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Letter 3683

Richard Richardson to Hans Sloane – November 3, 1729


Item info

Date: November 3, 1729
Author: Richard Richardson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 224-225



Original Page



Transcription

Richardson hopes his last box reached Sloane. Mr Miller of the Chelsea Physic Garden promised to send the plants soon. Richardson and Mr Green, the bookseller, drank to Sloane’s health recently. Richardson was a physician and botanist who traveled widely in England, Wales, and Scotland in search of rare specimens. He corresponded and exchanged plants with many well-known botanists and naturalists (W. P. Courtney, Richardson, Richard (16631741), rev. Peter Davis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23576, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: Miss. Watson (Daughter of Mrs. Watson)
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    Watson's illness first appeared in her elbow, which 'broake & discharged a large quantity of a thin white' fluid. She seems to have recovered after this. Another tumour has formed on her foot.

  • Diagnosis

    Tumour.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    The girl was taken to other physicians before Richardson. Richardson gave her 'Calibiate Waters Lime Drinks [...] milipeats in pretty large quantities [...] Dabam: Tartar'. She is washed and bathed regularly. The treatment has gone on for two or three months.


    Ongoing Treatment:

    Sloane's advice is solicited.


    Response:

    She seems to have recovered as a result of Richardson's treatment, but has to go to Wakefield before 'having the Cure Compleated'.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Tumour

Letter 4141

Joseph Ames to Hans Sloane – December 20th 1733


Item info

Date: December 20th 1733
Author: Joseph Ames
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4053
Folio: f. 118



Original Page



Transcription

Ames writes to Sloane about meeting Mr Holden and Mr Brassy at the African Coffee House. The governor of the Company and Job are also mentioned. Joseph Ames (bap.1687, d.1759) bibliographer and antiquary, elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1743. He was admitted to the Society of antiquaries and contributed to their Thursday meetings. He frequented university libraries as well as those of the members of both societies. (Robin Myers, ‘Ames, Joseph (bap. 1687, d. 1759)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2006 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/439, accessed 13 Aug 2015])




Patient Details

Letter 1708

William Derham to Hans Sloane – November 10, 1710


Item info

Date: November 10, 1710
Author: William Derham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4042
Folio: ff. 205-206



Original Page



Transcription

Fol. 206 Dear Sr Upmr Nov: 10 1710 5 of clock This comes to return you ten 1000 thanks for your kind directions in my Wifes very dangerous case, wch yesterday in the afternoon had like to have carried her off, her pulse being little more than a remor, feavr high, flesh convulsed, & her hands shaking; & all about 4 or 5 hours after a fifth time of bleeding, the first of her blood fizy, the last not so bad. But after somewhat more than ordinary dis- course with me, & concern in taking leave of each other, she on a suddain seemed to have some speedy relief whether by that Ventila[ti]on of her Lungs, or some motion of the affects parts, &c I leave to your better judgment: & last night she had much ease & kindly sleep so yt this morning she seems to be in a likely way of recovery I hope. I suppose it will be absolutely necessary to endeavour the prevention of a consump- tion succeeding so terrible a shock of her Lungs, wch I desire your directions about. She is brought to almost the lowest degree of weakness. Your affairs at Orset you may cast on my care. A Survey will be of absolute necessity for you, & I know one at Rumford yt will be the best man to be employed therein, as not only understanding surveying Land well, but also Timber &c. As I rememr the usual rates are 6d p acre, viz 3d for surveying & 3d plotting it down: if a small parcel of Land 8d they will ask; or if much Timber to be particularly noted, they will expect ac- cordingly. As soon as I can get to Rumford, I will talk wth the surveyour about all things, & give tou an account, yt you may either pitch upon him, or one in town. The Gates & Stiles shall be as well taken care of as by your self, when I am able to do it; & with great thankfulness I shall allways acknow- lidge my self Dear Sr Your much obliged humble servt W Derham Since my writing this, my wife is sized wth a violent Looseness, accompanied wth acute gripings. For want of yr better directions I give her ye White Decoction wth Formentil root boyled in it, & now & then a Cordial of Spiremint watr, Aq: Cin: fat: &c.

