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Denis Perronet

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 a long time’. In Pemberton’s letter Sloane, a ‘Mr Perronet’ ‘carryd those curious manuscripts to your [Sloanes] House’.

References:

Denis Perronet to Hans Sloane, 1730-10-28, Sloane MS 4051, ff. 127-130, British Library, London

Denis Perronet to Thomas Robe, 1731-02-22, Sloane MS 4066, ff, 92-93, British Library, London

Clemina Pemberton to Hans Sloane, 1732-07-29, Sloane MS 4052, ff. 153-154, British Library, London

 



Dates: to

Occupation: Unknown

Relationship to Sloane: Virtual International Authority File:

Letter 3826

Rose Fuller to Hans Sloane – September 27, 1730


Item info

Date: September 27, 1730
Author: Rose Fuller
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: ff. 113-114



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Transcription

[fol. 113] Paris Sept. 27 N.S. 1730 au Caffé de Baptist rue de la comedie Francoise Hon’red Sr The Letter of recommendation you did me the honour to send me for Mr, Jussieu, I have since my arrival here delivered to him, he received me very civilly, and was mightily pleased as he told me to hear of ye welfare of so good a freind; he promised me all the service he cou’d do me both by advice and his own instruction, and desired I wou’d often come to see him; he has a brother too, who is a mighty good sort of man, wth whom I am to goe to day or to morrow to see the Physick garden and some other curiosities. Mr, Jussieu desired I cou’d send you his best respects, which together wth mine I beg you wou’d accept from Hon’red Sr your most dutifull Grandson and most obliged humble servt Rose Fuller

Rose Fuller (1708-1777) was a politician, gun-founder and landowner. He was Sir Hans Sloane’s grandson. Fuller studied medicine at Cambridge from 1725 to 1728 and Leiden from 1729 to 1732 and went to Jamaica in 1733 to supervise the family estates. He served in the Jamaican assembly for some time before returning to England in 1755. Fuller was elected MP for Rye in 1768 (J. S. Hodgkinson, ‘Fuller family (per. c.1650–1803)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/47494, accessed 14 Aug 2014]).




Patient Details

Denis Papin

Denis Papin (1647-1712) was a natural philosopher and physician. Instead of practicing medicine he studied mathematics and machinery. He worked with Christian Huygens and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz before being appointed curator of experiments for the Royal Society.

Reference:

Anita McConnell, ‘Papin, Denis (1647–1712?)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2007 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/21249, accessed 9 July 2014].



Dates: to

Occupation: Unknown

Relationship to Sloane: Virtual International Authority File:

Letter 4164

A: Ashe to Peter Barwick – Oct: 1...


Item info

Date: Oct: 1...
Author: A: Ashe
Recipient: Peter Barwick

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: MS 4066
Folio: f. 255



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Transcription

Oct: 1… I send this to know yr finall Answer for if you refuse to swear [tellingly?] I will preferr a bill in Chancery against you & send you a sub para yt shall compell you to do it. How guilty must you appear yt decline swearing ye Truth of an Action you were Concernd in, you tell me I am discom= pos’d at being in ye [plais?] & dont reflect what yr own part is there he Calls you Dr Guiacum an opinionated Chimicall Dr a great pretender to cure Lunaticks & Claps, for (sayes he) this is a Dr. for ye purpose positive Ignorant & easie to be impos’d on one yt having a Long storm in his own pate solidly beleives he can cure it in other mens. He was first Apothecary of a phisick garden but hapning to cure ye son of a great statesman yt had crack’d his Brains with studying to out do his father in out witting ye french: Councills got Himselfe into mony & reputation & is now forsooth president of ye. Insanery. He has picturd you to like yt I am apt to think [Dursey?] & you very well acquainted & perhaps it was from you he had ye Relation of ye distration of Yr. Hu[le?]: sert: A: Ashe

Ann Ashe asks Dr. Barwick to give his final answer regarding an unspecified matter. Although the details of Ashe’s inquiry are not specified, her impatience regarding the matter is evident. Ashe discusses a man who was once an Apothecary of a Physick Garden but is now the president of an Insanery after he supposedly cured a statesman’s son who “crack’d his Brains with studying to out do his father in out witting ye French[.]”




