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Letter 3912

Hans Sloane to Jean-Paul Bignon – [?] Juillet 1731


Item info

Date: [?] Juillet 1731
Author: Hans Sloane
Recipient: Jean-Paul Bignon

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4068
Folio: f. 180



Original Page



Transcription

Monsieur LAbbe Bignon Aprés vous avoir presenté mes tres humbles Respêts, celleci est pour accompagner le dernier Catalogue des livres imprimer ici, avec la derniere Transaction philosophique. La premiere lui[?] s’imprimera contiendra des Experiences sur l’Electricité. Dès qu’elle sera publiée je ne manquerai pas de vous l’envoier. En attendant ce[?] l’honneur d’etre tres respectueusement, Monsieur, Votre tres humble et et tres obeisst Serviteur, Londres: Juillet 1731




Patient Details

Search the collections

Found 5320 Results
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) to Sloane.  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 Kent  and oldest brother of clergyman and natural philosopher Stephen Hales F. R. S. .  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 Hales 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 ‘the notorious injury he did their [Hodges grandchildren] parents in not settleing the promised £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 ‘liv’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 of Lord Schacher, Dean of the Medicinal Faculty at Leipzig. No other information about them is available.   Reference: Thomas Lediarde to Hans Sloane, 1735-08-25, Sloane MS 4054, f. 94, British Library, London        


N. N.

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A person known only by ‘N. N.’ wrote letter 4513 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

Publications

On the Sloane Correspondence

“Resisting Silences: Gender and Family Trauma in the Eighteenth Century,” Gender and History 32, 1 (2020): 30-53.

“Remembering Dr. Sloane: Masculinity and the Making of an Eighteenth-Century Physician,” Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies 42, 4 (2019): 433-453.

The Many Meanings of an Eighteenth-Century Account of a Caesarean Operation,” in John Cunningham (ed), Early Modern Ireland and the World of Medicine: Practitioners, Collectors and Contexts (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019).

“Sloane as friend and physician of the family,” in Alison Walker, Arthur Macgregor and Michael Hunter (eds), From Books to Bezoars: Sir Hans Sloane and his Collections (London: The British Library, 2012), 48- 56.

“The Body Embarrassed? Rethinking the Leaky Male Body in Eighteenth-Century England and France,” Gender & History 23, 1 (2011): 26-46

“‘An Account of an Unaccountable Distemper’: The Experience of Pain in Early Eighteenth-Century England and France,” Eighteenth-Century Studies 41, 4 (2008): 459-480.

“The Relative Duties of a Man: Domestic Medicine in England and France, ca. 1685–1740,” Journal of Family History 31, 3 (2006): 237-256

“Reassessing the Role of the Family: Women’s Medical Care in Eighteenth-century England,” Social History of Medicine 16, 3 (2003): 327-342.

 

On other topics

[with Laroche, Rebecca, et al.], “Becoming Visible: Recipes in the Making,” Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal 13, 1 (2018): 133-143.

“Bespelled in the Archives,” The Appendix: A New Journal of Narrative and Experimental History 1, 2 (2013): http://theappendix.net/issues/2013/4/bespelled-in-the-archives.

“Secrets of place: The medical casebooks of Vivant-Augustin Ganiare,” in Elaine Leong and Alisha Rankin (eds), Secrets and Knowledge in Medicine and Science, 1500-1800 (Ashgate, 2011): 213- 231.

“Imagining Women’s Fertility before Technology,” Journal of Medical Humanities.31, 1 (2010): 69-79.

“La Raillerie des Femmes? Les Femmes, La Sterilité et la Société en France à l’Époque Moderne,” in Cathy McClive and Nicole Pellegrin (eds), Femmes en Fleurs: Santé, Sexualité et Génération du Moyen Age aux Lumières (Publications de l’Université de Saint-Etienne, 2010), 203- 220.

Letter 3036

Robert Eaton to Hans Sloane – May 19, 1724


Item info

Date: May 19, 1724
Author: Robert Eaton
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4047
Folio: ff. 180-181



Original Page



Transcription

Eaton sends a proposal and requests that it is forwarded ‘to the same Authority yt the Account of this Medicin was first Dedicated’. It is up to Sloane to decide what to do. He sends abstracts for the other members of the Royal College of Physicians.




Patient Details

The Sir Hans Sloane Birthday Collection: Giants’ Shoulders #70

Sir Hans Sloane, collector and physician, was born on 16 April 1660. To celebrate his 354th birthday, I’m hosting the history of science carnival: Giants’ Shoulders #70. Sloane collected stuff of all kinds, from curiosities (natural and man-made) and botanical samples to manuscripts. He was very thorough… So what does one give the man who had (nearly) everything for his birthday? The gift of knowledge! Hosting Giants’ Shoulders follows–in a small way—in the footsteps of Sloane, who edited the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society for two decades.

