Welcome to issue 3 of my Irregular Newsletter.
Is it June already, how I’ve kept it going this long I’ll never know, it's becoming too regular!
English Bookbinder -
Will the REAL Darwin genius please stand up
Just so you know that I still keep my ear to the ground in the book world, this month's whisper is that the world's largest Charles Darwin book collection has been bought by The Natural History Museum for nearly £1m. The acquisition is the most expensive in the museum's 125-year history and was made possible thanks to a £175,000 grant by the Natural Heritage Memorial.
The Darwin Collection includes almost everything the naturalist published from 1829 onwards. Among the items are 470! editions of On the Origin of Species and a rare copy of Zoology of the Voyage of HMS Beagle, bound in original cloth, and a map of the Falkland Islands from the Beagle voyage.
Sadly this week Darwin's tortoise "Harry" died of a heart attack aged 176, it seems difficult to believe that this creature travelled from the Galapagos Islands on the Beagle and was with Darwin during his explorations.
Experts found out only 50 years ago why "Harry" was always in a bad mood and never had any offspring after trying for many years, this was down to the fact that "Harry" was in fact "Harriet"....Darwin's little joke maybe!
Interestingly I was going through my stock of quite rare medical and botanical books this week, when I chanced upon a fly leaf of a certain 18th century medical book which had been stuck down with sellotape. After carefully opening the page to my astonishment it was signed by a previous owner..... ERASMUS DARWIN, the GRANDFATHER of Charles.
(don't worry there's lots of pictures further down, this bit is called "education")
For those interested, Charles Erasmus Darwin was born in 1731 and died in 1802. He studied at Cambridge and Edinburgh, and established his medical practice in Lichfield in the West Midlands (about a 45 minute drive from here). It was an immediate success, with patients travelling considerable distances for his consultations. At one stage he was offered - and refused - the post of royal physician to George III.
He had an extremely broad range of scientific interests. He was a founder member of the Lunar Society, whose members included some of the greatest innovators of the age: Josiah Wedgwood, Matthew Boulton and James Watt, and Joseph Priestley, who discovered oxygen. (I think we all discovered oxygen the moment we were born).
Erasmus’ own inventions and ideas varied enormously. A horizontal windmill invented in 1765 was made and used by Josiah Wedgwood. A carriage that would not tip over was designed in 1766. In 1771 he invented a speaking machine, a canal lift for barges and in 1778 he came up with a copying machine and a variety of weather monitoring machines that included a north-south airflow machine and a weather vane with the pointer in his study.
During the following decade his work continued. In 1783 he invented an artesian well and conducted research into the formation of clouds, the latter of which he published in 1788. Despite his many innovations, however, he retained NO patents. He felt they would have harmed his reputation as a doctor and instead encouraged his friends to pursue his ideas; they then patented their own, modified, versions.
Yet Erasmus was also one of the most successful poets of his time. He published several volumes of botanical verse that received great acclaim and proved stylistically influential to the likes of Wordsworth, Keats, Byron and Coleridge.
It was Erasmus Darwin who wrote the poem "Visit of Hope to Sydney Cove, near Botany Bay" published in 1789 in The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay. The first four lines of the long sentimental work read: "Where Sydney Cove her lucid Bosom swells, Courts her young naives, and the storm repels; High on a rock amid the troubled air HOPE stood sublime, and wav'd her golden hair". The poem was written to accompany the celebrated medallion made by Joshua Wedgwood from clay sent by Joseph Banks from Botany Bay.
The 1791 1st ed of The Botanic Garden will cost you around £2700.
Between 1794 and 1796 he published his book, Zoonomia. This employed rhyming couplets to discuss scientific topics, including a theory of how all life originated from one vital spark and from then became all the variety of animals on the planet. This theory would only be developed to its logical extent by his famous grandson, Charles.
So really it was Erasmus who originally came up with the evolution idea.
You can read more about his genius here at.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/Edarwin.html
So what has this got to do with bookbinding?.........Absolutely nothing.