拍品专文
This chronometer and No's. 909, 915, 924 & 994 are confirmed as being purchased in a letter, dated Jan. 6, 1837, addressed to G.B. Airy Esq, Astronomer Royal, from F. Beaufort, Hydrographer to the Navy, Copies of which are included with this lot. The letters also show that in November 1858 it was with Johnson to be fitted with his 'Hermetic Seal' and that in August to December 1877 it had a new balance with 'Airy's Comp' fitted and at the same time had a 'Stop/Start' assembly fitted. In a document with the address '84 Strand' dated Nov. 5 1840 it is recorded that No. 896 was one of 23 Admiralty chronometers which Mr Dent (who had charge of them) had left at 84 Strand 'on the dissolution of Arnold & Dents partnership', it's record of issue to H.M.Ships etc. is also included.
In 1870 The present chronometer was lent to Prof. Rucker of the Royal College of Science, now part of Imperial College.It was almost certainly one of the chronometers used by Professor Rucker in the Magnetic Survey of the British Isles for the Epoch January 1, 1886, which he carried out, together with Professor Thorpe, between 1884 and 1888. The chronometer would have been used to time the swings of a suspended magnet, one of two operations involved in using the classical Kew magnetometer for determining the horizontal componenet of the Earth's magnetic field.
No. 896 had at one time been fitted with a balance locking device operated by a separate key through the scallop plate in the bottom of the bowl. In the late 1860s Airy, the Astronomer Royal, commissioned for a system to locking the balance without the necessity of removing the movement from the bowl, the system devised by Loseby gained favour with Airy and his may have been the one fitted in No. 896.
In 1870 The present chronometer was lent to Prof. Rucker of the Royal College of Science, now part of Imperial College.It was almost certainly one of the chronometers used by Professor Rucker in the Magnetic Survey of the British Isles for the Epoch January 1, 1886, which he carried out, together with Professor Thorpe, between 1884 and 1888. The chronometer would have been used to time the swings of a suspended magnet, one of two operations involved in using the classical Kew magnetometer for determining the horizontal componenet of the Earth's magnetic field.
No. 896 had at one time been fitted with a balance locking device operated by a separate key through the scallop plate in the bottom of the bowl. In the late 1860s Airy, the Astronomer Royal, commissioned for a system to locking the balance without the necessity of removing the movement from the bowl, the system devised by Loseby gained favour with Airy and his may have been the one fitted in No. 896.