Patient Details

Letter 1841

Henry Barham Sr. to Hans Sloane – May 10, 1712


Item info

Date: May 10, 1712
Author: Henry Barham Sr.
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4043
Folio: ff. 45-47



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Transcription

[fol. 45] Worthy Sr. ever Since I had the Happiness to Read your first Volume (the Second I Never did See) I could not be contented without makeing you some Acknowlodgment of the great Benefit I have Received thereby and I think the Whole Island ought unanimously Joyne in their Thanks to you; for the great Pains, Industry and labor in Compileing soo usefull a work. Butt such is the ungratefulness of some men (and those that the Rest have an Eye or Regard too) because they are not Consulted with, or had not a hand in itt; under Values and exploads that. that they scarse gave themselves time seriously to Read or unprejudice to Consider some of these men who ar [sic] thought by the Rest to honore. Capable of Reading and Judging; belive what ever they say; soo that a book is oftimes Condemned in Generall before ever it is Particularly Read or Considered; Such misfortune your Laboring and usefull History hath mett with Here; for you shall not meet with one in Tenn that Spekes slightly of it that ever Read itt. Some are Dissatisfyed with putting names in your Observation of Diseases others that the Practis is very mean and Plaine (I am sure it is safe) Butt the main Objection is; that you have writt the Names and their severall kindes of Plants in Latin wch very few understands in this Island. Altho you have Described their groath in English yet they are to look for a Name, they also wish you had been larger in the virtues of them. To Rendir these if their were an Abstract writt of the Nature and as Plaine as Culpepers English Physitian and Referr them to the figure of the Plant: I Belive every Planter would have one of them in his House: I hope youl Pardon my great Presumption in offering to Prescribe Rules or Method to soo Learned and eminent a Person. My zeal and Sincear affection to soo usefull and Laborius work makes me I Cannot forbare Spakeing or writeing with sincerity what may be of use and service to have the book more [?]: wch att present seem to be slighted Here and if anything in my mean Capacity may be usefull I shall be ready to Communicate it with all Integrit: I have for these many years made it my Indevors to finde out the specific qualityes of Plants wch is no small Task: and oftimes meet with Disapointments Through the fond Opinion and Credulity of some Persons: some will have the Corlex Peru to grow here, butt I Cannot meet with any that Certainly Know it when growing: Just after the Flagration on Port Royall where great quantitys of the bark was very [?] scarse any to be gott and that at an excessive price Other as well as myself made use of a Bullie [?] Free Bark wch answeard in intermitting Fevers butt in greater quantity: Here is a bark lately made known to our Traders by a Bishop Upon the Maine wch is famd and great esteem with the Peple for gravell stone or stoppage of Urine I often given it with good success it make a Pleasant Drink like New wort[?]; and it is Observd that is rare to find a Tree farr from Spanish Town and scarse a Tree of any bigness but what is bark; I am Informd that the lords [?] sends great quantityes off the Island: butt This Bark is farr short of a Plant wch in yr History is Called Montastrunk Maximum, flore CarabooNard Odore [?]; as I have had great and Certain experience off where there hath been a Total privation of Urine fainting sweats and Nothing butt Death expected: it give immediate relief and brought away in some an incredeable quantity of small stones and Gravell in some Slimy Thick Urine I Could write a small Treatise of examples; This particular quality or Virtue of the Plant is not Knowne to any at present butt myself to whome they apply too here is a bark whose Virtues are not much known Nothing Can Compare to it for Bitterness a small handful of the shavings of the wood will see Bitter severall Gallons of Water Altho butt just Dip and taken out Againe that [?] wormwood Can exceed; the Herb that Cured Capt: Pickerings Eye when it was to all appearance thrast out of its place with a stick is wonderfully esteemd with the Planters a Negro onely putt in some of the Juice of the Herb and Laid some of the Bruisd Herb over all the Eye and it Healed it to great admiration The Hogg Gum as its Called is