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Letter 1183

Étienne François Geoffroy to Jacques Cassini – September 7, 1700


Item info

Date: September 7, 1700
Author: Étienne François Geoffroy
Recipient: Jacques Cassini

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 63-64



Original Page



Transcription

Geoffroy consulted Bourdelot to answer Sloane’s questions. He believes Sloane’s catalogue should be annotated and bound with a copy of Vanderlinden’s Scriptis Medicis. Geoffroy will ask Dr Lefevre to do this for him. He was surprised by Halley’s meteorological reportage from the south. MM. Cassini, mathematicians Jean-Dominique Cassini and his son Jaccques Cassini, have left to measure the meridian from Paris to the Pyrenees. They send their best wishes. The shells that Sloane sent from England are surprising. This and other evidence suggest the earth was once covered in water. Geoffroy contemplates what would be covered should water levels rise again. He is preparing to leave for Italy with the Abbe de Louvois. He offers his services to Sloane and the Royal Society. Geoffroy promises to inform Sloane of any interesting observations. They have recently heard from Tournefort, who has sent drawings and descriptions of plants which Geoffroy will try to send before leaving. Etienne Francois Geoffroy (1672-1731) was an apothecary and physician who studied at Montpellier, like Sloane, and worked at the Jardin du Roi and College Royal (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etienne_Francois_Geoffroy).




Patient Details

Letter 2580

J. Hare to Hans Sloane – August 27, 1702


Item info

Date: August 27, 1702
Author: J. Hare
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4034
Folio: f. 31



Original Page



Transcription

A young man in ye house where I lodgd complaind too or three days of a pain in his right Ear which had been subject to a running humor in which time was apply’d to it some wool clean pickd as a little clarified honey which gave him but little ease. At length a maid Servt in ye house perceivd his Ear something bloudy & upon her searching saw something working in his Ear like maggots upon which a neighbouring Woman was sent for who applyd to it ye steam of warm Milk & a little after I was desird to see him & searching his Ear could plainly perceive a great number of Insects working in ye Conduit of his Ear & by degrees I pickd out 24 large maggots in shape & Colour like those that commonly breed in putrefied flesh. I could still perceive more remaining behind but being disturbd they workd so farr into ye Cavity of ye Ear that I could not easily get ‘em out, upon which I left him for about an hour in which time he was very uneasy & full of pain & then returning to him, I could at first perceive nothing but a think bloody matter but by degrees they workd outward & I pickd out nine more, after this he found himself more at east upon which we concluded that there were no more; the next day he found himself better & complaind no more of ye pain. The nicer consideration of this I leave to ye curious but ye matter of fact I affirm & in Testimony have subscribd my name Hare Vic. De Cardington Bedfordsh:




Patient Details

Letter 2587

Timothy Lovett to Hans Sloane – February 12, 1722/23


Item info

Date: February 12, 1722/23
Author: Timothy Lovett
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: f. 46



Original Page



Transcription

f. 46r Sr I have been troubled with a flegmatick cough above forty yeares spitting sometimes, thick & white clotted fleme one nostrill running corruptive thin matter smelling stinking shortness of breath but worst in ye morning it holds me an hour or more spitting makes me quamish & faintish till I have spit it up I use a litle brandy in ye morning I desire you would be pleasd to let ^me^ know whether it bee proper & what Liquors be fittest for mee to drink & what meat to eat I have used my selfe to smoaking severall years about 5 pipels a day but it is ready to make me short breathed. I find it opens & loosens ye body. I have severall knots in my hands and somtimes Itching pimples about mee which proceeds from ye scurvy I have a very Litle stomach to eat & what I doe eat it turns to thick fflegme it digests pretty well & I sleep I thanke God indifferently well swelling in my Leggs somtimes whether bleeding or vomitting convenient riding or going on foot which is most proper I can do either but not so well as formerly. Calibeats things I have taken & balsum of sulphur & linseed oile that which is binding I find is not proper for me pray Sr as you are an Eminent phisitian Lett me have yr best opinion of my distemper lisecor dec f. 46v I have much adoe to breath in a morning & I cannot walk far without a stopp for want of breath Sr if you can help me I will gratifie you Mr Lemmon may ffrind & an Apoticary at ye vanhelmans head on snow hill will wait upon you I would com up my selfe but London air choakes me. But if your worship thinks you can doe better by ye sight of me I will endeavour to wait on you soe expecting to hear from yr honnor I Remaine yr Humble Servant Timothy Lovett

Traces of black seal and postal mark on exterior of letter.




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Timothy Lovett
    Gender:
    Age:Over forty.
  • Description

    Smokes pipes.