Newspaper recipes pasted into a manuscript recipe book. Wellcome, WMS 7366, p. 78. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Newspaper recipes pasted into a manuscript recipe book.
Wellcome, WMS 7366, p. 78. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Being a physician was central to Sloane’s identity, so it’s fitting to start off with a round-up of history of medicine links. I must, of course, include a painful seventeenth-century medical case: that of “Samuel’s Stone-induced suffering”. Sloane, like many other eighteenth-century physicians, was no stranger to proprietary remedies; he even had his own special eye remedy. This month, we have “Proprietary Panaceas and Not-So-Secret Recipes”, “Newspaper Remedies and Commercial Medicine in Eighteenth-Century Recipe Books” and “The Business of Medicine”. Sloane was particularly interested in finding useful remedies and would, no doubt, have approved of our modern interest in reviving old treatments or exploring non-Western ones (“Under the Influence”). He was equally intrigued by indigenous knowledge (as was “A Pirate Surgeon in Panama) and older popular treatments (as was Thomas Scattergood in the early nineteenth century, here and here).

As President of the Royal College of Physicians from 1719, Sloane also would have been familiar with medical disputes and prosecutions against irregular practitioners, such as “Master Docturdo and Fartado: Libellous Doctors in Early Modern Britain”. A post on “The Return of Nicholas Culpeper” finds the traces of Culpeper’s career around London. I’ve often wondered whether Sloane would simply have seen Culpeper as an irregular practitioner, or appreciated what they had in common–botanical interests and willingness to treat the poor.

Photograph of a telescope that belonged to Caroline Herschel. Image Credit: Geni, 2008, Wikimedia Commons.

Photograph of a telescope that belonged to Caroline Herschel. Image Credit: Geni, 2008, Wikimedia Commons.

A driving factor in Sloane’s career was his insatiable curiosity. A teacher tells us why the history of science “is essential to engage students”, while “Hydra meets Handel” shows children participating in early modern science by gathering “duck pond detritus”. Sloane also encouraged curiosity in others, including women; for only two examples, he exchanged letters and botanical samples with the Duchess of Beaufort and Cassandra Willughby. There were lots of early modern women who practiced science—and this month, there were posts on Margaret Cavendish, Emilie du Chatelet and Caroline Herschel. Women could also be important patrons of science, such as Angela Burdett-Coutts. (Sloane certainly benefited from the patronage of women early in his medical career, particularly that of the Duchess of Albemarle.)

In his botanical research, Sloane catalogued and classified his specimens. Language was increasingly important in describing experiments and specimens, and was being developed and refined out of necessity. Robert Hooke, for example, coined sixty-eight words including (my favourites) “splatch” and “punk”. Over at Evolving Thoughts, a series on speciation outlines the origins of “speciation”, Linneaus’ contribution and late eighteenth-century developments. There are lots of posts this month about curiosities that might have appealed to Sloane, which I’ve divided into man-made and beautiful objects. Under man-made (and sometimes horrifying) objects, we have Holler’s copper plate, Dead Men’s Teeth (a.k.a. dentures), a Time-Traveling, Vote-Gathering Miraculous Acousticon, Brunel’s Atmospheric Railway and the plutonium box. Under beautiful objects, we have the Salagrama Stones, the Vessels of Hermes, a triangular book about alchemy, Nathaniel Wallich’s specimens, and a colourful atlas.

T. Rowlandson, 1787. A fashionable dentist's practice: healthy teeth are being extracted from poor children to create dentures for the wealthy. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

T. Rowlandson, 1787. A fashionable dentist’s practice: healthy teeth are being extracted from poor children to create dentures for the wealthy. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

One of the reasons that Sloane was so well-known for his botanical expertise is that he had actually travelled to Jamaica early in his career, gathered local knowledge and tried out local remedies. On behalf of the Royal Society, he also requested that some explorers bring back specific items or look into particular issues. In 1700, Edmond Halley returned to St. Helena and reported on the area. Halley’s travel descriptions weren’t intended for the Royal Society, but his travels would certainly have been of interest. Explorers have also been the mappers of new and old areas. There is a series of posts on “A Concise History of Geological Maps”, which highlights the many uses of mapping beyond the geographical (2, 3 and 4). The newest areas are sometimes very far away, such as Martian canals or the centre of the Earth. Getting to some places might have been impossible in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, though astronomical photography might help to span the distance. But in the end, the question remains: we can take humans out of their usual lands, but can we take the terrestriality out of the humans?

