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Letter 4428

Francis Drake to Hans Sloane – Feb 18 1734/5


Item info

Date: Feb 18 1734/5
Author: Francis Drake
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4054
Folio: f. 7



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Transcription

Sir, Having made a journey to Oxford, since I saw you, to inspect some Mss in the Bodlegen Library, & have ^ing been much out of order since I came up this has prevented me from paying my respects to you in the manner I ought. The news-paper has, I hope, informed you that I am in readiness to publish; as soon as my subscriptions will anyways answer the great trouble & expence I have already been at in this undertaking be(cut off) affair in heavier than I expected,I have (cut off) of great apistance to support me in it I am a person yet unknown to the Leaned world ^& a reasonable difference may be taken at my ability & capacity to perform this work. The inclosed is a letter which I have drawn up in order to be read to the Royal Society, if you Sr. would do me the honour to communicate it. I have shown it to Mr. West of the Temple, who app (cut off) of it; & does not doubt but that it will have desired success, if you wou’d be pleased to recom-mend it you known humanity of candour will excuse this presumption from me; & your reading at all times to encourage the learned & ingenious, tempts me to believe I shall not ask in vain. However, I leave it solely to your own determination, & am with great respect, Good Sr. your most obliged & most faithfull humble servant F. Drake. Anchor York-Street Coveat-garden Feb 18 1734/5




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Letter 2609

John Manley to Hans Sloane – February 15, 1723/4


Item info

Date: February 15, 1723/4
Author: John Manley
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: f. 117



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Fol. 117 Last Sunday morning before day Mr Plowden had another fit: and another on Monday morning. Tuesday he was well; Wednesday morning had a fit again and none since that. Your favour of the 11th came not to me till yesterday the 14th. The child having miss’t the fit and being in a fine way of recovery, I presume if you were here, you would recall the order you have given for the Bark. On Sunday and Monday he bled pretty plentifully at nose. His Giddiness in quite gone. Till yesterday he has had a small inconsiderable headache, which would come and go off, but sometimes last about an hour. Of late he complains that the Electuary and julep go against his stomach and make him sickish. Pray tell me if he must take those remedies again. Last Saturday night he had another mishap in bed.




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Letter 4399

Archibald Adams to Edward Tyson –


Item info

Date:
Author: Archibald Adams
Recipient: Edward Tyson

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: MS 4066
Folio: ff. 252-253



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Dear Sr I have gottt the objects more usefull then curious and answerable to my purpose than a hundred & fiftie my designe is to demonstrate two membranes belong =ing to the tympane which no man can dispute att sight of these I hope they will appear so att London as they doe att Norwich, I don’t near yt the same membrane is composd of two lates united together but really two membranes distinct so farr as you see. What was by many supposd but were demonstrated to the best of my knowledge is here plain to the naked eye, blood vessels visible upon the exterior membrane that is the old membrane or [better?] which I have also seen upon the interior but the difficulty of the preparation makes me unable att present to show it, these I freely present to the RS[.] if I find any thing further about this matter or any other I shall not be wanting to communicate the same providing the Society will always think that I doe this and any thing also of this nature purely to con firme the world that I doe not so much rely upon notion & theory as matter of fact, and to serve them as much as I can towards the establishment of a natural historie of things, as I find these [ac= =cepted?] so I shall be encourag’d to proceed to further advances of this nature and at the same time do think my self very much beholden to you who am good Sr Yr most assured humble servt Archibald Adams I did once see the blood vessels of the small bones of the ear in Ruysch’s closet but upon the typmane I never did & believe me I value this object very much notwithstanding if I thought it 10 times the value I would give it thinking it may be more usfull in a publick repository yn in my pittefull apartment where non but [Mechanicks?] doe rome. I have above be pparations of the ear & many of em [are?] as plain as those but I hope these will suffice for the purpose. I hope you’l honour me with ane answer I send them in a wooden box by the post for security. Valeas. the object that have the blood vessels apparent must be exposd in the clearest light.

Archibald Adams writes Dr. Edward Tyson to inform him of his research concerning the human ear. Archibald sends Tyson a box of specimens and conveys his willingness to share any additional findings with the Royal Society. (There is record of Archibald Adam’s having his work published in the Philosophical Transactions on more than one occasion.)




Patient Details

Elizabeth Newdigate

Elizabeth Newdigate is the daughter of Sir Richard Newdigate, 3rd Bt. and Elizabeth Twisden.  She married Hon. John Chichester, son of Maj.-Gen.Arthur Chichester, 3rd Earl of Donegall and Lady Catherine Forbes, on 13 September 1726.      From 13 September 1726, her married name became Chichester.

Reference:

G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume IV, page 391.

