrit: I have for these many years made it my Indevors to finde out the specific qualityes of Plants wch is no small Task: and oftimes meet with Disapointments Through the fond Opinion and Credulity of some Persons: some will have the Corlex Peru to grow here, butt I Cannot meet with any that Certainly Know it when growing: Just after the Flagration on Port Royall where great quantitys of the bark was very [?] scarse any to be gott and that at an excessive price Other as well as myself made use of a Bullie [?] Free Bark wch answeard in intermitting Fevers butt in greater quantity: Here is a bark lately made known to our Traders by a Bishop Upon the Maine wch is famd and great esteem with the Peple for gravell stone or stoppage of Urine I often given it with good success it make a Pleasant Drink like New wort[?]; and it is Observd that is rare to find a Tree farr from Spanish Town and scarse a Tree of any bigness but what is bark; I am Informd that the lords [?] sends great quantityes off the Island: butt This Bark is farr short of a Plant wch in yr History is Called Montastrunk Maximum, flore CarabooNard Odore [?]; as I have had great and Certain experience off where there hath been a Total privation of Urine fainting sweats and Nothing butt Death expected: it give immediate relief and brought away in some an incredeable quantity of small stones and Gravell in some Slimy Thick Urine I Could write a small Treatise of examples; This particular quality or Virtue of the Plant is not Knowne to any at present butt myself to whome they apply too here is a bark whose Virtues are not much known Nothing Can Compare to it for Bitterness a small handful of the shavings of the wood will see Bitter severall Gallons of Water Altho butt just Dip and taken out Againe that [?] wormwood Can exceed; the Herb that Cured Capt: Pickerings Eye when it was to all appearance thrast out of its place with a stick is wonderfully esteemd with the Planters a Negro onely putt in some of the Juice of the Herb and Laid some of the Bruisd Herb over all the Eye and it Healed it to great admiration The Hogg Gum as its Called is more in use then ever taken while fresh and New from the spurs of the Tree with a little sugar and water passes Through in the most Violent Belly ach it also hath great effect Dissolved in a Emollions Clyster and farr exceeds the belly ach weed when it is Old it will be very [fol. 46] very hard Melt it with a little hoggs fatt, Beed was [?] and a little birth wort Root in Powder makes a Balsam that will Cleanse the most foulest Ulcer a Negro Can have fill it with flesh and skinn off boy and anything that I can you meet with; The Gum Guaiacum Carefully administred Cures the Dropsie as I have lately had the experience in Three Desparate Cases The good Opinion of our hot Baths (to windward, increases Daily and great Cures are done by Drinking of itt more than by Bathing and were it not soo Difficult to combat it would be much more frequented I wonder it Never was Essayed Uppon a Minerall water as St Faiths in St Johns Parish, found it Impregnated with an Antimonial Sulphur and Vitrioloick salt it hath Relived severall Dropsicall Persons, and indeed where that water is according to my Judgment and by the Syptoms that Albaso Alonso Barta gives of mines it Must be very Rich one I Dugg into is about 3 or 4 feet and found about eleven Vainss Running North and South under a River and under a great mountaine the Lower I wonder the more solid the Oars by Less Shining and of the Nigrilla Tribe as the Spaniards Calls them out of 16 ounces of the Blackest [?] well washed and Ground I Could gett 4 ounces of Blaught [?] Regulus every wayes like to Regulus of Antimony 8 grains wrought uppwards and Downwards with a Negro bringing away many large worms: I had proceeded further in my search Had I not been prevented by Malicious Persons who Neither doo good themselves nor Lett anybody else have the Creditt; I Essayed a hott bath at the Round Hill as it is Calld butt not Much hotter then Blood I Could extract 1 ounce of square and graind salt out of 20 ounces of Water I Could not perceive any Sulphur or Nitras [?] as was Generally Thought nor att present accoundt for its Warmthl Here is late by found great and Certaine Virtues in a Plant Called the blood flower (and by some falslet Called Spocacranha[?]) and is the poysione erectum folio oblonga [?] flora umbellate, notatis soccinaris reflexis in your History of Jamaica, the Leafs outwardly Applied give Immediat relief in the Gout Drawing Violent by a Water out [?] the part The flowers stopp Bleeding att eh Nose Altho butt Smelt [?] too. And a Decoction of the whole Herb Cures fluxes and Gonarrhea [sic] as a Patient of myne lately experienced and after a Long while takeing of Balsamicks and Resringents [?] to noo purpose this Herb Cured him in 2 or 3 times takeing it was Discovered by a Negro. The Negroes have mad use of the Poppanax Root as it is Called here to Poyson their slaves as some hath Confessed when Suffering Death, and they say a large Wilde Bean that growes in the woods Will expel the Poyson I have been shown it and take it to be the Phascolus Maximus, Siligua ensiforme nervis insignita es semine Albige [?] in your History Plant wch I think you have not taken notice of and of the Tribe of Ferns or Capillary Plants; it hath a small Purple flower round the edges of the Leaf and after comes a large seed in shape tho not soo large as Hemp; wee have the Tarantula with Eyes on the back of the head as Baglivi spakes off butt not soo large nor venomous they are very black and Shining like Japan and have have a read spott Uppon the streech [?] About as bigg as a Pinn head; I have been Called to 2 Persons that have been bitt with them and a Negro manl the Other a White boy boath in Violent Pains in all their Joynts and sometimes Delirious the Negro quickly Recoverd butt Complained of a Cold and Numbness and is to this day Troubled with them once a yearl I had a small ruff stone like Iron stone seem to be broak of from a much larger wch would attract Iron as powerfull as any Load Stone that ever I sat in proportion it was brought from or Near Palmers Hutt in 16 Mile walk from whence they have brought me very large stones full of Iron where they say there is a Mountain off itt These are onely some Hints I give you wch if of any Service to you I Can inlarge Uppon them; and many Other things; butt I am afraide I have been so bold and Troublesome wch is admits of Pardon I shall always myself your most Devoted and faothfull Servant to Comm Henry Barham From my House in St Iago dela Vega May 10th 1712

