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Letter 2648

Lincoln to Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle – September 28, 1729


Item info

Date: September 28, 1729
Author: Lincoln
Recipient: Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: f. 161



Original Page



Transcription

Fol. 161 All the children have been out of order, this last week, but are now pretty well again; Lady Lucy, has had, the St Anthony’s fire in her arm; and a little fever in it, but is now quite well again, she was let blood, and tooke some physick, which has carry’d it, quite off. Harry and Lady Anne have have both had a purging ever since they came here, and indeed have had something of it, even on the road, but for this week past, it was to a great degree, and frightened me, tho’ Harry has never been in the least ill with it, so I think is not at all alter’d with it, tho’ t’as been so long upon him and I send for a Dr to them who told me it was a common effect of change of air, and was partly occasion’d by my having let them eat too much in their journey, and that t’was very happy it took that run, he has given them some little things, that have abated it, and agree with them. Harry’s is now very little and he is [ ] find Ly Anne is as gay as ever, but a good [line torn] before this looseness, she came into France. She hardly ever coughs and has no sort of fever and breaths well of nights, which she did not at home.




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: Lady Anne
    Gender:
    Age:Child
  • Description

    Lady Lucy was suffering with St Anthony's fire in her arm, accompanied by a little fever.

  • Diagnosis

    St Anthony's fire.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Blood was let and she took 'some physick'.


    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:

    Patient responded to treatment and no further course of action was proscribed.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Skin ailments, Fevers, Stomach, Stomach

Letter 2424

William Brinck to Hans Sloane – September 9, 1720


Item info

Date: September 9, 1720
Author: William Brinck
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 17-18



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 17] Kensington Fryday the 9th of Septembr 1720 Sir My Lady Portland having a Servant very sick, has ordereth me to begg the favour of Yr. Honr. to come here if possible to Night, for her Ladyship is very uneasy about him, and is desirous to consult You Sir if you please Sir Your Hon. most humble obedient Servant Wm. Brinck.

William Brinck was Secretary to Lady Portland.




Patient Details

Jean Rodolphe Lavater

Jean Rodolphe Lavater was a Swiss physician and naturalist educated in Zurich. He travelled to England in 1704-05 and became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1708.

Reference

(‘Jean Rodolphe Lavater’, Library Collection, www.royalsociety.org).

(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Fellows_of_the_Royal_Society_elected_in_1708) [accessed 31 January 2017].



Dates: to

Occupation:

Relationship to Sloane: Virtual International Authority File:

Letter 1274

Jean de Fontaney to Hans Sloane – December 1, 1705


Item info

Date: December 1, 1705
Author: Jean de Fontaney
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4040
Folio: ff. 99-100



Original Page



Transcription

Fontaney recommends the three missionaries destined for China. They will serve Sloane by collecting curiosities for him. Fontaney asks Sloane to recommend them to the East India Company, with whom they will be travelling. Jean de Fontaney (1643-1710) was a Jesuit priest who led Louis XIV’s mission to China in 1685. He and his team were admitted to the Academie des Sciences and equipped with astronomical and geological instruments to collect information on their trip. Fontaney was also a distinguished teacher of mathematics and astronomy at the College de Louis le Grand. His work was published in the Journal des Scavans and Memoires de l’Academie des Sciences (David E. Mungello, Curious land: Jesuit accommodation and the origins of Sinology, University of Hawaii Press, 1989: pp. 329-330).




Patient Details

Letter 2196

Bezaleel Sherman to Hans Sloane – July 20, 1720


Item info

Date: July 20, 1720
Author: Bezaleel Sherman
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 347-348



Original Page



Transcription

Sherman thanks Sloane for replying to his letter requesting advice on investing in the South Sea Company, even though Sloane would not help him. See: Sloane MS 4045, fols. 339-340. Bezaleel Sherman was a surgeon.




Patient Details

Letter 2408

Bezaleel Sherman to Hans Sloane – July 12, 1720


Item info

Date: July 12, 1720
Author: Bezaleel Sherman
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 339-340



Original Page



Transcription

Sherman asks about the bones of a calf fetus he sent Sloane some years back. See: Sloane MS 4041, fols. 198-199, 204-205. He is not doing well financially and asks that Sloane help him find investment opportunities in the South Sea Company. Sherman is unable to ride and cannot work as a result. Bezaleel Sherman was a surgeon.




