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Scope and Contents |
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The Herschel Family Papers largely represent the life and work of Sir John F. W. Herschel
(1792-1871), the English mathematician, astronomer, chemist, and experimental
photographer/inventor. Also present are manuscripts and correspondence by and about
John's
father Sir William Herschel (1738-1822), discoverer of the planet Uranus and stellar
astronomy pioneer; John's aunt, the noted astronomer Caroline Lucretia Herschel (1750-1848);
and many other Herschel family members, scientific colleagues, and friends. The papers
are
arranged in five series: I. Sir John Frederick William Herschel, 1809-1871; II. Sir
William
Herschel, 1753-1822; III. Caroline Lucretia Herschel, 1783-1849; IV. Other Herschel
Family
Members, 1721-1951; and V. Third-Party Works and Correspondence, 1808-1868. Manuscripts
and
correspondence are primarily written in English, although some items are written in
other
languages, including French, German, Italian, and Latin. |
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Papers for Sir John F. W. Herschel span 1809-1871 and comprise correspondence, essays,
drawings, notes, calculations, reports, observations, notebooks, charts, documents,
memoranda books, diaries, and travel journals. Manuscript works include his writings
on
actinometry, astronomy, botany, chemistry, geology, mathematics, meteorology and barometry,
music, photography, physical optics, physics, and other subjects. Early works include
drafts
of his publication "Memoir on a Remarkable Application of Cote's
Theorems" and mathematical notebooks from his student years. His diaries span
1820-1871 and his travel journals contain observations from tours in Italy, France,
Germany,
and England, 1809-1850. Herschel's observations at the Cape of Good Hope (1834-1838)
are
documented by reports, notes, star charts, financial accounts, and diaries. Reports,
essays,
and documents represent organizations with which Sir John was associated, such as
the
Analytic Society, the Royal Mint, the English Committee for the Terrestrial Magnetism
Survey, the Greenwich Observatory, the British Association for the Advancement of
Science,
and the Standards Commission. Correspondence is extensive and includes letters from
Sir John
to nearly 300 correspondents and almost 1200 incoming letters. Among the correspondents
represented are George Biddle Airy, Charles Babbage, Francis Baily, Francis Beaufort,
David
Brewster, William Rutter Dawes, Charles Darwin, Michael Faraday, James David Forbes,
William
Rowan Hamilton, John Russell Hind, Humphrey Lloyd, John William Lubbock, Charles Lyell,
Thomas Maclear, Roderick Impey Murchison, George Peacock, Benedetto Pistrucci, Edward
Sabine, Richard Sheepshanks, William Henry Smyth, George Gabriel Stokes, William Henry
Fox
Talbot, Charles Edward Trevelyan, William Whewell, and Thomas Young. |
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Materials representing Sir William Herschel date from 1753 to 1822 and include
correspondence, essays, notes, and tables. Within his correspondence are letters from
his
father and other relatives in Germany. "Concerning the Central Powers of
the Particles of Matter," "My Idea of Matter," "Remarks on Dr. Priestley's Disquisition on Matter and Spirit," "Interference of Light," notes on astronomy, notes on optics, and
various mathematical tables are represented in the collection. A list of the telescopes
Sir
William constructed and documents relating to his early musical career are also present. |
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Holdings for Caroline Lucretia Herschel span 1783-1849 and consist of correspondence,
biographical memoranda, documents, tables, and diaries. In her correspondence are
letters
from Carl Friedrich Gauss, John Haygarth, Alexander von Humboldt, and Joseph Lalande.
Her
manuscripts include diaries for 1833-1845, biographical memoranda, drafts of her
autobiography, her astronomical tables, and a commonplace book of astronomical memoranda
that records her education as an astronomer. |
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Materials for Other Herschel Family Members date from 1721 to 1951 and include the
correspondence, notes, documents, drawings, biographical memoranda, extracts, notebooks
and
housekeeping books of Sir John's family, including his mother, wife, and several of
his
children. Notable items include Isabella Herschel's biographical memoranda and extracts
from
diaries and letters of her father; extensive correspondence between Lady Margaret
Herschel
and other Herschel family members and friends; and the housekeeping book of John's
mother,
Mary Pitt Herschel. |
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The holdings for Third-Party Works and Correspondence span 1808-1868 and comprise
notes,
extracts, observations, documents, diaries, reports and correspondence of colleagues
including George Biddell Airy, Giuseppe Bianchi, William Thomas Brande, Ernst Wilhelm
von
Brücke, Richard Christopher Carrington, James Russell Hind, Joseph Johann Littrow,
Francis
Lunn, Thomas Maclear, Gilbert Elliot Minto, George Peacock, Edward Sabine, and William
Samuel Stratford. The bulk of the items relate to astronomical topics, but other subjects
include actinometry, meteorology, terrestrial magnetism, and the Standards Commission.