Experimentation, itself a way of exploring the universe, became increasingly important from the early eighteenth century. This month, I read about Isaac Newton’s experiments as instances of special power, the most famous failed science experiment, the lack of religious barriers to the practice of early modern science, experimental self-asphyxiation and experimental embryology in China. The secrets of the universe, however, are often invisible to the naked eye—perhaps more so than early eighteenth-century people even would have guessed. What about trying to study “the unfashionable ether”, magnetism and light rays, quantum physics… or medieval multiverses and modern cosmic conundrums? And that’s before we even get to time! Sloane would have been familiar with the attempts to measure time and longitude, but less so the pervasiveness of modern standardised time, the ancient methods of measuring the movements of the sun or a twentieth-century physicist’s obsession with time and existence.

Sloane would have been no stranger to scientific disputes (especially since he sometimes played mediator). Recently, there has been much lively discussion among historians of scientists about the T.V. series Cosmos. By and large, historians of science have been highly critical of the choices made: the focus on Giordano Bruno, the inaccuracies in the story of Bruno, frustrating omissions and outright misrepresentations. Other historians were a bit more sympathetic, with suggestions that historians of science need to tell more compelling stories and that we need to provide better alternatives to the Cosmos style of history.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Hunters in the Snow (Winter), 1565. Source: Wikimedia Commons, from Kunsthistoriches Museum.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Hunters in the Snow (Winter), 1565. Source: Wikimedia Commons, from Kunsthistoriches Museum.

To end the Sloane birthday edition, I offer some book reviews. Sloane, of course, was constantly adding to his library, as do most historians. You might be interested in acquiring Everyday Renaissance Astrology, The Book of Trees, Ice Time (especially for those of us suffering from this never-ending winter in North America), or Books and Readers at the Dawn of the Victorian Age.

Happy reading! See you next month over at The Renaissance Mathematicus, where Thony Christie will be hosting Giants’ Shoulders #71. His contact details are here, if you want to start sending in nominations for May.

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. (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 couldn’t discuss the details in person; as a result we find evidence of several such contracts in Sloane’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 “commerce de lettres” 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 Abbé Jean-Paul Bignon, who wrote:

 

My wishes would be fulfilled if […] 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. […] 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. (Sloane MS 4041, f. 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 Sloane’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 Sloane’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. (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) Je serois au comble de mes souhaits si […] vous voudrés bien entrer dans quelque sorte de commerce avec moi; et me mander de temps en temps ce qu’il y aura de nouveau par rapport aux Lettres. […] Pour faire des avances du commerce que je vous propose, et dont le principal ­­fruit doit me revenir, je vous envoye les nouvelles Litteraires que des raisons particulieres nous empechent d’imprimer dans nos Journaux.

(2) Mais vous n’etes pas s’il vous plaist dispensé pour toujours de l’obligation oû vous vous estes engagé vous mesme. Il est temps que je vous fasse souvenir que vous m’avez offert un commerce de lettres, et c’est un engagement que je ne pretends point qui soit rompu par les autres soins dont vous venez de vous charger. Ayez donc la bonté d’executer ce que vous m’avez promis, et trouvez bon que je vous en sollicite.

Letter 3407

Hans Sloane to Jean-Paul Bignon – le 20 d'octobre 1709


Item info

Date: le 20 d'octobre 1709
Author: Hans Sloane
Recipient: Jean-Paul Bignon

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4068
Folio: f. 52



Original Page



Transcription

Monsieur, A Londres le 20 d’octobre 1709 Il y a quize jours que je pris la liberté de vous envoyer quelques desseins de Persepolis par Mr. Mangold de Borte. je les ai addressés a Mr. Geoffroy. J’ai joins a ces desseins un Catalogue des livres quon a imprimer ici depuis un an, a fin que S’il y en a qui vous agreent, je puisse avoir l’honneur de vous les faire venir. Je vous envoye aussi deux livres; l’un de Mr. Lister de Haimor[?]. qui n’es pas commun, a cause qu’il y en a peu d’exemplaires que l’auteur fit imprimer a les depens; l’autre de Mr. Pitcairn[?] de Legibus Hist. Natur. qui fut imprim a Edinbourg il y a quelques années, mais qui pour de raisons particuliers n’avoir pas encore citer publier. Je vous aussi envoyé d’autres choses, Si je N’avait[?] crains de trop charger un Voyageur Outre d’ailleurs qu’il est parti d’ici trop Subitement. Il ne se fais ici rien de curieux, que je Saches qu’un livre des Muscles du corps humain de Mr. Coopers il en à deja donné deux Editions un 8e Mais presentement il en fais faire une infoli avec beaucoup d’additions es des planches plus exactes qu’il a dessinées lui meme Sur des cadavres es que l’on a gravées a l’eau forte. On a trouve depuis peu un Dens d’ivoire ou dens exertus d’Elephans pres de cette ville parmi du gravier. On ci trouva ici autrefois une autre a douze pieds dans la terres. Je l’ai dans mon cabines quoy qu’en pieces es fois alterées es [comme celci?] eu par les secs[?] et par les vapeurs de la terre. On peut voir pourtant que c’est une veritable dens d’Elephant. J’ai aussi une veritable Coquille en Nacre de Perle Des Indes Orientales qu’on a trouvé a quelque pieds dans la terre dans Buckingham Shire qui est un[?] province mediterannée on trouve aussi sous terre en Anglet une espece de Coquille qui vient des indes orientales es de la quelle on est[?] là pour les vitres es les lanterns. Comme ces etaient autrefois des parties d’animaux, il est difficile[?] de pouvoir en rendre conte, et expliquer comment toutes ces choses ont es découvertes de tous Strata de terre, de sable, de gravier et quelque fois reime de pierres. Je Suis avec un profound respect Monsr Votre trop humble et tres obeisant Serviteur. Hans Sloane




