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Letter 1524

Johann Jakob Scheuchzer to Hans Sloane – July 22, 1708


Item info

Date: July 22, 1708
Author: Johann Jakob Scheuchzer
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4041
Folio: f. 180



Original Page



Transcription

Scheuchzer sends meteorological and barometric observations. His natural history of Switzerland is being published in German. He will send a copy to the Royal Society. Scheuchzer mentions Henry Morgan, Governor of Jamaica. Johann Jakob Scheuchzer (1672-1733) was a Swiss scholar and physician. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1703 and his work was published in the Philosophical Transactions. In 1708 his Itinera aplina tira was published in London. It was dedicated to the Royal Society. His largest project was the Itinera per Helvetiae alpines regions facta annis 1702-1711, dedicated to his travels and published in four volumes in 1723 at Leiden (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Jakob_Scheuchzer).




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Letter 3451

John Dennis to Hans Sloane – April 30, 1728


Item info

Date: April 30, 1728
Author: John Dennis
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4049
Folio: f. 157



Original Page



Transcription

Dennis sends a copy of the first volume of one of his current projects. He solicits Sloane’s opinion. John Dennis was a literary critic, dramatist, and prolific writer. His ‘The Advancement and Reformation of Modern Poetry’ of 1701 was an influential work of literary criticism. Dennis was prone to public spats with other critics and lost friends as a result (Jonathan Pritchard, Dennis, John (16581734), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/7503, accessed 18 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 2870

John Dennis to Hans Sloane – September 17, 1722


Item info

Date: September 17, 1722
Author: John Dennis
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: f. 295



Original Page



Transcription

Two books are to be printed if they are deemed acceptable. Sloane is to review them. Dennis hopes Sloane will subscribe to them if they meet his approval. John Dennis was a literary critic, dramatist, and prolific writer. His ‘The Advancement and Reformation of Modern Poetry’ of 1701 was an influential work of literary criticism. Dennis was prone to public spats with other critics and lost friends as a result (Jonathan Pritchard, Dennis, John (16581734), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/7503, accessed 18 July 2013]).




Patient Details

An Eighteenth-Century Rogue

A letter that begins “Since the Unfortunate Affair in Kensington whereby I lost all my Substance, My Expectations and my friends” caught my attention while I was rooting through documents in the archives.

Botanist Richard Bradley found himself strapped for cash. He was managing to scrape by “at the publick Expence”, but publishing was an expensive business and all of his money had gone to paying off booksellers. He was even considering going abroad: “my Inclinations are for it, Even into the Most Dangerous country”. Bradley was unsure which was worse: “to live upon Expectations at home is as bad as it can be to venture one’s Life among Savages abroad”. What he truly wanted was “to have a Garden of Experiments for General Use”—something, no doubt, that Bradley hoped would capture Sloane’s attention, given his interest in and support of the Chelsea Physic Garden. He concluded that such a garden would allow him to “gain an Improving Settlement” and to “do my Country some Service without restraint of Booksellers”.

As a scholar, I was struck by his indebtedness to booksellers, but what on earth was his “Unfortunate Affair”? I just had to explore the letter’s background! A bit of digging revealed Bradley to be a bit of a rogue who constantly asked for (and received) money from his friends. Historian Frank Egerton has taken a sympathetic view; Bradley was a man who lived in an age when there was no government support for scholarship and, lacking personal wealth to support his investigations, he ended up in a cycle of constant debt. A fair point… though Bradley seems to have been particularly bad at managing his affairs.

Cannons Park, Middlesex (destroyed). Engraving from Vitruvius Brittanicus, vol. 4, by J. Badeslade & J. Rocque (London, 1739), plate 24. From Wikimedia Commons.

Born in 1688 to a middle-class London family, Bradley received a good education, but never attended university. He published widely on popular medical and scientific topics. He was known for his expertise in botany and managed to attract high-ranking patrons, including James Brydges, the Duke of Chandos (and husband of Cassandra Willughby). Brydges hired Bradley to oversee the planting of gardens at his estate, Cannons Parks, and even helped him out financially in November 1717, sending money to pay off personal debts. Then, in 1719, Brydges found that Bradley had mismanaged a substantial sum. It seems likely that this is the “Unfortunate Affair”. But he recovered and by 1724, William Sherard had recommended him for the position of Professor of Botany at Cambridge. As part of the Professorship, Bradley promised to found a botanical garden.

Bradley was, perhaps, generally unreliable. The Royal Society notes that “his ignorance of Latin and Greek and his failure to perform his duties caused great scandal”. Yet, despite his many problems, Bradley was still able to persuade people to invest in him. If his relationship with Sloane is typical, I can understand why. Bradley comes across as likeable in his correspondence. Starting in 1714, he occasionally sent Sloane news (e.g. of a hermaphroditic horse) and illustrations (e.g. a lizard from Sloane’s cabinet). In return, he sometimes asked Sloane for advice or employment recommendations.