 



Dates: to

Occupation: Unknown

Relationship to Sloane: Virtual International Authority File:

Letter 4472

Thomas Winder to Hans Sloane – May 24 1735


Item info

Date: May 24 1735
Author: Thomas Winder
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4054
Folio: f. 44



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Sr. I do my self the honour to send you an Account of a curious Collection of Silver Denarii, coin’d in the flowing state of the Roman Empire in the Reigns of the Cafors and of the most illustrious Emperors, which have been lately found in this country (and are now in my Hands) by 2 poor Men, sooking and trying for Lead-Minis. As you are so justly celebrated for your admirable Judgement in Polite and curious Knowledge you will pardon, I hope, the Presumption of a Stranger who only proposeth to qualifie your Curiosity in putting this Paper into your Hands and it will be a great Pleasure to me, if the Account is acceptable to so Aminent a Virtuoso. Tho the newest of these Coins must be sixteen hundred years old or near it, and some of them above seventeen hundred years old and have been hid many hundred years in the Earth, yet many of them are in extreme good condition and it is surprising how little they have suffer’d in so long a Revolution of Ages. The Busts of the Emperors for the most Part are in great Perfection raisd of surprising Beauty and Fulness, the in-scriptions fair and legible and the Devices are justly admie for their Elegance and curious Variety. In the Inscriptions the Imperial Titles are generally added only in a few the most common Titles are inverted. For Instance NERO CAESAR Alls And on the Reverse JUPITER CUSTOS Thus again HADRIANUS alls COS.m.pp On the Reverse SALUS Alls Imperial Titles are inserted and the Insert IMP. CAES. DOMEI AU GERM (cut off) TRP xv And on the Reverse IMP xii COS vii CENS.P.P.P. Thus again IMP. TRIANO AUG. GER. DAC P.M.TR.P. On the Reverse COS. P.P. S.P.L.R. OPTIMO PRINCIPI some this Form Occurreth IMP. CAES. NERUA. TRAIAN. AUG. GERM. and on the Reverse P.M. TR.P. COS iii P.P. and there are some Coins of a different Species with very ele-gant Busts of some Empeoss (as I suppose from the Inscriptions) which are FAUSTINA AUGUSTA And on the Reverse IUNONI REGINAE Or DIVA FAUSTINA And on the Reverse AUGISTA in the Motto’s a grateful Variety entertains the Curiosity and engageth the Attention of the Reader and the Devices are dislike by such a curious Diversity that it is my Opinion these coins were the Collection of some curious Person. I was skill’d in this kind of Knowledge and was able to describe in a worthy Manner the various Devices on the reverse of these Monuments of Antiquity, the Account. I have the Honour the day before you had been more perfect and entertaining but (dark) is the PRovince of a Learned Virtuoso such as Sir HANS SLOANE. The weight of the Denarius in the Reigns of the Emperors was exact (dark) Attack Drachm worth of our money & I ob. and they have lost a little considering their great Antiquity and the enevitable De- (dark) made by clearing them of the Rust they had contracted and (dark) them to a shining Brightness. I am Sir your most humble and obedient Serv.t P.S. If you shd have occasion (cut off) honour me with your Commands (cut off) pleased to direct for me.




Patient Details

Letter 1211

Pierre Bonnet Bourdelot to Hans Sloane – December 25, 1701


Item info

Date: December 25, 1701
Author: Pierre Bonnet Bourdelot
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 277-278



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Bonnet Bourdelot comments on Sloane’s library catalogue. He compares them to his own library catalogue and those of Van der Linden and Mercklin. Bonnet Bourdelot believes knowledge of English is now more important for a physician than is Greek. Pierre Bonnet Bourdelot was physician to Louis XIV and the Duchess of Burgundy.




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Letter 0909

Martin Lister to Hans Sloane – March 10, 1703/04


Item info

Date: March 10, 1703/04
Author: Martin Lister
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4039
Folio: f. 257



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Martin Lister was a physician and naturalist who was honored by being appointed second physician to the queen in 1710. He wrote and published several medical and natural history works, some of which appeared in Philosophical Transactions, as well as serving as vice-president of the Royal Society briefly in 1685-1686 (J. D. Woodley, Lister, Martin (bap. 1639, d. 1712), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/16763, accessed 11 May 2011]).




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Letter 0683

Arthur Charlett to Hans Sloane – May 4, 1701


Item info

Date: May 4, 1701
Author: Arthur Charlett
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: f. 165



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[fol. 165] Deare Sr The kind Concerne you have been pleased to expresse for this good young mans Health, obliges him to pay you his most Humble Thanks, and Duty for the same, as also I late required Mr Dennison to assure Dr Sloane, how much and often I love to talk of his many kindnesses to Learning, and what is very Personal to my Selfe, to all the Freinds of your most obliged and most Affectionate Humble servant Ar Charlett Univ. Coll May 4. 17:1

Charlett was elected Master of University College at Oxford in 1692 and held that post until his death in 1722. Charlett used the mastership to gain influence, especially through persistent letter-writing to numerous correspondents, sharing the latest literary, political, and scholarly gossip (R. H. Darwall-Smith, Charlett, Arthur (16551722), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/5158, accessed 18 June 2013]).




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Letter 0742

Arthur Charlett to Hans Sloane – March 31, 1701/02


Item info

Date: March 31, 1701/02
Author: Arthur Charlett
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 319-320



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Charlett thanks Sloane for his favours. He recommends Mr Denison, who is to call on Sloane. Dr Gregory has just left by coach. Dr Wallis is still of sound memory and reason and frequently remembers Sloane. Charlett was elected Master of University College at Oxford in 1692 and held that post until his death in 1722. Charlett used the mastership to gain influence, especially through persistent letter-writing to numerous correspondents, sharing the latest literary, political, and scholarly gossip (R. H. Darwall-Smith, Charlett, Arthur (16551722), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/5158, accessed 18 June 2013]).




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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, 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) – a naturalist-parson and patron of Sloane’s, easily the single person with whom he corresponded the most – 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. (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.