  • Diagnosis

    Shortness of breath; phlegmatic cough; knots in hands; possible symptoms of scurvy (itching pimples on the hands); loss of appetite; swelling in legs.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Balsam of sulphur and linseed oil


    Ongoing Treatment:

    Sloane's prescription at the bottom of the letter notes: Oxymel. sallit. tinct. decoct. ox. lignis. bezoar. min.


    Response:
  • More information

    Hints at domestic medical practices, such as sending an intermediary friend to Sloane for advice. Also discusses his reluctance to travel to London.

  • Medical problem reference
    Nose, Skin ailments, Inflammations, Coughs

Letter 4475

Thomas Short to Hans Sloane – April 22, 1732


Item info

Date: April 22, 1732
Author: Thomas Short
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4052
Folio: f. 103



Original Page



Transcription

Short was recently abroad examining mineral waters. He has sent samples to the Royal Society, but is hesitant to reveal too much to its members because ‘there are always some indigent creatures attending the meeting of the Society, which are for picking up anything that will afford matter if publication for a bit of Bread’. Short discusses his researches and thanks Sloane for sending the Philosophical Transactions. Thomas Short was a Scottish physician who settled in Sheffield. He traveled throughout England examining the medical effects of mineral waters and published works promoting their use in 1725 and 1766 (Norman Moore, Short, Thomas (c.16901772), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25461, accessed 24 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 3728

Thomas Short to Hans Sloane – March 9, 1729/30


Item info

Date: March 9, 1729/30
Author: Thomas Short
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 286-287



Original Page



Transcription

Short describes his use of tea in the treatment of diarrhea and dysentery. The recipe for the tea is provided. There are several examples given of Short’s tea curing diarrhea, dysentery, and consumption. Thomas Short was a Scottish physician who settled in Sheffield. He traveled throughout England examining the medical effects of mineral waters and published works promoting their use in 1725 and 1766 (Norman Moore, Short, Thomas (c.16901772), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25461, accessed 24 July 2013]).




Patient Details

A Visit to Seventeenth-Century Jamaica

One of my favourite letters in Hans Sloane’s correspondence is one written by twenty-eight year old Sloane to Sir Edward Herbert on the 17th of April, 1688 (British Library, Sloane MS 4068, ff. 7-9). It’s a lively account of Sloane’s experiences of the new world, including earthquakes and pineapples!

A parodic cosmological diagram showing opposing aspects of the life of colonialists in Jamaica - langorous noons and the hells of yellow fever. Coloured aquatint by A.J., 1800. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

A parodic cosmological diagram showing opposing aspects of the life of colonialists in Jamaica – langorous noons and the hells of yellow fever. Coloured aquatint by A.J., 1800. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Sloane had arrived in Jamaica in December 1687, after a three month journey, to be the personal physician of the Duke of Albemarle, Governor of Jamaica. Although Sloane suffered from sea sickness during the journey, followed by a fever on arrival, he had settled into his new surroundings by April. His ailments had been but a trifle—“a little seasoning (as I call it)”—and he had since enjoyed perfect health.[1] The climate, Sloane noted, was also more hospitable than people in England assumed. Mornings and evenings might be hot, but the rest of the day was temperate; “I’m sure”, he wrote, “I have felt greater heat in some parts of France then ever I did here”. 

On the subject of local diet, Sloane wrote that the fruits were not as good as European ones. Pineapples, he thought, were “far inferior” to pippins, but the watermelons were “very good”. The local water was particularly excellent and he insisted that “it has preserved my life I’m sure”. Perhaps it had, since he was in good health—unlike the settlers he treated, such as the Duke of Albemarle and his crony, the Admiral Henry Morgan, whose dissolute behaviour was well-known. Many settlers, Sloane suggested, had “a false principle concerning the climate” and ended up killing themselves “by adding fewell to the fire & drinking strong intoxicating liquor”. Sloane’s letter hints at an underlying belief that whereas intemperate men would find a tropical climate difficult, a temperate man would find it temperate.[2]

Since February, Sloane had come to “dread” the local earthquakes. He described the start of a local quake:  “I finding the house to dance & cabinetts to reel I look’d out at window to see whither people remov’d  house or no”. When he noticed the birds “in as great a concern as my selfe” and another shake occurred, he realised what was happening. He promptly “betook [himself] to [his] heels to gett clear of the house”.  Before he even reached the stairs, the earthquake was over.

Sloane’s later report in the Philosophical Transactions (issue 209, 1694) is less humorous, but provides details about both the earthquake and his life in Jamaica. He was, for example, specific about the timing. Three small shocks occurred at eight in the morning, lasting only a minute. The report also included accounts from across the island. Ships in the harbour felt it, but one man on horseback didn’t even notice. A gentleman on his plantation “saw the ground rise like the Sea in a Wave” as it headed northward. Minor though it was, the earthquake still caused damage. Many houses were “crack’d”, “ruin’d” or lost tiles.