Derham was a Church of England clergyman and a natural philosopher, interested in nature, mathematics, and philosophy. He frequently requested medical advice from Sloane, and likely served as a physician to his family and parishioners (Marja Smolenaars, “Derham, William (1657-1735)”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/7528, accessed 7 June 2011]).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Anna Derham
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    Mrs Derham was near death the day before. Derham bled her five times. Her blood became less 'fizy' each time. She is gripped with pain.

  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:
    Ongoing Treatment:

    In response to the sudden change in her condition, Derham tells Sloane that he needs advising. In the meantime, he will administer a 'White Decoction with torimentil root boyled in it, and now and then a Cordeal of Spiremint watz, Aq: Cin: fut. or.'


    Response:

    Her condition has improved, though Derham does not know whether it is due to a clearing of the lungs or the medications he gave her.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Lungs, Blood

Letter 0652

Jacob Bobart to Hans Sloane – November 23, 1700


Item info

Date: November 23, 1700
Author: Jacob Bobart
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 93-94



Original Page



Transcription

Bobart wants to help Sloane with his comparison of Dr. Morison’s plants. He asks Sloane to direct him to the proper catalogues. Jacob Bobart (1641-1719) was a botanist and son of Jacob Bobart, the elder (c.1599-1680). He worked with his father at the Oxford Physic Garden for nearly 40 years (D. E. Allen, ‘Bobart, Jacob, the younger (1641–1719)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/2742, accessed 5 June 2015]).




Patient Details

Letter 4126

Edward Milward to Hans Sloane – November 6th 1733


Item info

Date: November 6th 1733
Author: Edward Milward
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4053
Folio: f. 70



Original Page



Transcription

Milward writes to thank Sloane for his Friendship and requests any job in his business either here or abroad that Sloane may offer to him. He fills the letter with complements and praise, emphasizing his respect for Sloane and his work. Edward Milward (1711/12-1757), physician and writer was educated at Trinity College Cambridge but left without graduating and acquired his doctor of medicine from a European university, probably Leiden. His main interests were medical writers of antiquity on which he wrote many essays. Alexander Du Toit, Milward, Edward (1711/12-1757), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/18806, accessed 13 Aug 2015]).




Patient Details

Letter 2879

John Mortimer to Hans Sloane – November 10, 1722


Item info

Date: November 10, 1722
Author: John Mortimer
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: f. 308



Original Page



Transcription

Mortimer asks for a recommendation for his son, who has been studying at Leiden and is going to Paris to further his medical education. John Mortimer (1656?-1736) was an agricultural writer. Born in London, he received a commercial education and became a successful merchant. In 1693 he retired to practice his ideas on agricultural improvement. He published ‘The Whole Art of Husbandry, in the way of Managing and Improving Land’ in 1707 which was popular and influential. He dedicated this work to the Royal Society, of which he had been a Fellow since 1705. (Thomas Seccombe, Mortimer, John (1656?1736), rev. Anita McConnell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/19348, accessed 18 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 0771

John Chamberlayne to Hans Sloane – September 1, 1702


Item info

Date: September 1, 1702
Author: John Chamberlayne
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4039
Folio: f. 20



Original Page



Transcription

Chamberlayne thanks Sloane for helping him complete his collection of Philosophical Transactions for the years 1700 and 1701. He asks Sloane to post the enclosed letter to Leeuwenhoek. If Sloane does not feel Dudley’s works are worth publishing he should return them, as Chamberlayne does not have copies of them. John Chamberlayne was a translator and editor specializing in modern languages which he studied at the University of Leiden. He translated works on many topics, was a fellow of the Royal Society, and published three works in the Philsophical Transactions (Reavley Gair, “Chamberlayne, John (1668/9-1723)”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2009 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/5060, accessed 30 May 2011]).




