User:MinorProphet/Draft subpages/Lee Building, Christ Church

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TTD[edit]

  1. Spin off #Matthew Lee? and deffo #The old Anatomy School into new articles.  Done
  2. Keep relevant sections of Matthew Lee re will & benefaction in this article.
  3. Redact lengthy quotes from Gunther as per Help Desk - they are available online for the inquisitive reader.
  4. Fix various similar refs to be [ref name=], & sfns eg Gunther.
  5. Write Description with aid of Curthoys, Gunther, et al.
  6. Tidy refs and bibliography.
  7. Update John Freind.
  8. Make separate sections for a) the fabric of the building & its various alterations, and b) the Lee's Readers.

Outline of article[edit]

  1. Lede
  2. History
    1. Old Anatomy School - see new draft
    2. John Freind & Matthew Lee (physician) - see new draft
    3. Lee Building - construction & fabric
      1. Anatomy School
      2. Chemistry lab
      3. Art gallery
      4. SCR
  3. Dr. Lee's readers
  4. Selden Map
  5. Refs & Bibliography

Curthoys refs[edit]

1. Objections by Chemistry and Physics readers to a planned extension of the Kitchen and Scullery in 1910. Their worries were noted, and the extension took place southwards towards the Meadow, rather than westwards where it would have encroached on the Lee Building's curtilage.[1]

2. In 1963 the remaining pictures in the Christ Church Library were moved into temporary storage.[2] I have it in my head that the Lee Building was used for this purpose: and that the opening of the Gallery and the re-opening of the LB were more or less simultaneous. Check!

3. Dean Gregory was the "main force" behind the LB's construction.[3]

4. Description: It is a "simple, astylar box with unembellished sash windows and a plain parapet. The 'ground' floor entrance has a small portico, reached by a short flight of stone steps.[4]

Built at the top of some steeply sloping land, the façade is just two stories high; but to the side the basement continues down the slope, and there are three stories at the rear of the building.

5. Main history, pp. 151-9, notes pp. 250-1.

5.1 Organist's house was demolished to make way for the Anatomy School (AS).[4] The organist was Thomas Norris See also [[List of musicians at English cathedrals#Oxford, Christ Church Cathedral]]

5.2 Lee's bequest of £20,000 was specifically for Westminster alumni and for the construction of the AS.[4]

5.3 The AS was built in 1765. The architect was Henry Keene, who had designed both the Gothic revival interior of the upper Christ Church Library and the much simpler lower Library, which was to become the picture gallery to house Sir John Guise's bequest. Project supervised by the dean, sub-dean [possibly Dr. Edward Bentham and the treasurer, tho' Bentham filled both offices... ]

BHO: "Slightly earlier is the small Anatomy School designed by Henry Keene and built in 1766–7 to the south of the hall: it later became a chemical laboratory, but in 1948–50 was reconstructed as an additional picture gallery."
BHO: "In addition the College owns an important collection of paintings and drawings by old masters which are housed partly in the Library and partly in the former School of Anatomy which has been re-decorated for this purpose."
'Christ Church', in A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 3, the University of Oxford, ed. H E Salter and Mary D Lobel (London, 1954), pp. 228-238. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol3/pp228-238 [accessed 23 April 2020].

6. CC Chapter House used to be the trad meeting place for the dean and canons until the AS's refurbishment in 1971 as the SCR.[5]

7. Alterations to the old Anatomy School included in major repairs to buildings in late C19 and early C20.[6]

8. Basement of the Anatomy School converted into a refectory.[7]

9. Gunther receives nary a mention in this book.

Lede[edit]

The Anatomy School, with the college kitchens on the left. Woodcut by Orlando Jewitt[8] of an original drawing by W. A Delamotte

Dr. Lee's Building is a Grade II Georgian building in the grounds of Christ Church, Oxford, built in 1765 (or 1766-7) as the new Anatomy School which was formerly housed in the Schools Quadrangle of the Bodleian Library. It is named for Dr. Matthew Lee, an alumnus of Christ Church and physician to Frederick, Prince of Wales.[a] Lee endowed a Readership in Anatomy in his will, along with funds for a new Anatomy School building.[10]

John Freind (d. 1728) had also made similar provisions in his will, and when his unmarried son died in 1750 Christ Church became the beneficiary. NB How much did Freind leave? Lee died in 1755. The impetus for building a new Anatomy School was taken up(?) by the new Dean from 1756, David Gregory.