Bradley again found it difficult to make ends meet by 1726. He had not founded his botanical garden and had trouble attracting students (whose fees were needed to support him). He wrote to Sloane offering him a saffron kiln in return for a favour: help in—of course—getting free from the “booksellers’ hands”. The following year, Sloane noted at the bottom of another letter from Bradley: “Sent him a guinea”. In 1729, Bradley’s financial problems appeared to have been sorted he married a wealthy woman. But within a short time, Mary Bradley’s money had gone to pay off his many debts, and the unlucky couple was forced to sell off household furnishings and move into more modest lodgings.

Bradley died as he lived in 1732, after a long and expensive illness that left his wife and child in debt. The last letter about Bradley was from his widow, asking Sloane for support. And, given his history with Bradley, Sloane likely provided the widow with assistance.

Perhaps Mrs Bradley was better than her husband at money management, as she was never heard from again.

Sources

F. N. Egerton, “Richard Bradley’s relationship with Sir Hans Sloane”, Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 25 (1970), 59–77.

F.N. Egerton, “Bradley, Richard (1688?-1732)”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005.

Letter 3587

Hans Sloane to Charles-Irénée Castel de Saint-Pierre – May. 27. 1714


Item info

Date: May. 27. 1714
Author: Hans Sloane
Recipient: Charles-Irénée Castel de Saint-Pierre

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4068
Folio: f. 89



Original Page



Transcription

MonSr. May. 27. 1714 J’ay eu l’honneur de recevoir vos deux lettres dont je vous remercie aussi bien que d’un exemplaire de vostre livrs traduit en Anglais Sur un projet de paix universelle et d’autre que l’on donne sur les chemins. Si tout[?] que j’ais receu vos papiers je les fis rendre a MonSr. Watts par un de les confreres. Je suis beaucoup obliges a vostre bonte de tout cela. Je serai fort aise que la paix generale sois etablie pour tousjours car les craintes quoique fort souvent sans fondement, & quoique bien fondier souvent dits pres par des providences imprevues ne laissent pas de faire du dommage a la faute de pauvres mortels, qui quelques fois ont de telles for blesser d’esprit de trouver la danger ou il n’y en a point. Les mauvais chemins aussi sont des gens malades, par exemple les grandes secousses font que les pierres dans les reins ou dans la vessie donnent de la peine qui autrement seraient restées en repos, le froid & toutes les incommodites des voyages sur des mauvais homines en ne chout le monde a des telles entreprises qui sont fort utiles dans la guerre son des plusieurs maladies sauvage ainsi Je ne peux pas assez louer ces Personnes comme vous qui travaillent a tant des biens. Si je vous puis estre de quelque utilite dans ces sortes des choses je le ferai tres volonters & suis Vostre Mr. L’Abbe de St. Pierre.




Patient Details

Letter 2234

Nicholas Martini to Hans Sloane – December 20, 1717


Item info

Date: December 20, 1717
Author: Nicholas Martini
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 83-84



Original Page



Transcription

Martini laments that he no longer hears from ‘foreign curious Friends and Patrons’. His friend, David Krieg, died during the last bout of the plague. Martini enjoyed Sloane’s History of Jamaica. He fondly remembers visiting Sloane in 1702 and 1703. The war of ’18 Years Standing’ has caused the deaths of all the interesting people in Riga and Martini has only ‘small provision’ because of the siege. He offers his service and would be happy to trade sugar and tobacco from Sloane’s Jamaican plantation in the Baltic after the war comes to an end and ships can travel freely. He suggests buying one thousand loaves of refined sugar ‘with the lowest price a pound’ due to the large quantity. Martini asks whether Flagsby and Wilson are still alive and wants to know ‘whiter [sic] the first hath invented no new baro and thermometers and the last no new curious microscopes’.




Patient Details

Letter 3442

Charles Goodwin to Hans Sloane – April 4, 1728


Item info

Date: April 4, 1728
Author: Charles Goodwin
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4049
Folio: ff. 140-141



