London
Found in 1992 Collections and/or Records:
Enquiry from Lieutenant John Couch regarding remuneration for some tables, 1825-08-03
Correspondence regarding various astronomical and nautical tables.
Enquiry from Maillardet concerning the date of the act of parliament offering a reward for the discovery of perpetual motion, 1815
envelope, containing a feather; secondary type: miscellaneous, 1869-09-29
Letter from William Bernhard Tegetmeier to Charles Robert Darwin; written at London
(Letter, miscellaneous)
envelope (originally containing items 142: 72-84?); secondary type: miscellaneous, 1862-09-16
Letter from [unidentified] to Charles Robert Darwin; written at London
(Letter, miscellaneous)
envelope returned from war front, 1915-04-21 - 1915-04-30
Miscellaneous; by (O H M S); written at [London] in containing See items 107-109
(Miscellaneous)
Essay chapter in which Joseph Shee criticises the Board of Longitude, 1818
Essay chapter in which Joseph Shee criticises the Board of Longitude, 1818
Examples of Brazill's longitude method, 1817
Two letters, with examples.
Expense sheets for the trigonometrical survey between London and Paris, 1822
The accounts of printers and publishers for Board of Longitude publications, with miscellaneous accounts.
Explanation of an optical instrument, 1817-11-29
Includes letters from Hawkes and from Captain F.G. Dickens and Rev. S.W. Paul who wrote to Thomas Hurd on Hawkes' behalf.
Explanation of the polar compass constructed by William Casson and John Minto, 1805
Correspondence regarding the effects of magnetic variation on the mariner's compass, the use of magnetic variation to establish longitude and the cause of magnetic variation.
Explanation of the Solometer or Pencil for Ascertaining the Situation of Place, 1821-01-26
Sent by Lester to the Board of Longitude, providing details on the technical construction of his invention, the Solometer.
Extract from a report of the Committee of Instruments and Proposals, 1820-04-20
Concerning estimates received from Troughton, Dollond and Jones for instruments for the Cape Observatory.
Extract from a work by Arthur Hodge, 1814
An extract from 'Commerce and Freedom' regarding a boat with wheels, with drawings of the same.
Extract of a letter from Fearon Fallows, 1827-02-12
Two letters from Fallows to John Barrow, and two related notes from Barrow to Dr Young.
Extract of a letter from Fearon Fallows to J.W. Croker, 1828-03-22
Requesting stationary, copy books and copies of papers by Professor Woodhouse on Dollond's transit instrument.
F. Roche's method of finding the longitude by calculation and the quadrature of the circle, 1818
FitzRoy and Darwin, 1831-36 [Clay]: 8pp, 1912-01-01 - 1912-12-31
Printed; by Sir Francis Darwin; written at London reprint, reset from letter to 'Nature' 22 February
(Printed)
Flimsy of letter from Hore-Belisha to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1936-01-09
Letter to Neville Chamberlain about London street improvement with estimated expenditure for a provisional list of overdue improvements.
Francis Xavier Brosius' method of finding the latitude by double altitudes of the Sun, 1817-11-17
Letter and proposal, sent to Captain Thomas Hurd.
'Free examination of Darwin's treatise on the origin of species and of its American reviewers' [Trübner; Ticknor & Fields]: 55pp (reset from 'Atlantic Monthly' July - October 1860), 1861-01-01 - 1861-12-31
Printed; by Asa Gray; written at London / Boston
(Printed)
From Albert Edward Sammons [Violinist], Bayswater
Suggesting Dent's attendance at a rehearsal of a piece by [Antonio] Scontrino
From Arthur Hayden Parry, Golders Green, 1917 (Circa, undated)
Eddie [Marsh] has got him transferred to London; grateful for Timmy's address; feels fit and well
From Beverley Nichols [Author], Bryanston St, 20 Nov. 1917
A meeting with Harley Trott, who gave Nichols 'three very abandoned pictures'