Henry Barham (1670?-1726) was a botanist. He lived in Jamaica and corresponded with Sloane on the plant and animal life of the island. Parts of Barham’s letters to Sloane appeared in the latter’s Natural History of Jamaica (T. F. Henderson, Barham, Henry (1670?1726), rev. Anita McConnell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1374, accessed 13 June 2011]).




Patient Details

Contracts and Early Modern Scholarly Networks

By Ann-Marie Hansen

In the face of such an extensive collection of correspondence as Sir Hans Sloane’s, one might well ask how a person could establish such a network of contacts in the days before electronic social-media. Each relationship tells its own story, of course, but Sloane communicated with many scholars within what was known as the Republic of Letters. This intellectual community had a set of rules governing the proper way of establishing a written exchange.Ā (For recent commentary on the need for rules in online academic sociability today, see here, here and here!)

One such practice was the epistolary contract, which allows us to understand how such relationships were established. This was a formal agreement between correspondents that determined their respective responsibilities and subsequently formed the basis for all further communication. Such contracts were especially necessary in cases where the correspondents never met and so couldnā€™t discuss the details in person; as a result we find evidence of several such contracts in Sloaneā€™s correspondence with French scholars.

Jean Paul Bignon. Engraving by C. Duflos after H. Rigaud, 1708. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

In the crucial first letters of an exchange a relationship would be offered and, if accepted, the specific terms would be negotiated such that the ensuing ā€œcommerce de lettresā€ would suit both parties. The language used reveals a contractual nature of the proposed exchange, for example referring to conditions and obligation. There is, however, also a hint of the relationship’s commercial nature. The goods and services to be provided by one or both sides were discussed, as well as the fair compensation for these favours. This was ordinarily payment in kind, such as scientific news from France being traded for scientific news from England. This was the case in the exchange proposed by the AbbĆ© Jean-Paul Bignon, who wrote:

 

My wishes would be fulfilled if [ā€¦] it would please you to enter into some sort of exchange with me, and from time to time send me news of what is happening in the learned world. [ā€¦] To make an advance on the dealings that I am proposing, the principal gain from which will be mine, I am sending you literary news which particular reasons keep us from printing in our journals.Ā (Sloane MS 4041, f.Ā 324)

Epistolary contracts sometimes stipulated how often each person had to write, and if either party did not meet these obligations they could expect to be reprimanded for their silence. Sloane himself was scolded in November 1695 for neglecting his recently established correspondence with the journalist Henri Basnage de Beauval. Having heard of Sloaneā€™s recent nuptials with Elizabeth Langley (in May 1695), Basnage admitted that taking a wealthy wife was sufficient reason for having lately been overly occupied, but insisted that Sloaneā€™s new situation did not free him from his prior commitments.

But please, you are not henceforth excused from the obligation to which you committed yourself. It is time that I remind you that you offered me an epistolary exchange, and that is a commitment which I do not accept to have been annulled by the other duties that you have recently taken upon yourself. Be so good then as to fulfill what you promised me, and recognize that it is well that I should ask you to do so.Ā (Sloane MS 4036, f. 219)

Sloane must have replied promptly enough after that, as the two men exchanged news for some years to come. Moreover, given how vast a network of contacts continued to communicate with Sloane, this temporary failing on his part seems to have been a rather rare occurrence. He did only marry the one time after all.