Patient Details

Citizen Science and Flying Ant Day, in 1707 and in 2013

Oecophylla smaragdina males preparing for nuptial flight, Thailand. Image credit: Sean.hoyland, Wikimedia Commons.

“What the heck!?” I spat, as an ant flew into my mouth. The winged ants were everywhere: crawling on the ground or (seemingly) flying dozily around. It was a warm and humid afternoon and I envied the laziness of the ants. But I had a tube train to catch and I hurried off without paying them much attention. It was only when I arrived in the centre of London and spotted more ants that I began to wonder what was happening.

This was the U.K.’s famed ‘Flying Ant Day’ in which Queen Ants and the males take to the skies in their grandly titled nuptial flight. Although this annual event occurs wherever colonies of ants live, I had somehow never noticed it on the prairies of Canada–only discovering this natural spectacle about ten years ago while walking the urban pavements of London.

The 2013 rush has apparently already started, with ants in places as diverse as Cambridge and Nottingham already having had their day in the sun this week. There have also been several seagull traffic deaths in Devon, caused by the gulls gobbling down too much ant acid.

Last year, the Society of Biology enlisted the aid of “citizen scientists” to keep track of times, dates and weather conditions of sightings. What they found was that the nuptial flight occurs after a low pressure system and within a tight time frame, usually over a few days. The ants also make their flights between four and six in the afternoon.

The idea of citizen scientists compiling data for a scholarly society strikes me as, perhaps, rather familiar: early modern Royal Society anyone? William Derham (1657-1735), for example, was a clergyman by day and a “citizen scientist” by night—specifically, an astronomer—who kept Hans Sloane and the Royal Society apprised of his star-gazing. (I discussed Derham’s interests in another post.) Derham also passed on observations from other people, including Mr Barrett’s* account of flying ants in 1707.

I was lately at our friend Mr Barrets, who desired me to acquaint the Society concerning the Flights of Ants (that made such a noise in London last Sumer) that he hath for many years last past constantly observed the Flight of that Insect on the very same, or within a day or two of that very day of the Month, on which they fell in London. About the year 1689 or 1690 (as I remember) he said he saw a cloud of them, and several times since he hath seen the same. He took it for a Cloud full of Rain approaching towards him, & was much surprized to find it a vast Number of Ants only frisking in the Air, & carried aloft as he imagined only wth the gentle Current of the Air. He is of opinion that they allways come fromward the Westerly points. I hope our curious Members will for the future observe them more accurately, that we may make a judgment from what parts they came. The next day after they fell in London, I remember we had in divers places many of them, particularly at Mr Barrets, & South-Weal & Burntwood. I call them Flying-Ants, because Mr Barret (who is a good Judge) said they were such that he saw.

In 1707, people were as fascinated by the sight of flying ants as we are today, with the Flight causing quite a stir in London in 1706. Although observers weren’t even sure if the insects really were ants, or why they were flying in a mass, they were clear on three points: that it was a regular annual event, that air currents enabled the Flight, and that it occurred on multiple days across the south of England.

Over three-hundred years on, we’re rediscovering that Flying Ant Day is region specific in the U.K. and is affected by weather. It is intriguing that modern science still hasn’t explained the specific triggers for the Flight of Ants and has once again turned to citizen scientists to provide a larger data set for study. Despite Derham’s hope that “our curious Members will for the future observe them more accurately”, the Royal Society doesn’t appear to have taken much interest in the Flight of Ants. Maybe the Society of Biology will have more success.

If I happen to spot the Flying Ants this year, I plan to take part in the Society of Biology’s 2013 Flying Ant Day survey. This time, I’ll follow in the footsteps of Barrett and Derham by closely observing the natural world at my doorstep instead of dashing past it.

UPDATE, 22 July: The nuptial flight occurred in my London neighbourhood today, just before 5 p.m. I could not avoid observing nature on my doorstep, which had become a graveyard for a number of them. Here are two, caught in between a bit of flying around my garden. (And I did fill in my survey!)

Flight of the Ants, 22 July 2013. Image: Lisa Smith.