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 140] Apr. 4th. 1729 Sr For about 18 days, or rather nights, as soon as warm in my bed, I have bin under grievous pains in both my feet, my right much ye worst, wth the Gout, wch continued all the nights till 8 or 9 in ye morning, then wearisomness procured me some sleep till towards noon, wch pacified the pain, and I gott up, & drink Coffee or Tea wth bread & butter, & laid my feet up in pretty easy benumd condition all the day after, both being much soothd, & ye great pain renewing evry night. After a littler slumm one night I found my pain suddainly gone out of my feet, & immeadiately my bowells all in commotion, upon wch I drank a Tea cupp of snake root Cordial being that root, scutchaneel, & saffron steepd in Brandy, wch I keep by mee for such purpose, this presently quieted my bowells, & set my feet to akeing again, & my bowells quiet ever since. And now my pains in my feet are much abated, & my rest returnd in ye nights I bless God to mee. I have eat & drank wholesom food wch a good stomach all ye time, & chearfull afternoons. Lyeing long a bed, & constant sitting made my makeing water uneasy, for wch. I suppd on mallow gruel, wch much helpd me. And now every morning I find the swelling of my feet down, but they begin to fill towards ye after noon, & are much swell’d by bed time, and pitt, the pain has kept verry much inward in the feet amongst the Nerves, & little of redness outwardly on the swellings, the swelling seems now to rise something above the ankles to ye small of the legg whereas it has kept hitherto totally in the feet. I would desire to know whether I am to wait on its dispersing itself in its own time & manner or whether by bleeding, or by purging, or any other meanes, I should endeavour to dispers, & abate it, as it now is. Thus we strive to sustain these crasie earthly tabernacles what we can, begging that God will give the soul, pardon & a blessed immortality. A word of your thoughts will oblige verry much. Sr Yr verry humble servant I am at waies rideing, & in exercise when pretty well. Now going into my 69th yeare. For mee at Rowant near East grinstead in Sussex Cha Goodwin. ally Nephew Goodwin shall wait on you wth my thanks. The Cordiall above, & Sr Wal. Rawleigh’s is good I perceive, when it attacks stomach or bowels, but what is to be done, if it attack the head, I am totally ignorant, & that they say it does sometimes, pray what is to be done in that case, sure that must be verry badd. [Prescription written in Sloane’s hand:] Infus. amar. Chalybeat. pulv. Jalap. Lemel in ana.




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Charles Goodwin
    Gender:
    Age:69 years old.
  • Description

    Goodwin is losing sleep as a result of his trouble with gout.

  • Diagnosis

    Gout.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Goodwin took 'Sir Walter Rawleigh's' Cordial and another 'Cordial being that root, scutchaneel, & saffron steepd in Brandy'. He is trying to eat well and take exercise.


    Ongoing Treatment:

    Sloane prescribed an 'Infus. amar. Chalybeat. pulv. Jalap. Lemel in ana.'


    Response:

    'Sir Walter Rawleigh's' Cordial caused headaches.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Swelling, Headache, Pain, Gout, Sleep

Letter 3405

Hans Sloane to Jean Aymon – Nov. 17. 1702.


Item info

Date: Nov. 17. 1702.
Author: Hans Sloane
Recipient: Jean Aymon

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4068
Folio: f. 38



Original Page



Transcription

Monsr. J’ay recue il y a quelqs temps vos trois lettres adrefser a la Society[?] Royale & moy mefme je les ay lire[?] dans une assemblee de la Societe aussie tot que je pouvoir après (pendant Lesquelles je les avoir recu[?]) leur vacances ordinaires. Ils m’ont commande de vous remercier de leurs party & de vous assurer de leur respects & services & de vous remarquer[?] qu’ils seront bien aiser[?] d’entendres votre progress dans les Sciences & propositions que vous avances mais qu’ils vient[?] pay des fonds pour L’assistance des Gens meritent. Ils ont prie Monsr. Halley de vous voir & de vous parler plus au long sur vos propositions. Je suis Monsr Votre Nov. 17. 1702. M Aymon




Patient Details

Letter 1494

Frances Coningsby to Hans Sloane – 1729


Item info

Date: 1729
Author: Frances Coningsby
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4075
Folio: f. 21



Original Page



Transcription




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Thomas Coningsby, 1st Earl of Coningsby
    Gender:
    Age:Born 1656.
  • Description

    '[S]truck with the dead palsie ... his speech is quite gone'.

  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:
    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:

    '[A]nd by all that we can guess his earnest desire is yt you'll be so good as to come down imediately to him which I beg you'll not fail to do or desin [] moment this being the last thing we can do for him...'

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Age, Apoplexy, Palsy, Paralysis

Letter 4420

Johann Georg Steigertahl to Hans Sloane – January 15, 1732


Item info

Date: January 15, 1732
Author: Johann Georg Steigertahl
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4052
Folio: ff. 58-59



Original Page



Transcription

Steigertahl hopes the package including the appendix for the first six months of the ‘Commerce literaire Nurenberg’ reached Sloane. A new volume has been published. He will send a copy as soon as possible. Steigertahl received word from Lübeck that Mr Sievers, a Member of the ‘Societé Royalle de Prusse’, has released a treatise on ‘lapidis musicalis’ (musical stones). He briefly discusses the book’s contents, but does not know whether it is in Latin or German as their librarian, Mr Förster, has not received an excerpt. Volumes ‘416 & 417’ of the Philosophical Transactions have arrived, but ‘411’ did not. Steigertahl requests that Sloane send another copy of ‘411’. Johann Georg Steigertahl (1666-1740) was the personal physician to George I of England. He was a member of the Royal Society and secured the purchase of Engelbert Kaempfer’s collection of East Asian curiosities for Sir Hans Sloane in 1723 (http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Georg_Steigerthal).




Patient Details