Other
notable items include selections written in King George III's hand for a concert of
chamber
music and documents relating to the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. |
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Notes on Arrangement and Description:
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Arrangement: During the 1960s, a sizeable portion of the
Herschel Family Papers at the Ransom Center was cataloged in a manual card file. The
arrangement of the papers appears to have been derived in part from the 1958 Sotheby
&
Co. Catalogue of Valuable Printed Books Autograph Letters Historical Documents,
etc., in which a portion of the Herschel Papers were originally offered for
sale. |
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Identification numbers: The papers were organized into four
categories and individual items were assigned an alpha-numeric identification number.
The
four categories included: |
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W0001-W1039: For Sir John Herschel's works; |
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L0001-L0769: For Sir John Herschel's outgoing letters; |
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M0001-M1227: For Sir John Herschel's incoming correspondence, works and letters of
Sir
William Hershel and Caroline Herschel, other Herschel family members, and other
third-parties; |
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MW0001-MW0151: For miscellaneous items and later acquisitions. |
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These alpha-numeric identifications were used as designations when the collection was microfilmed. They were also used to reference the Ransom Center's holdings of Sir John Herschel's correspondence that are described in A Calendar of the Correspondence of Sir John Herschel (edited by Michael J. Crowe, et. al., 1998). This work is now available online at http://historydb.adlerplanetarium.org/herschel/. |
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Because researchers may wish to identify or locate items using these identification
numbers, they have been included with descriptions in the finding aid. Additionally,
a
separate Identification Number Index listing all of the former identification numbers
in
alpha-numeric sequence plus their current location is available at the end of the
finding
aid. Items received in later acquisitions were not assigned identification numbers. |
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Index of Correspondents: All of the correspondence in the
Herschel Family Papers is listed in an Index of Correspondents at the end of this
finding
aid. It includes correspondence located through all five series for Sir John Herschel,
Sir
William Herschel, Caroline Herschel, other Herschel family members, and some correspondence
between third-parties. |
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Description of manuscripts: All materials described in the
finding aid can be assumed to be handwritten works, letters, and documents unless
otherwise
stated, i.e. typed or printed items. |
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Copies: A number of items in the collection are handwritten
copies, drafts, or excerpts of other people's work. In many cases these are from published
works. Such items are usually filed under the name of the individual in whose hand
it was
written (in most cases, Sir John Herschel) and not under the original author. |
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Recycled items: Because Sir John Herschel had a tendency to
reuse paper, many of his notes or calculations were written on the backs of incoming
correspondence. In other cases he wrote draft letters on the backs of old documents.
Such
works and letters are described in this finding aid as being "on verso" of a particular
item. The majority of Herschel's recycled incoming letters or drafts of letters written
on
other items do not appear in the above-referenced correspondence calendar or database. |
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Original folders: The collection also includes three boxes that
contain the original envelopes, binders, and paper or pasteboard folders in which
many of
the materials were housed at one time. Folders or envelopes that could be matched
to the
items they originally held have been placed with those items. The remainder is housed
in
boxes 42-44 at the end of the collection. Box 43 holds original containers bearing
Sir John
Herschel's handwriting and box 44 holds pasteboard covers originally used to protect
some of
John's work. Many of the items in box 44 can be matched generally with materials in
the
collection, but are too large to fit into a standard document box. Box 42 holds containers
bearing unidentified handwriting, probably labeled by various Herschel family members
or
Sotheby & Co. |
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Series Descriptions |
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Series I. Sir John Frederick William Herschel, 1809-1871 |
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This series includes materials representing Sir John F. W. Herschel's scientific
activities and tenure at the Royal Mint, his personal records, and his correspondence.
The series is arranged in three subseries: A. Works, 1811-1871; B. Personal Records,
1809-1871; and C. Correspondence, 1811-1871. |
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Subseries A. Works is arranged alphabetically by topic: actinometry, astronomy, botany,
Cambridge University Commission, chemistry, chronometry, linguistics and sound,
mathematics, meteorology and barometry, music, philosophy, photography, physical optics,
physics, poetry, Royal Mint, spectral analysis, Standards Commission, terrestrial
magnetism, universities and education, and miscellaneous writings, notes, and drawings.
Items within these topics are arranged alphabetically by title. Astronomical
observations, mathematical works, and documents related to his tenure as Master of
the
Mint make up a significant portion of this subseries. Other large portions include
test
papers and notes recording his experiments in chemistry, photography, and physical
optics. |
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Subseries B. Personal Records is arranged alphabetically by format: account books,
diaries, lists, memoranda, memorandum books, travel journals, travel papers, and
miscellaneous family papers. Items filed under account books, diaries, memorandum
books
and travel journals are arranged chronologically and items filed under lists, memoranda,
travel papers and miscellaneous family papers are arranged alphabetically by title.