The new building also housed the curious collection of human and animal anatomical specimens which had steadily grown since the original Anatomy Lecture was founded in 1623.(See Gunter for list.)

In 1858 the Anatomy lectures and collection were transferred to the Oxford University Museum, principally through the efforts of Sir Henry Acland.

The trustees of Dr. Lee's bequest then WHEN? funded a Readership and a Professorship of Chemistry, and a Professorship of Physics. By 1863 the building had been converted into a laboratory for the newly created Dr. Lee's Readership in Chemistry. As the various branches of chemistry expanded during the 19th century the building became a specialised inorganic chemistry laboratory.

Much of the research in the building during the 1920s was on radioactive isotopes such as radium and uranium. In 1941 most of the staff and researchers removed to the new Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory in South Park Road. When the last of Lee's Readers to use the building retired in 1955, the radiation levels were found to be somewhat higher than background. It was slowly 'cleansed' and after 1968 it was converted into an annex of the College's Senior Common Room, which function it still fulfils.

Lee's Building, active as a place of scientific research for 190 years, was the first Oxford college laboratory to be built, and the last to be in regular use.[11]

See User:MinorProphet/Draft subpages/Matthew Lee (physician)

Description of the building[edit]

[12] [13]

History[edit]

The old Anatomy School[edit]

Oxford's first Anatomy Lecture was endowed by Richard Tomlins (or Tomlyns) in a proposal to the University in November 1623 with a yearly stipend of £25.[14]

The Anatomy School was in the Schools Quadrangle with the other Schools, in the same building as the Bodleian Library.[15][16]

Before the trustees of Matthew Lee and John Freind endowed the Lee's Readership in 1756, there were some fifteen readers of the original Anatomy Lecture. [17] The original lectures were at first given by the Regius Professor of Physic, which chair was endowed in 1546 by Henry VIII. The first Anatomy Reader was Tomlins' "worthy friend Thomas Clayton" the elder (1575–1647), Doctor of Physic, and Regius Professor of Physic from xxxx to xxxx.[18] He made his first lecture in the Anatomy School on March 12 1624.[14]

The old Anatomy School also housed a growing collection of anatomical specimens, both human and animal.[19]

John Smith was the last reader in Anatomy (succeeded to the readership in c1757) before Matthew Lee's will established the new readership. In 1766 he was elected Savilian Professor of Geometry.


Dr. Lee's Anatomy School and Lecture[edit]

"It is thought that the creation of the laboratory had originally been suggested by John Freind, physician to Queen Caroline, who gave a course in Chemistry in 1704."[20] Freind died in 1728, and in his will stipulated that if his son should die childless, that £1,000 should be directed to establishing an Anatomy Readership and a new building for the School at Christ Church. His son died unmarried in 1750, and the money, along with Lee's benefaction of £10,000, was given to Christ Church.[21][22][23]

The Lee building is ituated south of Tom Quad, SW of the kitchens (built by Cardinal Wolsey in 1506).[24] [25]

The new Anatomy School was designed and built on the site of the organist's house at a cost of £1,200 in 1765 by Henry Keene under the direction of John Parsons,FIX THIS PAGE the first Lee's Reader in Anatomy.[22][26] John Parsons had arrived at Christ Church as an undergraduate at the same time as the indefatigable botanist Joseph Banks.[20]

The old Anatomy School in the Schools Quad was finally emptied of its contents, and the "heterogeneous and gruesome" collection was re-housed in the lecture room of the new Anatomy Building.(Gunter p. 116) It seems at least possible that the copy by Edward Bernard of the Selden Map was transferred to the new building and hung on the walls. see #Copy of the Selden Map

A marble bust c1755 of Dr Matthew Lee by Louis Francois Roubiliac stands at the foot of the stairs in Dr. Lee's Building.[27]

The old School in the Bodleian was finally fitted up for housing the Bodleian's collection of Greek and Biblical MSS in 1789, and by 1794 it was referred to as the 'Auctarium' (Auctarium, Latin, an addition or augmentation).(Gunter p. 116)

The titles of either 'Lee's Reader' or 'Dr. Lee's Reader' were used throughout the 19th century - modern practice prefers the latter.