Patient Details

Bed-wetting in the Eighteenth Century

Sometimes the embarrassment and frustration of eighteenth-century sufferers seems to seep from their letters. One such case is that of a young boy, John Plowden. A Mr John Manley of Winchester wrote seven letters to Sloane in 1723-4, asking advice about the child’s lack of bladder control. The relationship between Manley and John is never made clear in the letters. The boy did not seem to be an apprentice and his father was still alive. His age was also not given, though it seems likely that he was at least the age of reason (seven)–but perhaps not much more. John’s own letter was composed in grammatical sentences, but he retained a childish script.

A man carrying a child’s commode. The child has just had an accident, according to the picture’s text. (1769) Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

In October 1723, Manley complained that John “has several times bepiss’d his Bed, & when ever that happens, it is always but midnight. He has also bepiss’t his Breeches about six times a day.” A month later, John and his nurse insisted that she had been “very careful & vigilant in complying” with providing John with his remedies. The real problem, though–as Manley claimed–was that John “is so negligent that he has sometimes bepiss’t his Breeches in the day time. I say tis his own negligence, for he is never deny’d leave to do down whenever he askes it”. A strong statement.

John reported in January 1724 that his control had improved. He was now able to wake himself up in the night when he needed to urinate and “don’t do it in my Sleep so often as I us’d to do”.  Manley noted that John had occasional mishaps in bed the previous month, but the nurse had spotted a pattern: the “mischances happen chiefly on those nights [when] at going to bed he makes but a small quantity of urine.” With the cause identified, it became possible to change John’s behaviour. Having John write his own letter to Sloane may also have been an attempt to make him take responsibility for his problem.

Setting aside the fact that toilet training is obviously a desirable goal, this case highlights the importance of bodily control from an early age in the eighteenth century. John’s guardian must have been deeply concerned about the “mischances” if he was consulting one of England’s leading physicians: few people wrote to Sloane about children and consulting Sloane was expensive (a guinea per letter). Manley saw this as a troubling matter.

In John’s case, his physical symptoms suggested a potentially worse problem–an underlying lack of self-control. By the early eighteenth century, there was a growing emphasis on masculine self-management in terms of mind, body and behaviour. Young boys were particularly vulnerable to learning bad habits that could have long-term effects. Manley’s letters reveal a tone of increased impatience with the boy’s repeated “negligence”, while John himself recognised a need to regain control of his own body. And this mastery needed to be as much mental as physical, including even the ability to wake himself when asleep. Much was at stake for young John Plowden.

I also discussed this case in “The Body Embarrassed? Rethinking the Leaky Male Body in Eighteenth-Century England and France”, Gender and History 23, 1 (2011): 26-46.

Update October 24, 2013: Hannah Newton has an excellent post up at earlymodernmedicine on remedies and explanations for bed-wetting (“Wet Beds & Hedgehogs”).

Letter 2995

John Plowden to Hans Sloane – December 19, 1723


Item info

Date: December 19, 1723
Author: John Plowden
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4047
Folio: ff. 114-115



Original Page



Transcription

Plowden wishes Sloane a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.




Patient Details

Letter 2956

William Plowden to Hans Sloane – September 9, 1723


Item info

Date: September 9, 1723
Author: William Plowden
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4047
Folio: ff. 45-46



Original Page



Transcription

Plowden describes the negotiations between Mr Sheldon and Lord Cadogan. The two men are involved in a real estate transaction. They will get ‘an act of Parliament for the exchange’, pending a formal agreement. Plowden describes a tract of land in Northamptonshire he would ‘freely sell to my Lord, on the same terms’ if the other deal came to nothing. He thanks Sloane for taking care of his son.




Patient Details