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Josiah Wedgwood (1730–95) — Scientist

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

John A. Chaldecott
Affiliation:
Science Museum, South Kensington, London SW7 2DD.
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Abstract

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Type
Presidential Address
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1975

References

This presidential address was delivered at the summer meeting of the British Society for the History of Science at the University of Leeds on 3 July 1974.

I am indebted to the Trustees of the Wedgwood Museum, Barlaston, for permission to reproduce photographs in their collections (Figures 2 and 4); also to the Delegacy of King's College, London, and to the Director of the Science Museum, London, for permission to reproduce a photograph of Wedgwood's pyrometer (Figure 3). I am grateful to Mr Bruce Tattersall, Curator of the Wedgwood Museum, Barlaston, and to Mr Ian H. C. Fraser, Archivist at Keele University Library, for supplying information about documents in the Wedgwood arcnives.

1 Schofield, Robert E., ‘Josiah Wedgwood, industrial chemist’, Chymia, v (1959), 180–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 Schofield, Robert E., The Lunar Society of Birmingham: a social history of provincial science and industry in eighteenth century England (Oxford, 1963), p. 45.Google Scholar

3 McKendrick, Neil, ‘The rôle of science in the industrial revolution: a study of Josiah Wedgwood as a scientist and industrial chemist’, in Teich, Mikuláš and Young, Robert (eds.), Changing perspectives in the history of science: essays in honour of Joseph Needham (London, 1973), pp. 274319.Google Scholar

4 Ibid., p. 280.

5 Josiah Wedgwood, J. W. experiments nos. 1–4832, Wedgwood Museum Trust MS. 19117–26.Google Scholar

6 Located in the Wedgwood Museum at Josiah Wedgwood & Sons Ltd., Barlaston, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire ST12 9ES, England.

7 Josiah Wedgwood, Common place book no. 1, f. 10, Wedgwood Museum Trust MS. 28408–39.

8 Fordyce, George, ‘Of the light produced by inflammation’, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London, lxvi (1776), 504–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (7), ff. 1120.Google Scholar

10 Letter from Priestley, Joseph to Wedgwood, Josiah, 30 11 1780Google Scholar, Royal Society Miscellaneous MSS., vol. v, letter ref. 1; Royal Society Letters and Papers, decade 7, vol. lxvii, no. 178.

11 The term calorimeter was introduced by Lavoisier in his Traité élémentaire de chimie (Paris, 1789), ii. 389–90Google Scholar; English translation by Kerr, Robert, Elements of chemistry (Edinburgh, 1790), p. 345.Google Scholar Wedgwood referred to his calorimeter as a cistern.

12 Boerhaave, Hermann, Elementa chemiae (Leyden, 1732), i. 187–8Google Scholar; English translation by Shaw, Peter, A new method of chemistry (2nd edn., London, 1741), pp. 245–6.Google Scholar

13 Minute book of the Philosophie Society, f. 21, Museum of the History of Science, Oxford, MS. Gunther 4. This meeting was held at the Chapter Coffee House, London. I am indebted to our Honorary Treasurer, Mr G. L'E. Turner, for bringing this record to my notice.

14 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (7), ff. 7781.Google Scholar

15 Ibid., ff. 81–2.

16 Ibid., ff. 19–20.

17 Based on a curve given by Hyslop, J. F. and McMurdo, A. in ‘The thermal expansion of some clay minerals’, Transactions of the Ceramic Society, xxxvii (19371938), 181Google Scholar, fig. 1. The curve relates to tests carried out in an oxidizing atmosphere, the rate of temperature increase being 10°C. per minute.

18 Brass gauges were made for Wedgwood by Peter Pearson; see Keele University Library, Wedgwood MSS. 9749–11, 9750–11, and 9753–11.

19 Wedgwood, Josiah, Catalogue of cameos, intaglios, medals … and other ornamental and useful articles (6th edn., Etruria, 1787), pp. 6971.Google Scholar This edition was reprinted with a different pagination as Wedgwood's catalogue of cameos, intaglios … useful articles, ed. Meteyard, Eliza (London, 1873)Google Scholar; the relevant entry is on pp. 103–5.