It seems likely that some chemistry lectures were given in the building as well from the early 1770s, probably prepared by Parsons, although the majority of chemistry courses took place in the 'old' Ashmolean.[28]

The laboratory had its own library of scientific and medical books, much of which has survived. The library included Joseph Priestley's Experiments on Air; the Annales de Chimie (from its first publication) in which Louis Pasteur's classic researches on optical isomerism were published; "as well as other journals, and an impressive array of monographs maintained and updated almost to the time of the laboratory's final closure."[20]

The collection of Old Masters and drawings bequeathed to Christ Church by General John Guise after 1765 (since 1968 housed in the Christ Church Picture Gallery) was hung in the College's new library.(Thalman p. 14)[29]

Sleeping Venus by Giorgione, a copy of which hung in the Anatomy school.
Leda and the Swan, after Michelangelo, a copy of which hung on the Anatomy school

Some pictures (depicting the naked female form) were considered not to be suitable for polite viewing, however, and were hung in the lecture room of the Anatomy Museum. These were copies of Leda and the Swan (after Michelangelo),[30] A Sleeping Venus (after Titian), and Ariadne (unattributed). "Unfortunately these fell into disrepair and are no longer in Oxford, but can be found in Cambridge used as a teaching resource for fine-art conservation."[20]

In 1789, a skylight was inserted to improve lighting, and a gas pipe was laid to the building in 1821.[31]

Lee Readers of the Anatomy Lecture[edit]

Continuing the existing tradition, the Lee Readership in Anatomy was in the gift of the Regius Professor of Physic, who at the time was one John Kelly.[who?]

John Parsons's interest in chemistry, altho he was Anatomy Reader, makes it "very likely" that practical chemistry was routinely carried out there as well. Richard Walker, apothecary at the Radcliffe Infirmary made an experiment in January 1789 to freeze mercury. The Dean of Christ Church, Dr Jackson, was present.[12][32] This phenomenon had been recorded thirty years earlier in Russia by Mikhail Lomonosov in 1759.

William Thomson (BA1780, BM 1785, DM 1786, FRS), was elected to the Readership in 1786.(Wood ed Gutch p. 866) In July 1790 Thomson performed a public lecture on the bodies of two felons, executed for the murder of an elderly Scottish pedlar, one David Charteris.[33] [b][35] Thomson seceded and resigned in September 1790, on the allegations of performing improper experiments.[20](Wood ed Gutch p. 866)

Christopher Pegge. 1813 engraving by John Agar after Thomas Uwins

Christopher Pegge Reader 7 December 1790 (Wood ed Gutch p. 866) Although he was one of the lights of the medical school, he was later described as a 'desultory' lecturer, so much so that 'the protection of the Dean and tutors of Christ Church could never make his anatomical school famous beyond the walls of the University, or popular with the young men within them'.[36]

"The Anatomy School, in 'Skeleton Corner', as it was called, was the centre of anatomical and zoological studies in Oxford for nearly two-thirds of a century. A fair idea of the way in which it was managed is obtainable from the Accounts and from the Minutes of the annual visitations by the Dean and other members of the Governing Body of the House. From these Minutes, which cover the period 1796-1860, the following items have been abstracted:"[37] A Platina Retort, gift of Rt. Hon. Lord Granville (who went to Christ Church). The Lee's Reader was permitted to lend it, when wanted, to public Reader in Chemistry, taking always an acknowledgment for it and requiring it to be returned when no longer wanted. 1817: Microscope by William Cary - £91 18s. 1820: Air pump (Cary)- £55 13s. Platina cups and thermometer - £18 19s 9d.[38]

John Kidd (ex Westminster) Lee's Reader in Anatomy 1816. Chem was not part of the undergraduate study. Lived at 37 St Giles and left the house to Dr Lee's Trust, for use by the Anatomy Reader, later used by the Chem Reader until Richard Wayne retired in 2006.[39] One of Kidd's pupils was Charles Daubeny, Chemistry Professor in November 1822, but not Reader.