Patient Details

Letter 2537

Philip Rose to Hans Sloane – January 8, 1721/22


Item info

Date: January 8, 1721/22
Author: Philip Rose
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 175-176



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 175] hon.ble S.r This day I was to wait on you, between nine and ten in the Morning, and I understood that you went out at eight. Since that I called between Eleven and twelve at old Man’s; where about Eleven you did call, before I came. I had been glad to have had a short conference with you, but for this time I am disapointed; however S.r I hope I am not out of yr Thoughe, and though the Common Report maketh The Contagion Bill somewhat severe, I am resolved to submit to what Regulations, The King and parliament, or King and Council, with The wise advice of y.r self and other select physicians, shall determine Mrs. Wagener who liveth in Jermyn Street, over against Berry or Duke street end S.t James, is the patient who produced that Fungous excrescence you have by you. She hath one son, viz. Colonel Lloyd of The Guards. what I set down in this Letter is not to publish her name to the world; but onely to intimate, that That Gentlewoman, will at any time when the Question is asked by a Physician, confirme what I have printed, or written upon the Labels relating to her case. This S.r I hope will be fully satisfactory to you, as to the Truth and Genuiness of That product, and the person from whom it came. S.r Hans I wish you and y.r Lady and good Family, a happy new year and a numerous repitition of The Like, being with all due Respect Hon.ble S.r y.r Faithfull and most obedient servant Phil. Rose. Jan. 8. 1721/2

Philip Rose was admitted a Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians in 1691. In 1728 he was forgiven 12 pounds owed to the College (http://munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk/Biography/Details/3854).




Patient Details

Letter 2924

Timothy Harris to Hans Sloane – April 19, 1723


Item info

Date: April 19, 1723
Author: Timothy Harris
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 347-348



Original Page



Transcription

Harris reminds Sloane of the ‘Indian Pastoral’ he sent. He praises Sloane’s knowledge of philosophy and calls him ‘Master in all other Liberal Arts and Sciences’. ‘Kings bench prison’ is unpleasant and Harris again asks that Sloane help him get out of ‘the horror & dismality of the place’. He hates to have to write Sloane, but he has been incarcerated for four months for a small debt. If Sloane helps him he will publish the ‘Indian Pastoral’ and give it to the ‘East India Company’ men. The bearer will take Sloane’s reply to Harris. Timothy Harris was Keeper of the Coffee House in Ormond Street, London.




Patient Details

Looking to the Edge, or Networking Early Modern Women

Itā€™s a funny thing, really, that after several decades of womenā€™s history in the academic world, historians should still need to be told how to go about finding women. ā€˜Look to the edgesā€™, exhorted Amanda Herbert in her keynote address for ā€˜Networking Early Modern Womenā€™. This was no less than a call to arms, especially amidst the #femfog (in which a prominent medieval historian claimed that feminists intimidate and victimize men, obscuring manly good sense in a feminist fog).[1]

V0007640ETR Angels, demons and representations of flesh and the devil cr Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org Angels, demons and representations of flesh and the devil crowd around a stool upon which the different elements that make up a human burn and smoke; representing a test of faith. Etching by C. Murer after himself, c. 1600-1614. 1622 By: Christoph MurerPublished: 1622 Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

The origins of #femfog? C. Murer, c. 1600-1614. Image Credit: Wellcome Images, London.

The goal of the add-a-thon, hosted by the great Six Degrees of Francis Bacon project, was to add more women into the databaseā€™s networks. And the Sloane Letters team[2] was (virtually) there! As Hillary Nunn noted in a review of Six Degrees, there were initially few women in the database, in large part because the project drew heavily on the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography when identifying networks.

Elizabeth Monck (nƩe Cavendish), Duchess of Albemarle, after Unknown artist etching and line engraving, late 18th to early 19th century NPG D30497 Image Credit: National Portrait Gallery, London. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Elizabeth Monck (nƩe Cavendish), Duchess of Albemarle, after Unknown artist. Image Credit: NPG D30497, National Portrait Gallery, London. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

From a Sloane perspective, the Six Degrees database also lacked any of the women in Sloaneā€™s networks–even though much of Sloaneā€™s early patronage came from women. For example, Sloane was the Duchess of Albemarleā€™s household physician for several years after returning from Jamaica. The Duchess later married the Duke of Montagu, and Sloane was consulted by the extended Montagu family.

Sloane also corresponded with women about a range of subjects beyond medical treatment. Widows like Margaret Ray, Margaret Flamsteed, and Anna Hermann consulted him about bookselling and publishing. Some women, such as the Duchess of Bedford and the Lady Sondes, asked for advice about family matters. Other female correspondents shared an interest in natural philosophy; Cecilia Garrard, for instance, sent him specimens and the Duchess of Beaufort discussed botany (and, at her death in 1715, bequeathed him her herbarium). All of this I know through long familiarity with Sloaneā€™s correspondence.

But what does the picture of womenā€™s networks look like if we take a step back from individual letters to examine the cumulative data in the Sloane Letters database?