In the Phil. Trans., Sloane also revealed tidbits about his residence in Spanish Town and other Jamaican buildings. Sloane lived in a “high Brick House”. It must have been a good size, as he had to pass through two rooms to get to the staircase to go down. There was apparently a third (or fourth?) floor since “a pair of stairs higher” suffered the most damage from the tremors, with most items on the shelves falling down.

King's Square, St. Jago de la Vega (Spanish Town), c. 1820-1824. Most of these were late eighteenth-century buildings, although as early as 1672, it was a good sized area with 2000 households. Original: Hakewill, (1875), A Picturesque Tour of the Island of Jamaica Scan: http://archive.org/details/picturesquetouro00hake Internet Archive

King’s Square, St. Jago de la Vega (Spanish Town), c. 1820-1824. In 1672, it was a good sized area with 2000 households. The buildings in this picture date to the late eighteenth century.
From Hakewill, (1875), A Picturesque Tour of the Island of Jamaica. Source: The Internet Archive. http://archive.org/details/picturesquetouro00hake

The island’s Spanish architecture, in contrast, was very practical: low houses consisting only of ground-rooms, with supporting posts buried deep in the ground. This, Sloane explained, was “on purpose to avoid the Danger which attended other manner of building from Earthquakes”. He noted, for example, that “Inhabitants of Jamaica expect an earthquake every year” and that some believed “they follow their Rains”. Given the frequency of earthquakes in the region and the impracticality of Sloane’s residence, it was a good thing for him that this was a minor one.

While in Jamaica, Sloane did more than collect flora and fauna specimens and treat his patients. He keenly observed the world around him, whether it was the taste of fruit and water or the style of local buildings. Sloane might harshly judge the habits of the settlers, but his 1688 letter reveals an otherwise affable and curious young man who was enjoying his stay in Jamaica, even if he didn’t care for pineapple.

Or earthquakes.

[1] This referred to the process by which Europeans believed they would acclimatize to non-European climates, diseases, foods and waters.

[2] This fits with Wendy Churchill’s argument that Sloane attributed diseases to behaviour rather than to different climates or group complexions: “Bodily Differences? : Gender, Race, and Class in Hans Sloane’s Jamaican Medical Practice, 1687-1688”, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 60, 4 (2005): 391-444.

Letter 4394

Thomas Short to Hans Sloane – November 1, 1731


Item info

Date: November 1, 1731
Author: Thomas Short
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4052
Folio: ff. 32-33



Original Page



Transcription

Short’s previous letter concerned the mineral waters of Yorkshire and Berkshire, which he ‘examined at the spring head’. He has seen them cure ‘three fourths’ of distempers that are regularly treated with mineral waters. Short discusses mineral waters in great detail. Thomas Short was a Scottish physician who settled in Sheffield. He traveled throughout England examining the medical effects of mineral waters and published works promoting their use in 1725 and 1766 (Norman Moore, Short, Thomas (c.16901772), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25461, accessed 24 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 3732

Thomas Short to Hans Sloane – March 9, 1729/30


Item info

Date: March 9, 1729/30
Author: Thomas Short
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 286-287



Original Page



Transcription

Short describes his use of tea in the treatment of diarrhea and dysentery. The recipe for the tea is provided. There are several examples given of Short’s tea curing diarrhea, dysentery, and consumption. Thomas Short was a Scottish physician who settled in Sheffield. He traveled throughout England examining the medical effects of mineral waters and published works promoting their use in 1725 and 1766 (Norman Moore, Short, Thomas (c.16901772), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25461, accessed 24 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 3734

Thomas Short to Hans Sloane – March 9, 1729/30


Item info

Date: March 9, 1729/30
Author: Thomas Short
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 286-287



Original Page



Transcription

Short describes his use of tea in the treatment of diarrhea and dysentery. The recipe for the tea is provided. There are several examples given of Short’s tea curing diarrhea, dysentery, and consumption. Thomas Short was a Scottish physician who settled in Sheffield. He traveled throughout England examining the medical effects of mineral waters and published works promoting their use in 1725 and 1766 (Norman Moore, Short, Thomas (c.16901772), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25461, accessed 24 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 3729

Thomas Short to Hans Sloane – March 9, 1729/30


Item info

Date: March 9, 1729/30
Author: Thomas Short
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 286-287



Original Page



Transcription

Short describes his use of tea in the treatment of diarrhea and dysentery. The recipe for the tea is provided. There are several examples given of Short’s tea curing diarrhea, dysentery, and consumption. Thomas Short was a Scottish physician who settled in Sheffield. He traveled throughout England examining the medical effects of mineral waters and published works promoting their use in 1725 and 1766 (Norman Moore, Short, Thomas (c.16901772), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25461, accessed 24 July 2013]).




Patient Details