20 Wedgwood Museum, Barlaston: inventory no. 4549.

21 Draft of letter from Josiah Wedgwood to Richard L. Edgeworth, 13 February 1786, Keele University Library, Wedgwood MS. 2488–3. The letter as sent is published in Finer, Ann and Savage, George (eds.), The selected letters of Josiah Wedgwood (London, 1965), pp. 291–2.Google Scholar

22 Science Museum, London: George III collection of scientific instruments: inventory no. 1927–1812.

23 Josiah Wedgwood, J. W. experiments 1781–1793, f. 47, Wedgwood Museum Trust MS. 19121–29.

24 Ibid., f. 48.

25 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (7), ff. 88–9.Google Scholar

26 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (23), f. 56.Google Scholar

27 Ibid., f. 58.

28 Letter from Priestley, Joseph to Wedgwood, Josiah, 21 03 1782Google Scholar, Royal Society Miscellaneous MSS., vol. v, letter ref. 8. Published versions of this letter are to be found in: Bolton, Henry Carrington (ed.), Scientific correspondence of Joseph Priestley (New York, 1892), pp. 35–6Google Scholar, and Schofield, Robert E., A scientific autobiography of Joseph Pritstley (Cambridge, Mass., 1966), pp. 206–7.Google Scholar

29 Letter from Wedgwood, Josiah to Boulton, Matthew, 8 04 1782Google Scholar, Birmingham Public Library, Boulton and Watt Collection, box 36, bundle 1781–1835.

30 Letter from Wedgwood, Josiah to Watt, James, 15 05 1782Google Scholar, Keele University Library, Wedgwood MS. 18956–26. Published in Finer, and Savage, , op. cit. (21), pp. 265–6.Google Scholar

31 Wedgwood, Josiah, ‘An attempt to make a thermometer for measuring the higher degrees of heat, from a red beat up to the strongest that vessels made of clay can support’, Philosophical transactions. lxxii (1782), 305–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

32 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (23), f. 65.Google Scholar Degrees on the Wedgwood scale are cited hereafter as °W.

33 Alchorne was then master's assay master and later king's assay master at the London Mint. See SirCraig, John, The Mint (Cambridge, 1953), p. 231.Google Scholar

34 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (23), f. 66.Google Scholar

35 Wedgwood, Josiah, ‘An attempt to compare and connect the thermometer for strong fire … with the common mercurial ones’, Philosophical transactions, lxxiv (1784), 358–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

36 Ibid., p. 367.

37 ‘Abstract of a memoir upon beat by Messrs. Lavoisier and De La Place, Members of the Royal Academy of Sciences of Paris, read at the said Academy June 28, 1783’, The monthly review; or, literary journal, lxix (1783), 568–79.Google Scholar See footnote 38 regarding the confusion which arises over the date quoted in the above title.

38 Lavoisier, A. L. and Laplace, P. S., ‘Memoire sur la chaleur’, Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences, Paris (1780; read 18 June 1783; published 1784), 355408Google Scholar; reprinted in Oeuvres de Lavoisier (Paris, 1862), ii. 283333.Google Scholar Their memoir was printed in 1783 as a brochure for private distribution, but with the date incorrectly given as 28 June. The abstract in the Monthly review (see footnote 37) must have been based on a copy of that brochure. For details of other reprints, abstracts, and translations of this memoir, see Duveen, Denis I. and Klickstein, Herbert S., A bibliography of the works of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (London, 1954), pp. 54–6, 248–9.Google Scholar

39 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (23), ff. 203–5Google Scholar; op. cit. (35), 371–84. For an evaluation of Wedgwood's criticism of the ice calorimeter and of his influence on British writers, see Lodwig, T. H. and Smeaton, W. A., ‘The ice calorimeter of Lavoisier and Laplace and some of its critics’, Annals of science, xxxi (1974). 118 (4–9).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

40 Wedgwood, Josiah, Description and use of a thermometer for measuring the higher degrees of heat, from a red heat up to the strongest that vessels mode of clay can support (London, 1784), pp. 22–3.Google Scholar

41 Wedgwood, Josiah, Private ledger 17861890, f. 52aGoogle Scholar, Wedgwood Museum Trust MSS.

42 The repertory of arts and manufactures, vi (1797), 255–68, 324–43Google Scholar; vii (1797), 173–95, 239–59.

43 Scherer, Alexander N., ‘Wedgwood's pyrometer’, Allgemeines Journal der Chimie (Scherer), ii (1799), 5062.Google Scholar

44 de Morveau, L. B. Guyton, ‘Extraits d'une lettre de M. A. N. Scherer au cit. Guyton’, Annales de chimie, xxxi (1799), 171 n., 172 n.Google Scholar

45 Vauquelin, L. N., ‘Réflexions sur la qualité des poteries, et résultats de quelques analyses de terres et de poteries communes’, Bulletin des sciences, par la Société Philomathique de Paris, ii, no. 26 (1799), 1012.Google Scholar