Important administrative changes occurred during Kidd’s tenure of the Readership. The history of the Lee Trust is somewhat intricate, but it may be summarized as follows. The Lee estate realized a capital sum of about £30,000. This was expended in the purchase of two estates, one in Buck[ingham]s[hire], the other, Butlers Marston, in Warwickshire.[40] From the date of purchase in 1775 the income increased, and in 1825 the Dean and Chapter asked for an improved scheme which was granted by the Court of Chancery in 1827. Dr. Lee’s Reader in Anatomy was to have £200 instead of £100 per annum. There was added a charge for the increase of the living of Butlers Marston (the parish in which the estate lay), and the living was limited to Westminster Students. In 1832 the Dean and Chapter again went to the Court of Chancery owing to difficulties that had arisen through the passing of an Act of Parliament restricting the use of bodies for dissection. Dr. Kidd obtained leave to lecture on models and preparations instead of on actual bodies : but the Act was repealed, or became inoperative before the Court of Chancery had adopted any conclusion. (Report of 1852 Commission , Part ii, p. 282.)[41]

"With regard to the large expenditure incurred in 1829 (very nearly £800), it may be noted that during the previous year Dr. Buckland discovered that a considerable sum had accumulated which might be claimed for the benefit of the Museum. In July 1828 he wrote to Sir Roderick Murchison[c] in great delight at his discovery. "I am going to town in a day or two to attend the opening of Brooke's sale,[???] for I have found out £1200 that we can lay out for our anatomical school at Christ Church, which will quite set us up, unless we find powerful rival bidders in the two new London Colleges." "[42]

Henry Acland c1874.

Kidd was succeeded as Lee's Anatomy Reader by the highly capable Henry Acland, later Sir Henry Acland, 1st Baronet.[43] It was mostly thanks to his efforts that the Oxford University Museum was built, where the teaching of the Natural Sciences became more centralised, and to which place a number? of college-based laboratories removed.

"After 1850 the University took increased interest in Science. Dr. Acland, who was made Lee's Reader in 1845 and Regius Professor in 1857, was strongly of opinion that it was the business of the University to establish a vigorous school of Natural Science, but not to attempt the special training required by Medical men. It would appear that in consequence of this view of Dr. Acland's (as the income of the Lee trust was still improving), the Lee's Readership in Chemistry was founded in 1857."[44]

"The Ordinance of 1858 legislated for two Lee's Readerships in Anatomy and Chemistry. In 1860 the Dean and Chapter went to Court for a further scheme, and a serious departure was made from Dr. Lee's original scheme. The Court sanctioned the application of a part of the revenue for Lectures in Law and Modern History, and for exhibitions to persons studying Law, Modern History, Physiology, and Mathematics ; and Mr. Sidney Owen became Lee's Reader in Law and Modern History. In 1866 the Court increased the payment of the Lee's Reader in Modern History, abolished the Exhibitioners, and substituted Lecturers with permission to teach any Sciences or subjects recognized in the University Examinations. This arrangement terminated about 1869. Acland's view was that the Lee Trust was available for the general purposes of Natural Science in Oxford : and this also appears to have been the view of Rolleston. This principle governed the loaning of the Collections, which were originally kept in Christ Church, and are now in the Museum on loan from the Governing Body. When Acland became Reader there were no Collections or preparations of any kind."[45]

"Lee's Reader in Anatomy was originally to reside for six months in each year: later he seems to have combined his functions in Oxford with work in London. His stipend was £200 a year. After 1858 Lee's Readers were required to reside and teach, and their income was raised from time to time till it reached the limit which the present Statute prescribes. This increase, with a decrease in proceeds from the Lee estate,[46] has made it necessary to supplement Lee income from the corporate revenues."[45]

A Royal Commission reporting in 1852 proposed plans for a Science Museum, (now Museum of the History of Science? with Gunter 1st curator), a Professorship of Physiology, and the creation of a Lee's Readership in Chemistry. (The Lee's Readership in Physics was not to appear until 1869).

By 1854, a reading room had been incorporated and the gallery redesigned for the better exhibition of all the anatomical and zoological specimens collected over the years.[31]

George Rolleston

"In November 1857 George Rolleston was elected Lee's Reader in the place of Dr. Acland, who resigned on being appointed Regius Professor of Medicine, and at the annual visitation the Dean was requested to convey to Dr. Acland the high sense entertained by the Lee's Trustees of the excellent services rendered by him. The present author [R. T. Gunther] would however here note that the efficiency of a scientific department in which material objects for study are a sine qua non, depends in no small measure upon the annual grant paid to it. During the half century preceding 1847, the year of Dr. Acland's appointment, the annual grant to the Anatomy School was on the average under £70 a year, indeed it had been as low as £20 three years previously. During Acland's tenure of the office, twelve years, he received no less than £3,280 13s. 10d. for his department— or about £273 a year! and he had a stipend of £600 a year."[42]

Microscope by R & J Beck

Charles Robertson was appointed as assistant to Rolleston at a salary of £60 a year, and it was arranged that Woodward's wages should be paid by the Lee's Reader.