Original French Quotations

(1)Ā Je serois au comble de mes souhaits si [ā€¦] vous voudrĆ©s bien entrer dans quelque sorte de commerce avec moi; et me mander de temps en temps ce quā€™il y aura de nouveau par rapport aux Lettres. [ā€¦] Pour faire des avances du commerce que je vous propose, et dont le principal Ā­Ā­fruit doit me revenir, je vous envoye les nouvelles Litteraires que des raisons particulieres nous empechent d’imprimer dans nos Journaux.

(2)Ā Mais vous nā€™etes pas sā€™il vous plaist dispensĆ© pour toujours de lā€™obligation oĆ» vous vous estes engagĆ© vous mesme. Il est temps que je vous fasse souvenir que vous mā€™avez offert un commerce de lettres, et cā€™est un engagement que je ne pretends point qui soit rompu par les autres soins dont vous venez de vous charger. Ayez donc la bontĆ© dā€™executer ce que vous mā€™avez promis, et trouvez bon que je vous en sollicite.

Lost Letters in the Eighteenth Century

Copies of William Dockwraā€™s postal markings used in 1680-1682. Credit: Michael Romanov, Wikimedia Commons.

Copies of William Dockwraā€™s postal markings used in 1680-1682. Credit: Michael Romanov, Wikimedia Commons.

Sending a letter around the turn of the eighteenth century was an uncertain business. Although the Penny Post (1680) had enabled the daily delivery of letters within ten miles of London, letters were generally sent with travellers or servants or, perhaps, by diplomatic channels, over longer distances. As Alice Marples recently hinted, warfare, lost ships, highwaymen, pirates and unreliable bearers were potential barriers to delivery. Hans Sloaneā€™s correspondents, not surprisingly, had much to say on the matter of postal problems–including, sometimes, the letter-writer himself!

The path of sending letters was sometimes complicated. William Fraser forwarded Sloane a letter from Dr Martini in Riga. Fraser had left Martini’s letter behind in Hamburg by accident and had only just received it once more. Any replies were to be directed to Fraser at Robinā€™s Coffeehouse, which he would then forward to Martini in Riga. Fraserā€™s letter was undated, so there is no telling how long it took for Martiniā€™s letter dated 20 December 1717 to reach Sloane. Jacob Scheuchzer of Zurich had a detailed back-up plan that he needed when he did not hear from Sloane, despite sending several letters, in 1716. He wrote to John Woodward in England who then forwarded Sloane a copy of the original letter.

This was a wise decision when letters and packages might be lost. Letters sent between countries were especially at risk. Ā Denis Papin, for example, only learned in 1709 that Sloane had sent a letter to him in France when a mutual acquaintance told him. Johann Philipp Breyne, writing from Amsterdam, was disappointed in 1702 when he discovered that Sloane had never received his letter from Rome, which had included (tantalizingly) a ā€œcurious accountā€. But even letters sent within England might go astray. In April 1702, Abraham de la Pryme, writing from Thorne, was unsure whether or not Sloane had received his last monthā€™s letter about a man bitten by a rabid dog. To make matters worse, the Philosophical Transactions that Sloane had sent him had also not arrived!

Despite the problems, people seem to have trusted the post enough to send valuable items through it. William Sherard reported in 1701 that several prints had arrived from Paris and were at the post office awaiting payment of customs fees. Sherard also promised that his brother, once returned from Paris, would send Sloane some books. John Ray, in 1697, let Sloane know that he had finally received Sloaneā€™s package of flower specimens.

Of course, sometimes lost letters were the ones ignored buried under Sloaneā€™s piles of correspondence. In May 1704, Nehemiah Grew wrote to Sloane about one of Ralph Thoresbyā€™s letters (subject unspecified). Sloane had apparently not yet responded to or returned the letter, despite his promises for over half a year. This, Grew complained, put him in a difficult position. He demanded that Sloane return Thoresbyā€™s letter immediately. Sloane presumably returned the letter and it seems likely that the letter was eventually published in the Philosophical Transactions (1704) as the (delightfully titled) ā€œAn Extract of a Letter from Mr Ralph Thoresby, F.R.S. to Nehemiah Grew, Fellow of the College of Physicians and R.S. concerning a Ball voided by Stoolā€.

Sloaneā€™s lack of a reply to Grew and Thoresby does, however, make me wonder how many of these ā€˜concernsā€™ about lost letters were actually Sloaneā€™s correspondents issuing polite reminders to reply— a strategy that is as useful Ā in the age of electronic communication as it was in the eighteenth centuryā€¦

October 9 is World Post Day: the celebration of the Universal Postal Union, founded in 1874, which allowed for the development of a reliable international postal service.

For more on early modern letters and post, see James Daybell, The Material Letter in Early Modern England (2012).

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