more in use then ever taken while fresh and New from the spurs of the Tree with a little sugar and water passes Through in the most Violent Belly ach it also hath great effect Dissolved in a Emollions Clyster and farr exceeds the belly ach weed when it is Old it will be very [fol. 46] very hard Melt it with a little hoggs fatt, Beed was [?] and a little birth wort Root in Powder makes a Balsam that will Cleanse the most foulest Ulcer a Negro Can have fill it with flesh and skinn off boy and anything that I can you meet with; The Gum Guaiacum Carefully administred Cures the Dropsie as I have lately had the experience in Three Desparate Cases The good Opinion of our hot Baths (to windward, increases Daily and great Cures are done by Drinking of itt more than by Bathing and were it not soo Difficult to combat it would be much more frequented I wonder it Never was Essayed Uppon a Minerall water as St Faiths in St Johns Parish, found it Impregnated with an Antimonial Sulphur and Vitrioloick salt it hath Relived severall Dropsicall Persons, and indeed where that water is according to my Judgment and by the Syptoms that Albaso Alonso Barta gives of mines it Must be very Rich one I Dugg into is about 3 or 4 feet and found about eleven Vainss Running North and South under a River and under a great mountaine the Lower I wonder the more solid the Oars by Less Shining and of the Nigrilla Tribe as the Spaniards Calls them out of 16 ounces of the Blackest [?] well washed and Ground I Could gett 4 ounces of Blaught [?] Regulus every wayes like to Regulus of Antimony 8 grains wrought uppwards and Downwards with a Negro bringing away many large worms: I had proceeded further in my search Had I not been prevented by Malicious Persons who Neither doo good themselves nor Lett anybody else have the Creditt; I Essayed a hott bath at the Round Hill as it is Calld butt not Much hotter then Blood I Could extract 1 ounce of square and graind salt out of 20 ounces of Water I Could not perceive any Sulphur or Nitras [?] as was Generally Thought nor att present accoundt for its Warmthl Here is late by found great and Certaine Virtues in a Plant Called the blood flower (and by some falslet Called Spocacranha[?]) and is the poysione erectum folio oblonga [?] flora umbellate, notatis soccinaris reflexis in your History of Jamaica, the Leafs outwardly Applied give Immediat relief in the Gout Drawing Violent by a Water out [?] the part The flowers stopp Bleeding att eh Nose Altho butt Smelt [?] too. And a Decoction of the whole Herb Cures fluxes and Gonarrhea [sic] as a Patient of myne lately experienced and after a Long while takeing of Balsamicks and Resringents [?] to noo purpose this Herb Cured him in 2 or 3 times takeing it was Discovered by a Negro. The Negroes have mad use of the Poppanax Root as it is Called here to Poyson their slaves as some hath Confessed when Suffering Death, and they say a large Wilde Bean that growes in the woods Will expel the Poyson I have been shown it and take it to be the Phascolus Maximus, Siligua ensiforme nervis insignita es semine Albige [?] in your History Plant wch I think you have not taken notice of and of the Tribe of Ferns or Capillary Plants; it hath a small Purple flower round the edges of the Leaf and after comes a large seed in shape tho not soo large as Hemp; wee have the Tarantula with Eyes on the back of the head as Baglivi spakes off butt not soo large nor venomous they are very black and Shining like Japan and have have a read spott Uppon the streech [?] About as bigg as a Pinn head; I have been Called to 2 Persons that have been bitt with them and a Negro manl the Other a White boy boath in Violent Pains in all their Joynts and sometimes Delirious the Negro quickly Recoverd butt Complained of a Cold and Numbness and is to this day Troubled with them once a yearl I had a small ruff stone like Iron stone seem to be broak of from a much larger wch would attract Iron as powerfull as any Load Stone that ever I sat in proportion it was brought from or Near Palmers Hutt in 16 Mile walk from whence they have brought me very large stones full of Iron where they say there is a Mountain off itt These are onely some Hints I give you wch if of any Service to you I Can inlarge Uppon them; and many Other things; butt I am afraide I have been so bold and Troublesome wch is admits of Pardon I shall always myself your most Devoted and faothfull Servant to Comm Henry Barham From my House in St Iago dela Vega May 10th 1712