In 1858 in addition to the establishment charges, Rolleston expended £5 4s. on a Smith and Beck microscope, and in 1859 he asked that £10 be paid to the porter to keep the building clean. In this year he gave two courses in Anatomy and Physiology, attempting to realize the objects of Matthew Lee. He arranged practical classes in which students received instruction by actual demonstration and dissection. He noted that of forty-eight persons attending, fifteen were Christ Church men.[42][47]

In 1859, the Lee's Reader in Anatomy, George Rolleston, moved the laboratory to the Oxford University Museum when the anatomical series (specimens) from the Anatomy School were placed under the charge of the Professor of Medicine.[20]

Rolleston was appointed the first Linacre Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in 1860. Robertson was appointed Demonstrator of Anatomy, and his skilful work became widely known beyond the University through his Zoological Series with Dissections in Illustration.[48][49]

Chemistry laboratory[edit]

A. G. Vernon Harcourt

A. G. Vernon Harcourt, the first Dr. Lee's Reader in Chemistry, began his lectures in the Uni Museum. By around 1863 the building had been converted into a Chemistry Laboratory, and Harcourt took over the building.

A glass McLeod gauge or manometer, drained of mercury

Harcourt constructed at Christ Church apparatus for analysing gases which entailed accurate measurements often at low pressures - using a simple but effective apparatus invented by Herbert McLeod. Used for analysing town gas inc. Oxford Gas Works.[20][50][51] He started Reaction kinetics re absolute zero. Although Charles L. Dodgson was a contemporary, Harcourt collaborated with the mathematician William Esson. The College laboratory provided experimental teaching courses in inorganic chemistry for undergraduates from all Oxford colleges.[20][52] Holroyd organised lectures for women students only - chaperones were required until 1893. Harcourt's and Esson's wives were on the first committee which set up Somerville College. Harcourt's assistant from 1897-9 was G.W.F. Holroyd.

Harcourt was Lee's Reader in Chemistry until 1902. Chemical kinetics, the study of rate processes, has been a recurring theme of physical chemistry in Oxford since these auspicious beginnings. Hinshelwood and F. A. Lindemann (Prof of experimental philosophy (physics) at Oxford and director of the Clarendon Laboratory), made a major contribution to the study of unimolecular reactions.

H. B. ('Dry') Baker, Lee's reader from 1902 until 1912, at once started to improve the haphazard nature of chemistry teaching in the colleges. Baker demonstrated that the rate of a chemical reaction depended on the amount of moisture (water vapour). [NB Is this right?]

The Christ Church lab was to be used for instruction of inorganic chemistry, while J. J. Manley taught quantitative analysis at Magdalene College.[53][54][d] Baker left to be Professor of Chemistry at Imperial College London.

In 1903 a third storey was added to the building to provide extra laboratory space, but this unsightly upwards extension was removed by 1929-1930.[56]

"It was found in 1912 that only a small fraction of the annual income devoted to Lee Professors and Readers came from the Lee estate. The Governing Body was anxious to associate the name of Lee with its contributions to Natural Science, but in view of the small proportion which the proceeds of the Lee estate bore to the complete charges upon the House, Christ Church thought themselves justified in making any arrangements which the needs of the University might require.[57]

And O The War...

The radioactive gaze of Frederick Soddy

In 1919 Frederick Soddy was elected as the first Dr. Lee's Professor of Chemistry.[58] Earlier that year Ernest Rutherford and Soddy had conducted an experiment at the University of Manchester in which they bombarded nitrogen nuclei with helium ions (alpha particles from the natural decay of eg uranium), with the result that the nitrogen nucleus was transformed into an unusual isotope of oxygen. Although they didn't realise it at the time, this was the first ever transmutation of one element into another. This method of would continue until the invention of the cyclotron in the 1930s. [59]

In the period up till 1936 Soddy reorganized the laboratories and the syllabus in chemistry, although he was frustrated by the lack of University funds, occasioned by the building of the new Dyson Perrins Laboratory for organic chemistry.[58]