Many
items from this subseries originally comprised Lot 489 of Sotheby & Co.'s 1958
Catalogue of Valuable Printed Books Autograph Letters Historical
Documents, etc. Most of John's diary entries from 13 November 1833 to 23
December 1838 have been transcribed and published in Herschel at the Cape: Diaries and Correspondence of Sir John Herschel,
1834-1838, edited by David Evans (1969). |
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Subseries C. Correspondence contains letters to family, friends, and associates and
is
arranged alphabetically by recipient (outgoing) and sender (incoming). The most
significant and voluminous letters in this series are between Herschel and George
Biddell Airy, centering primarily on the Royal Observatory at Greenwich and the
Standards Commission. Other lengthy exchanges with notable correspondents include
Edward
Sabine (terrestrial magnetism) and Charles Edward Trevelyan (Royal Mint). |
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Series II. Sir William Herschel, 1753-1822 |
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This series includes materials associated with Sir William Herschel's activities as
an
astronomer and musician and is arranged in three subseries: A. Works, 1763-1816; B.
Personal Records, 1753-1822; and C. Correspondence, 1764-1822. |
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Subseries A. Works is arranged alphabetically by title. Items include astronomical
tables, notes on optics, astronomy, linguistics, and philosophy. The subseries also
contains an astronomical calculator scroll and descriptions of astronomical instruments,
especially micrometers. |
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Subseries B. Personal Records is arranged alphabetically by title. A number of
documents relate to William's activities as a telescope maker. The subseries also
includes a substantial number of obituary notices for William Herschel with John or
Caroline's notes in the margins. |
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Subseries C. Correspondence is fairly limited in scope, comprising roughly fifteen
correspondents, four of whom are relatives of William. The subseries is arranged
alphabetically by recipient (outgoing) and sender (incoming). Notable correspondents
include Charles Blagden, Prince Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent, Henry Englefield, and
astronomer José de Mendoza y Riós. |
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Series III. Caroline Lucretia Herschel, 1783-1849 |
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This series comprises materials related to Caroline Herschel and includes significant
amounts of biographical information on both William and Caroline. It is arranged in
three subseries: A. Works, 1783-1840; B. Personal Records, 1792-1849; and C.
Correspondence, 1800-1847. |
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Three bound volumes--Caroline's autobiography--comprise the bulk of subseries A. Works,
which is arranged alphabetically by title. A work on the eclipse of the sun and "Tables
for the Variation of Stars for One Year" make up the remainder of this subseries. |
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Daybooks, extracts, and additional biographical memoranda comprise the majority of
subseries B. Personal Records, which is arranged alphabetically by title. Legal
documents, indices, diplomas, inventories, and documentation of Caroline's pension
from
King George IV of Great Britain complete this subseries. |
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Subseries C. Correspondence is arranged alphabetically by recipient (outgoing) and
sender (incoming). Correspondents include friends, associates, and family members.
Letters from Lady Margaret Herschel comprise a large portion of Caroline's incoming
correspondence. Other notable correspondents include scientists Johann Franz Encke,
Carl
Friedrich Gauss, and Alexander von Humboldt. |
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Series IV. Other Herschel Family Members, 1721-1951 |
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Arranged alphabetically by name, this series includes manuscripts, correspondence,
personal records and other documents for Alexander Stewart Herschel, Isabella Herschel,
John Herschel (son of Sir John), Julia Mary Herschel, Lady Margaret Herschel, Margaret
Louisa Herschel, Mary Pitt Herschel, Sir William James Herschel, and other or
unidentified Herschels. |
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Series V. Third-Party Works and Correspondence, 1808-1868 |
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Series V. is arranged in two subseries: A. Works, 1827-1868; and B. Correspondence,
1808-1860s. This series comprises materials not ascribable to the principal authors
of
the first four series. The bulk of the material is scientific in nature and likely
was
given to, or acquired by, John F. W. Herschel. |
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Subseries A. Works includes abstracts, memoranda, notes, reports, observations, and
calculations, and is arranged alphabetically by creator name. In cases where two or
more
works are associated with one creator, those works have been arranged alphabetically
by
title under the creator's name. Notable persons include George Biddell Airy, James
Russell Hind, Thomas Maclear, Edward Sabine, and William Samuel Stratford. Also present
are some unidentified works, the majority of which are scientific in nature. |
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Subseries B. Correspondence is arranged alphabetically by creator name. This subseries
includes letters between non-Herschels. Notable correspondents include George Biddell
Airy, Robert Fulton, Henry Drury Harness, and Charles E. Trevelyan. Some letters from
unidentified authors to either non-Herschel or unidentified recipients is also
present. |