To prepare for the Six Degrees add-a-thon, research assistant Edward Devane extracted all of the Sloane Letters references to women who were born before 1699–the cut-off date for inclusion in the Six Degrees database. I also asked him to create a shortlist of women who had clearly strong connections with Sloane: women who appeared frequently, referred to social contact, or wrote several letters. There were 339 female individuals on the long list who were mentioned in the letters at least once. But for the shortlist? A mere twenty-seven women.

Look to the edge, indeed!

The group of strongly connected women picked up several crucial relationships, such as Sloaneā€™s friendship with Lady Sondes; his old family connection to Anne Hamilton (dowager Countess of Clanbrassil); and his assistance of Margaret Ray, widow of Sloaneā€™s good friend John Ray.

But the most important connections in Sloaneā€™s life were only to be found in the margins. This was quite literally the case for his family relationships (wife and daughters) who appear in postscripts, along the lines of: ā€˜My humble service to your Lady and daughtersā€™. There are also occasional references to his other female family membersā€”mother, nurse, sisters, auntsā€¦ As for the Duchess of Albemarle, she was mentioned only a few times in a handful of letters from Peter Barwick.

Of course, it is not surprising that people whom Sloane saw frequently do not appear in the letters, but their absence obscures the social, family and patronage networks that would have been important to Sloaneā€™s daily life. Although the women remain hidden as strong connections when extracting basic data, the Sloane Letters database can still be searched by name or relationship, which makes it easier to sift through the masses of correspondence to find scattered references to his family networks.

Image Credit: University of Cambridge Digital Library.

Image Credit: University of Cambridge Digital Library.

Then there are the female correspondents who didnā€™t even appear in the list at all because they signed their names using initials. Take, for example, J. Squire who wrote to Sloane in 1731. There is nothing in the letter that explicitly suggests that J. Squire was a woman. However, the linkage of the three namesā€”Squire, Abrahm de Moivre and Sloane is telling. Jane Squire had a proposal to determine longitude, which attracted the interest of De Moivre and Sloane. How many other women are to be found lurking behind initials in the correspondence?

What we mean when we talk about networks might also need to be broadened when we look to the edge. Do we just trace important people with wide networks? Do we just trace those whose biographies can be verified? Just how inclusive should we be?

A family group of a woman and four children flanked on either side by figures of children. Engraving by Aug. Desnoyers after himself after Raphael. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

A family group of a woman and four children flanked on either side by figures of children. Engraving by Aug. Desnoyers after himself after Raphael. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Sloaneā€™s loose connections present a number of women who saw Sloane as a part of their network, even if the women did not play a meaningful role in his life. Mrs. E. Martin wrote to Sloane in 1725 and 1726 asking for his help in a person situation. Her lover, Mr. Knight, had abandoned her and their children to marry another woman. By 1726, the situation was worse: Mr. Knight had her confined, removed her child, and frozen his payments to her. Mrs. Martin noted that Sloane had once treated her. This was typical; there were several one-off letters from former patients asking for assistance, presumably because Sloane was one of the most important people they knew.

However, the names that Mrs. Martin dropped in the letters also suggest that she thought Sloane might have personal influence: Mr. Knight, Mr. Isted, and Mr. Meure. Isted was Sloaneā€™s son-in-law, while Knight and Meure were friends of Isted and Sloane. Perhaps these other connections were a little too close, because Sloane dismissed her altogether:

I rec’d yors & am in no manner of condition either to advise or relieve you being perfectly a stranger to what you write & not in a possible way of helping you, being full of affairs in my own profession that I have neither time nor abilities to be assisting to you.

Mrs. Martin was, indeed, a woman found at the edgeā€”of survival and social networks.

At first glance, looking at the list of letter-writers, women hardly factor in Sloane’s correspondence. There were women who wrote directly to Sloane, but most women appear only as subjects, mentioned by medical practitioners, family members or friends (their, er, networks?). One of the reasons that I developed the Sloane Letters database was to make those hidden women more findable; if we describe the letters beyond authorship, women’s stories and networks suddenly become visible.

And it is only by looking to the edges in the first place that the outlines of early modern women’s networks emerge, revealing how women were at the centre all along.

[1] David Perry has a good summary on #femfog and links to other criticisms here: http://www.thismess.net/2016/01/grab-your-balls-and-problem-with-blind.html

[2] The team included my University of Essex research assistants (Edward Devane and Evie Smith) and me.

Letter 2394

J. Delacoste to Hans Sloane – April 10, 1720


Item info

Date: April 10, 1720
Author: J. Delacoste
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: f. 323



Original Page



Transcription

Delacoste is glad he went to Bath. He had several meetings with Dr Rave and a disagreement with Dr Beefson. He returns Sloane’s books. ‘Lady Russell of Red Lyon square’ is coming to Bath. Delacoste hopes that Mr Hamden recommends him to her. J. Delacoste was a physician. He practiced in Bath and Paris.




Patient Details