At the time, instruction for undergrads studying Physical Sciences came from three different bodies: the colleges were responsible for one-to-one weekly tutorials; the Board of the Physical Sciences Faculty organised the lecture programme; and the University and college laboratories provided lab work under the umbrella of the Board. The lecturers split their time between college and laboratory, whereas Arts lecturers were only based in college and thus more able to contribute to college life.[60]

Alexander Russell (Reader from 1920–1955) succeeded H. B. Baker. "In 1920, Alexander S. Russell, MC, a Glasgow graduate who had worked with Nernst, Rutherford and Soddy, was appointed to the Lee's Readership in Chemistry. Russell had already made fundamental discoveries in the field of radioactivity, and it is arguable that the term and concept of an "isotope" was originated by him." [20] His An Introduction to the Chemistry of Radioactive Substances was published in 1922. He also contributed to a collection of essays on science and faith.[61]

Apparently W.H. Auden had some lectures with Russell. "Of all the elements, beryllium is the most beautiful".[20] Auden would bring visitors to the Gasworks to show them what he considered to be the embodiment of 'The Waste Land' by TS Eliot.[50]

"Elsewhere, organic chemistry was located at Queen's College, analytical chemistry at Magdalen, and physical chemistry at the Trinity-Balliol laboratory and at Jesus College."[20]

Cyril Hinshelwood

Carl H. Collie entered New College, Oxford to read Chemistry, and worked with Russell on isotopes in the laboratory in 1924. In 1929 Collie was elected Lee's Reader in Physics. Collie was to lay the foundations of what became nuclear physics at Oxford, The radioactivity researches of the day were basic and horrifyingly simple in their techniques. "We just used to take 1 kg of uranium..." he would begin.[20][62]

Professor Cyril Hinshelwood (Dr. Lee's Professor in 1937 - 1964) was Head of the Department, which at that time included the Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory.

The new Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory opened in summer 1941.[63] It was a only small party that moved in from the College laboratories in the summer of 1941: There was a grand total of eighteen staff and research students.[64]

After 1941[edit]

"Alexander Russell continued to work in the Lee Building, researching the ‘borderline’ between the new atomic physics and chemistry, When he retired in 1955, however, the Lee Building was found to be radioactive, as a result of the radium, uranium and other substances with which Russell had been working. Paul Kent, Richard Wayne, and the subsequent Lee Readers would be based in new laboratories in the science area."[65]

When the Picture Gallery in Canterbury Quad was completed in 1968, the Dr. Lee Building was transformed into a comfortable and attractive annex to the Senior Common Room through the "tasteful designs" of Oscar Wood, one of the Tutors in Philosophy.[20] As an undergraduate Wood delivered a paper at a meeting of the student-run Jowett Society (to which Gilbert Ryle also belonged in the early 1920s)[66] in May 1947. In the audience was Ludwig Wittgenstein on his only visit to Oxford from 'the other place'.[67]

The undercroft where dissections used to take place in the early days of the Anatomy School was transformed in c2018 from the “most dingy, dirty, scruffy bar in Oxford” into “now the most wonderful (bar) in Oxford”. The work, including preparation for a lift was carried out by Purcell architects and won an Oxford Preservation Trust (OPT) Award. The Project Architect was Alain Torri.[68]

Copy of the Selden Map of China[edit]

The Selden Map of China with trade routes, a copy of which (by Edward Bernard) hung in the Anatomy School

The Catalogue of the cabinet of curiosities of the old Anatomy School, included a copy of the Selden Map from Dr Edward Bernard's MSS, "which is to be put in the Anatomy Schoole." Bernard was the compiler of the 'Old Catalogue' of MSS in Oxford colleges & libraries. See John Greaves for cite.

8. See Thomas Hearne, ‘An Extract and particular Account of the rarities in the Anatomy School’, Bodleian MS Rawl. C 865, reprinted in R. T. Gunther, Early Science in Oxford, vol. 3 (Oxford, Hazell, Watson and Viney, 1925), 264–74; and

Thomas Hearne, Hearne's Remarks and Collections, vol. 1, ed. C. E. Doble (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1885), p. 70. https://archive.org/details/remarksandcolle01saltgoog/page/n82

Early Science in Oxford Vol 3, R. T. Gunther, https://archive.org/details/earlyscienceinox03gunt/page/277

"The passage in Hearne implies that the Anatomy School actually received a copy of the map:" ‘Today Mr. Halley coming to ye Library, Dr Hudson shew'd him Mr. Selden's large MSt Map of China (whereof there is a Copy amongst Dr. Bernard's MSS. that is to be put into the Anatomy Schoole) to wch Dr. Hyde added some Explicatory Notes. Mr. Hally having taken a view of it, concluded it to be full of faults, from some wch he knew to be so from his own observations’.