Henry Barham (1670?-1726) was a botanist. He lived in Jamaica and corresponded with Sloane on the plant and animal life of the island. Parts of Barham’s letters to Sloane appeared in the latter’s Natural History of Jamaica (T. F. Henderson, Barham, Henry (1670?1726), rev. Anita McConnell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1374, accessed 13 June 2011]).




Patient Details

Letter 3642

Rose Fuller to Hans Sloane – July 30, 1729


Item info

Date: July 30, 1729
Author: Rose Fuller
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 160-161



Original Page



Transcription

Fuller visited Amsterdam and the two men Sloane to whom had sent books. Seba was especially happy to receive Fuller. Seba has ‘a very fine collection of Serpents and Lizards and other reptiles and a pretty many other Animals’. He also has a great collection of bezoars, but no precious stones. There are three large pieces of amber ‘larger than my fist’ and a great number of other curious things. Fuller also visited Mr Ruysch and saw ‘his preparations’, which were not as good as those found in England. He suggests that Mr Ranby’s are better. Ruysch was working on comparative anatomy between animals and plants at the time. Fuller wanted to ask questions about the preparations, but Ruysch was ‘exceeding[ly] deaf and allmost blind’. The preparations were not like those of Mr St Andre, who painted them. Ruysch wanted Fuller to pass his thanks on to Sloane for everything he has sent. Fuller received word that Sloane is ‘out of order’, but by the same letter he was informed that Sloane is ‘on the mending hand, and allmost recover’d’. Fuller thanks Sloane for ensuring that his brother’s call for subscriptions was successful. Roser Fuller (1708-1777) was a politician, gun-founder and landowner. He was Sir Hans Sloane’s grandson. Fuller studied medicine at Cambridge from 1725 to 1728 and Leiden from 1729 to 1732 and went to Jamaica in 1733 to supervise the family estates. He served in the Jamaican assembly for some time before returning to England in 1755. Fuller was elected MP for Rye in 1768 (J. S. Hodgkinson, ‘Fuller family (per. c.1650–1803)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/47494, accessed 14 Aug 2014]).




Patient Details

Letter 3627

Rose Fuller to Hans Sloane – June 12/23, 1729


Item info

Date: June 12/23, 1729
Author: Rose Fuller
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 140-141



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Transcription

Fuller thanks Sloane for supporting his education, writing that he should have written sooner. He encloses some books. Fuller is in good health. He discusses how bark is used in Holland to treat ‘all Cronich distempers Scurvy Dropsy Gout &c’. Fuller is taking a botany course with Mr Van Royen, who replaced Dr Boerhaave. Van Royen follows John Ray’s method. Dr Albinus is his anatomy teacher. Fuller thinks Dr Boerhaave’s lectures are the best. Chemistry lectures have not yet begun. Rose Fuller (1708-1777) was a politician, gun-founder and landowner. He was Sir Hans Sloane’s grandson. Fuller studied medicine at Cambridge from 1725 to 1728 and Leiden from 1729 to 1732 and went to Jamaica in 1733 to supervise the family estates. He served in the Jamaican assembly for some time before returning to England in 1755. Fuller was elected MP for Rye in 1768 (J. S. Hodgkinson, ‘Fuller family (per. c.1650–1803)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/47494, accessed 14 Aug 2014]).




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Letter 3689

John Thomas Woolhouse to Hans Sloane – November 21, 1729


Item info

Date: November 21, 1729
Author: John Thomas Woolhouse
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 236-237



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Transcription

[fol. 236] Monsieur Apres bien des informations auprés de Monsieur l’Abbé Bignon & le secretaire de la Bibliotheque et les Gardes des livres de la meme Bibliotheque du Roy aussi bien que de Monsieur Geoffroy, j’ay decouvert que c’est Monsieur Goodman Libraire de Londres qui auroit pu vous donner les deux parties dont vous souhaités d’etre informé qui ont eté imprimées cette année selon l’ordre que vous verrés dans l’Imprimé que j’ay l’honneur de vous envoyer par Ma Dame le Comtesse de Sandwich le Sieur Perrot de Geneve que je connois depuis long temps et qui ma apporté le susdit Imprimé vous offre ses tres humbles services pour vous Monsieur et vos Amis qui voudront bien luy donner Commission de retenir des souscriptions et pour autres sujets qui concernent la Librairie, Si vous me les faites adresser je les lui ferai tenit A l’égard des Transactions Philosophiques ou Memoires de la Societé Royale de Londres avec l’histoire de cette Academie, vous n’ignorés pas Monsieur que c’est le Reverend Pere Castel du College de Louis le Grand fameuse Mathematicien qui est l’Auteur Directeur et Traducteur de ce grand ouvrage. Il a eu l’honneur de vous envoyer son Traité de Mathematiques & j’ay envoyé a Mons’r Machin un autre Exemplaire de ce Traité a mes despens par Monsieur Lotman mais il ne m’en a pas encor accusé la reception depuis huit mois que l’envoy en a eté fait Cette savante societé des Jesuites se flatte que le discernement et la Justice de notre Societé Royales ne fera aucune difficulté de choisir un de leur Corps pour Membre Etranger de la Societé Royale apres une entreprise si necessaire si utile et si glorieuse pour la Societé Royale de Londres que ce Reverend Pere Castel a projetté depuis lon temps ayant appris la langue Angloise seulement pour se rendre Capable de cette entreprise. Monsieur J’ay amassé toutes les plus belles theses de l’Université de Montpelier &c. au nombre de 35 toutes concernantes la Medecine [fol. 237] J’espere que Mons’r Zolman vous les aura deja fait tenir je vous suis bien obligé Monsieur de l’honneur et de la protection que vous avés accordé a Beaumont qui a eté obligé de retourner ici avec precipitation a cause de la maladie dangereuse de la Dame son Epouse qui est grosse de son premier Enfant, mais pendant le peu de jours qu’il a resté a Londres il a decouvert beaucoup de fourberies et subornations de temoins avec parjure en ma partie adverses qui de concert de mon procureur ont complotté une conjuration contre mes interests et ont prolongé mes deux procés cette année Je vous supplie Monsieur de me continuer vos bontés mon aage [sic] et infirmité m’ont fait quitter la Bibliotheque du Roy pour soigner ma pratique avec plat de loisir et de repos. J’ay l’honneur d’etre tres parfaitement. Monsieur Votre tres humble et tres obeissant serviteur J:Th: de Woolhouse F:R:S:&c a Paris 21 9bre 1729