46 ‘Chemische Betrachtungen über die irdenen Geschirre’, Allgemeines Journal der Chemie (Scherer), iii (1799), 734–7Google Scholar; Vauquelin, L. N., ‘Reflections on the qualities of pottery, with the resuit of some analysis of earths, and of common pottery’Google Scholar, A journal of natural philosophy, chemistry, and the arts, ed. Nicholson, W., iii (1800), 264–5Google Scholar; O*** [Oppenheim], L'art de fabriquer la poterie, façon anglaise (Paris, 1807), p. 160.Google Scholar

47 de Morveau, L. B. Guyton, ‘Examen des faits sur lesquels sont fondées les objections contre la régularité de la marche du pyromètre de Wedgwood’, Annales de chimie, lxxiv (1810), 129–52 (130–1).Google Scholar

48 de Morveau, L. B. Guyton, ‘Correction de la table de Wedgwood; valeurs réelles des degrés de son pyromètre; et leur concordance avec les differentes échelles thermométriques et pyrométriques’, Mémoires de la Classe des Sciences Mathématiques et Physiques de l'Institut de France, xii, part 2 (1811, published 1814), 89120Google Scholar; a slightly edited version appears in Annales de chimie, xc (1814), 113–37, 225–38.Google Scholar

49 For details of this instrument, see Chaldecott, John A., ‘The platinum pyrometers of Louis Bernard Guyton de Morveau, F.R.S. (1737–1816)’, Annals of science, xxviii (1972), 347–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

50 SirHall, James, ‘Experiments on the effects of heat modified by compression’, A journal of natural philosophy, chemistry, and the arts, ix (1804), 98107 (99 n.)Google Scholar. A translation appeared in Bibliothèque britannique (Sciences et arts), xxvii (1804), 289309.Google Scholar

51 This fact was pointed out in Daniell, John Frederic, ‘On a new register-pyrometer, for measuring the expansions of solids, and determining the higher degrees of temperature upon the common thermometric scale’, Phihsophical transactions, cxx (1830), 257–86 (259).Google Scholar

52 Spielmann, Jacob Reinbold, Institutiones chemiae (2nd edn., Strasburg, 1766), pp. 118–20Google Scholar; Instituts de chymie (Paris, 1770), i. 260, 263.Google Scholar For an examination of the source of Spielmann's information, see Chaldecott, John A., ‘Cromwell Mortimer, F.R.S. (c. 1698–1752), and the invention of the metalline thermometer for measuring high temperatures’, Notes and records of the Royal Society of London, xxiv (1969), 113–35 (125–6).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

53 The small quantity of pyrometric clay dug out in 1779 was almost exhausted by the end of 1782; a fresh supply was obtained early in 1783 from the same location but it was found to have somewhat different burning-shrinkage characteristics. See Wedgwood, , op. cit. (23), ff. 106, 117, 120.Google Scholar

54 Salvétat, Alphonse, Leçons de céramique professées à l'École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures, ou téchnologie céramique (Paris, 1857), ii. 258–61.Google Scholar

55 Daniell, John Frederic, ‘On a new pyrometer’, The quarterly journal of science, literature, and the arts, xi (1821), 309–20Google Scholar; also Daniell, , op. cit. (51), 257–86.Google Scholar

56 Prinsep, James, ‘On the measurement of high temperatures’, Philosophical transactions, cxviii (1827), 7995.Google Scholar

57 Pouillet, Claude S. M., ‘Recherches sur les hautes températures et sur plusieurs phénomènes qui en dépendent’, Comptes rendus hebdomadoires des séances de l'Académie des Sciences, iii (1836), 782–90Google Scholar; cited hereafter as Comptes rendus.

58 Violle, Jules L. G., ‘Chaleurs spécifiques et points de fusion de divers métaux réfractaires’, Comptes rendus, lxxxix (1879), 702–3.Google Scholar

59 Watkin, Henry, ‘The principle of contraction of clays as a pyrometer for pottery purposes’, Transactions of the North Staffordshire Ceramic Society, ii (19021903), 7292 (75).Google Scholar

60 Wedgwood, , op. cit. (7), f. 82.Google Scholar

61 For a survey of these investigations, see Chaldecott, John A., ‘Studies in the history of pyrometry’ (University of London Ph.D. thesis, 1972), pp. 3956, 6282.Google Scholar

62 McKendrick, , op. cit. (3), p. 279.Google Scholar