 

*Probably Dacres Leonard Barrett, a member of the Fuller family (relations by marriage to Sloane) and occasional correspondent of Sloane’s.

Meeting Sloane

Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753) was a great collector of his age. He collected curiosities, books, manuscripts, art, botanical samples, coins… He even collected knowledge, as secretary of the Royal Society and editor of the Philosophical Transactions (1695-1712), and kept his extensive correspondence from other people (forty-one volumes alone at the British Library). Despite his sizeable library and museum, Sloane himself remains elusive. He published relatively little and kept few drafts of his own letters. So, we often meet Sloane through the eyes of others.

Gottfried Kneller, Portrait of Hans Sloane (Source: Scientific Identity: Portraits from the Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology, Smithsonian Libraries)

In August 1742, Henry Newman described his recent visit to Sloane’s new home in Chelsea (Wellcome Library, A letter by Henry Newman, 21 August 1742, WMS 7633/10; pictured above on blog banner). Sloane was 82 and had supposedly retired the year before because of poor health. Retirement for Sloane, however, was a busy affair. According to Newman, Sloane started his day by visiting the local Coffeeshop of Rarities via the garden passage that he’d had built. This ensured that Sloane did not “want company nor amusements”,  even though he had left London. From 5:00 to 6:00, Sloane saw patients and had his servant show visitors “his apartement of Curiosities”.

Newman was “indulg’d” in both activities. He first consulted Sloane about his asthma (caused, he reported, by living in London’s smoke), then was taken on a tour of the collections by Sloane’s servant. Newman noted the sheer size of the library–49,000 books and manuscripts. But what Newman admired most was the effectiveness of Sloane’s catalogues. Catalogues were crucial, both for finding items and for ensuring that everything remained in the same order as it had been in Bloomsbury. There were thousands of glasses with preserved animals also in precise order. The scale of Sloane’s move to Chelsea had been enormous, but “there was not one broke nor one book lost or mislaid”.

Among Sloane’s regular visitors was Princess Amelia. Newman reported that the Princess and her sisters had already visited Sloane three times, but as he “waited on Sr Hans they sent to know when they might come again”. All this description, Newman told his friend, was “to anticipate the pleasure you will have in viewing” the collections. Newman also hoped that Sloane’s “usefull life will be prolong’d many years by the change of his situation”.

Perhaps, as ever, the focus is really on Sloane’s collections. But there are tantalizing glimpses of the man himself. Even in retirement, he continued to practice medicine and to visit the coffeehouse for company. This suggests a sociable man who liked to keep busy and who continued to value his medical skills; others, like Newman, also thought highly Sloane’s experience, deeming him “usefull”. Sloane’s ability to keep his collections organised so that others could enjoy them was particularly impressive. Above all, though, Newman took much pleasure in his visit with Sloane–as did apparently the Princess, a repeat visitor: Sloane’s collections were only part of the attraction for his visitors.

Letter 1715

John Fuller Sr. to Hans Sloane – January 8, 1710/11


Item info

Date: January 8, 1710/11
Author: John Fuller Sr.
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4042
Folio: ff. 219-220



Original Page



Transcription

Fuller sends the bird he found near his house, as promised. He kept it in his garden pond for ‘a fortnight’. Fuller believes the beak is designed ‘for the wrenching open of whole Fish’. The bird had lost its ability to fly. Fuller suggests it may be ‘a Common Sea Bird’. Sloane will know more, as Fuller is unfamiliar with birds. Some of his relations claim to have seen a similar birds ‘upon our Coasts’. John Fuller, Senior married Elizabeth Rose, daughter of Fulke and Elizabeth Rose of Jamaica, in 1703. He managed the family sugar plantations in Jamaica and in 1705 took control of the family furnace where he became an ironmaster and gunfounder. His wife’s mother later married Sir Hans Sloane, making Sloane Fuller’s stepfather-in-law (J. S. Hodgkinson, Fuller family (per. c.16501803), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/47494, accessed 2 July 2013]).




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