John Thomas Woolhouse was an English oculist and physician. He practiced physic in London, served James II for a time, and in 1711 secured a position at Paris’s Hospice des Quinze-Vingts. He served as the King of France’s oculist, was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1721, and a member of both the Berlin Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Sciences of Bologna. Woolhouse was criticized for charlatanry by some contemporaries (Anita McConnell, Woolhouse, John Thomas (16661734), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/29954, accessed 17 July 2013]).




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Letter 0367

Samuel Smith to Hans Sloane – May 10, 1692


Item info

Date: May 10, 1692
Author: Samuel Smith
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4036
Folio: f. 122



Original Page



Transcription

Dale writes there is ‘a controversie among authors about the cochinel’, which he heard Sloane saw much of in Jamaica. He speculates as to the proper classification of the insect. Smith asks Sloane to respond to Dale’s query. Samuel Dale was an apothecary, botanist, and physician who contributed several articles to the Philosophical Transactions. He was John Ray’s executor and good friend, and from Dale’s letters to Sloane we learn many details of Ray’s final moments (G. S. Boulger, Dale, Samuel (bap. 1659, d. 1739), rev. Juanita Burnby, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/7016, accessed 5 July 2013]). Samuel Smith apprenticed to the book trade in 1675 and was indentured to the bookseller Samuel Gellibrand followed by Moses Pitt. Smith joined the Stationers Company and became freeman of the company and then freeman of the city of London in 1682. Smith published the Royal Society’s Philosophical Transactions from the beginning of his career and he and his partner Benjamin Walford were officially named ‘printers to the Royal Society’ in 1693 (Marja Smolenaars, Ann Veenhoff, Smith, Samuel (bap. 1658, d. 1707), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/63289, accessed 27 June 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 0368

Samuel Dale to Hans Sloane – May 10, 1692


Item info

Date: May 10, 1692
Author: Samuel Dale
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4036
Folio: f. 122



Original Page



Transcription

Dale writes there is ‘a controversie among authors about the cochinel’, which he heard Sloane saw much of in Jamaica. He speculates as to the proper classification of the insect. Smith asks Sloane to respond to Dale’s query. Samuel Dale was an apothecary, botanist, and physician who contributed several articles to the Philosophical Transactions. He was John Ray’s executor and good friend, and from Dale’s letters to Sloane we learn many details of Ray’s final moments (G. S. Boulger, Dale, Samuel (bap. 1659, d. 1739), rev. Juanita Burnby, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/7016, accessed 5 July 2013]). Samuel Smith apprenticed to the book trade in 1675 and was indentured to the bookseller Samuel Gellibrand followed by Moses Pitt. Smith joined the Stationers Company and became freeman of the company and then freeman of the city of London in 1682. Smith published the Royal Society’s Philosophical Transactions from the beginning of his career and he and his partner Benjamin Walford were officially named ‘printers to the Royal Society’ in 1693 (Marja Smolenaars, Ann Veenhoff, Smith, Samuel (bap. 1658, d. 1707), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/63289, accessed 27 June 2013]).




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