Decade 9 of scientific letters and papers submitted for publication by the Royal Society
Reference number: L&P/9
Date: 1786-1792
Description
Ten volumes of scientific letters and papers from various authors containing accounts, observations and theories covering a wide variety of subjects and disciplines. Sent to the Royal Society for discussion and possible publishing. Some items feature original artwork, figures and tables. The coverage of the volumes that make up decade 9 is as follows:
Volume 81: item numbers 1-22, read 22 June 1786 - 21 December 1786
Volume 82: item numbers 23-49, read 18 January 1787 - 17 May 1787
Volume 83: item numbers 50-72, read 17 May 1787 - 10 January 1788
Volume 84: item numbers 73-101, read 17 January 1788 - 12 June 1788
Volume 85: item numbers 102-120, read 6 November 1788 - 12 March 1789
Volume 86: item numbers 121-144, read 26 March 1789 - 2 July 1789
Volume 87: item numbers 145-167, read 12 November 1789 - 15 April 1790
Volume 88: item numbers 168-180, read 22 April 1790 - 24 June 1790
Volume 89: item numbers 181-201, read 11 November 1790 - 19 May 1791
Volume 90: item numbers 202-221, read 19 May 1791 - 26 January 1792
The dates given correspond to the date that the papers were written/sent by the author. The read date in the description indicates when papers were read at a Royal Society meeting.
Each volume contains a list of contents which provides: a document reference number, author, title, extent, date of reading to the Society and place of publication in the 'Philosophical Transactions' as far as could be determined for each item.
Nos 131, 138 and 139 relate to the dispute over the achromatic lenses patent between Chester Moore Hall (1703-1771) and John Dollond (1706-1761) who registered the patent in 1758. Jesse Ramsden, son in law to John Dollond, gave his version of events in No 138, and was supported by Addison Smith's account of the original lens given him by Hall in No 139
- Reference number
- L&P/9
- Earliest possible date
- 1786-1792
- Physical description
- 10 bound volumes in quarter vellum with cloth sides, with leather labels
- Page extent
- Ten volumes containing 221 items
- Format
- Manuscript
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Citation
Decade 9 of scientific letters and papers submitted for publication by the Royal Society, 1786-1792, L&P/9, The Royal Society Archives, London, https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/items/l-and-p_9/decade-9-of-scientific-letters-and-papers-submitted-for-publication-by-the-royal-society, accessed on 13 December 2024
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https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/items/l-and-p_9/decade-9-of-scientific-letters-and-papers-submitted-for-publication-by-the-royal-society
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Hierarchy
This volume contains 221 manuscripts:
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Paper, 'Additional observations on making a thermometer for measuring the higher degrees of heat' by Josiah Wedgwood
1786 Creator: Josiah Wedgwood Reference number: L&P/9/1 -
Paper, 'Investigation of the cause of that indistinctness of vision which has been ascribed to the smallness of the optic pencil' by William Herschel
1786 Creator: William Herschel Reference number: L&P/9/2 -
Letter, 'Of the longitude and latitude of York' from Edward Pigott to Nevil Maskelyne
16 March 1786 Creator: Nevil Maskelyne Reference number: L&P/9/3 -
Paper, 'Advertisement of the expected return of the comet of 1532 and 1661 in the year 1788' by Nevil Maskelyne
1786 Creator: Nevil Maskelyne Reference number: L&P/9/4
This item is part of:
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Letters and Papers of a scientific nature submitted for publication by the Royal Society
1741-1806 Reference number: L&P
Explore the collection
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Letters and Papers
Dates: 1741-1806
'Letters and Papers' contains the scientific correspondence sent to the Royal Society through the 18th century, many of which were published in its journal.View collection