The Selden Map Rediscovered: A Chinese Map of East Asian Shipping Routes, c.1619 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03085694.2013.731203

Edmond Halley visited the Bodleian Library on 12 November 1705 (Hearne p. 70) and inspected the original Selden Map.

"This article assembles scattered pieces of evidence to demonstrate that the famous Chinese “Selden map”, acquired by the Bodleian Library in 1659, was duplicated in the later seventeenth century by the Oxford mathematician and orientalist Edward Bernard (1673–91), as part of his abortive attempt to edit a definitive corpus of classical and post-classical mathematical texts. It was Bernard’s copy, and not the original Selden map, that was publicly exhibited in Oxford in the eighteenth century."[69] Well, that's pretty much what I had gathered.

References[edit]

Notes
  1. ^ One of Prince Frederick's principal art advisers was General John Guise,[9] whose bequest of notable artworks currently adorns the walls of the Christ Church Picture Gallery. His father was Professor of Oriental Languages at Christ Church.
  2. ^ Their accomplice, Giles Covington, was later apprehended and hanged in Oxford Castle on 7 March 1791. His body was also dissected in the Anatomy School, perhaps by Thomson's successor, Christopher Pegge. His skeleton, after residing in the University Museum for about a century from 1860, is now in the Museum of Oxford.[34]§
  3. ^ Gunther has "Sir Robert Murchison", which is a not uncommon error.
  4. ^ John Job Manley had beem appointed 'Daubeny Curator' in in 1888 - effectively the Magdalene lab technician. Frederick Soddy considered Manley to be "probably the greatest living authority of the chemical balance, and by 1928 Manley's standard balance was "easily capable of detecting a 128th-millionth part of a gram."[55]
Citations
  1. ^ Curthoys 2017, pp. 66–7.
  2. ^ Curthoys 2017, p. 142.
  3. ^ Curthoys 2017, p. 52.
  4. ^ a b c Curthoys 2017, p. 152.
  5. ^ Curthoys 2017, pp. 201–2.
  6. ^ Curthoys 2017, pp. 204.
  7. ^ Curthoys 2017, pp. 209.
  8. ^ Jenkins, Stephanie. "Orlando Jewitt (1799–1869)". History of Headington. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  9. ^ Rorschach 1990, p. 19.
  10. ^ Gunther 1968, p. 114-6.
  11. ^ Laidler 1988, p. 218.
  12. ^ a b Williams, Chapman & Rowlinson 2009, p. 70.
  13. ^ Gunther 1968, p. 114.
  14. ^ a b Wood 1796, p. 883.
  15. ^ Good photos at "The Schools Quadrangle, 1613-24". Cabinet. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  16. ^ Tyack, Geoffrey (10 April 2017). "How Oxford University's buildings evolved, and how its 'chiefest wonder' came into being". Country Life . Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  17. ^ Wood 1796, p. 883-6.
  18. ^ "Thomas Clayton senior (1575–1647)". Oxford Medical Men. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  19. ^ Gunther 1968, pp. 256–263, 266–277.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Wayne & Kent 2004.
  21. ^ Robb-Smith 1972, p. 22.
  22. ^ a b Grossel, M.C. (1996). "The Lee Benefactions and the origins of the Christ Church Science Laboratory". Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  23. ^ Grossel, M.C.; Kent, P.W. (1996). "The Christ Church Science Laboratory: The Teaching of Science at Christ Church". Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  24. ^ Curthoys, Judith (18 July 2019). "Stones of Christ Church blog, pt. 2". Retrieved 5 December 2019. Illustrations from Judith Curthoys' book The Stones of Christ Church (2017).
  25. ^ Sketch map at Laidler 1988, p. 199
  26. ^ Gunther 1968, p. 116.
  27. ^ Bridgwater, David (13 July 2018). "Bust of Dr Matthew Lee by Roubiliac". Bath, Art and Architecture. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  28. ^ Laidler 1988, pp. 219–220.
  29. ^ Thalmann, Jacqueline (2015). "Commemorating the 250th Anniversary of the Bequest of Sir John Guise" (PDF). Christ Church Matters (CCM) (35): 12–14. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  30. ^ "Leda and the Swan, mid 16th century". RA. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  31. ^ a b Curthoys, Judith (2012). "Cardinal Sins – Notes from the Archives" (PDF). Christ Church Matters (CCM) (29): 5. Retrieved 5 December 2019. Plus good selection of pictures of the laboratory.
  32. ^ Walker, Richard. "Experiment XXV. Experiments on the production of artificial cold. By Mr. Richard Walker, Apothecary to the Radcliffe Infirmary at Oxford. In a letter to Henry Cavendish, Esq. F. R. S. and A. S". Phil. Trans. R. Soc. 78. doi:10.1098/rstl.1788.0027. S2CID 186208544. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
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  34. ^ Sullivan 2012, pp. 113–9.
  35. ^ Davies, Mark Johnstone (2014). "The Abingdon Waterturnpike Murder". Retrieved 21 April 2020.
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  37. ^ Gunther 1968, p. 191.
  38. ^ Gunther 1968, p. 191-3.
  39. ^ Williams, Chapman & Rowlinson 2009, p. 86.
  40. ^ Salzman, L. F., ed. (1949). "'Parishes: Butlers Marston'". A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 5, Kington Hundred". London: British History Online. pp. 28–31. Retrieved 4 December 2019. ...by 1789 the advowson had been acquired by the Dean and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford, the present holders.
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  42. ^ a b c Gunther 1968, p. 195. Cite error: The named reference "FOOTNOTEGunther1968195" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
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  45. ^ a b Gunther 1968, pp. 120–121.
  46. ^ See perhaps Tithe Commutation Act 1836
  47. ^ Arresting photograph c1860 by one C. L. Dodgson: 'The Anatomy Lesson': George Rolleston examining a skull; Charles Robertson, Demonstrator in Anatomy; a young A. G. Vernon Harcourt and fellow student Heywood Smith (b. 1838) examining the skeleton of a stonefish. From "Ancient Greek skulls in the Oxford University Museum, Part I: George Rolleston, Oxford and the formation of the human skulls collection". Retrieved 5 December 2019.
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  49. ^ https://jcs.biologists.org/content/joces/s2-6/24/201.full.pdf
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  53. ^ Williams, Chapman & Rowlinson 2009, p. ???.
  54. ^ Fox & Gooday 2005, p. 124.
  55. ^ Fox & Gooday 2005, p. 124-5.
  56. ^ Laidler 1988, pp. 219.
  57. ^ Gunther 1968, pp. 121–2.
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  59. ^ {cite book Title The Periodic Table: Its Story and Its Significance Author Eric R. Scerri Edition 2 Publisher Oxford University Press, 2019, pp. 350-351 ISBN 9780190914363 |url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=9x2yDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA336}
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  61. ^ "Reviews: Adventure: The Faith of Science and the Science of Faith by Burnett H. Streeter, Catherine M. Chilcott, John Macmurray & Alexander S. Russell". The Journal of Theological Studies. 29 (115): 290. April 1928. JSTOR 23950951.
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  65. ^ Chapman, Allan (2017). "250 Years of the Lee Building in Christ Church" (PDF). CCM (Christ Church Matters) (40): 14. Retrieved 5 December 2015. With photo of A. S. Russell.
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Bibliography[edit]

Printed sources
  • Curthoys, Judith (2017). The Stones of Christ Church: the story of the buildings of Christ Church, Oxford. London: Profile Books. ISBN 9781781258125.
  • Rorschach, Kimerly (1989–1990). "Frederick, Prince of Wales (1701–51) as Collector and Patron". The Volume of the Walpole Society. 55. The Walpole Society: 1–76. JSTOR 41829512.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  • Williams, Robert J. P.; Chapman, Allan; Rowlinson, John Shipley, eds. (2009). Chemistry at Oxford: A History from 1600 to 2005. Royal Society of Chemistry. ISBN 9780854041398.
Internet sources

External links[edit]

Category:History of anatomy Category:Buildings and structures of the University of Oxford Category:Chemistry laboratories Category:History of the University of Oxford‎


Category:Science laboratories Category:Science at Oxford University Category:Scientists of Oxford University