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Microscope Museum Collection of antique microscopes and other
scientific instruments |
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Microscope
277 (R Field
& Son; school microscope; c. 1860)
Robert Field,
Senior, was born in about 1787, in Birmingham, England, and was recorded as
being an optician on all of his children’s christening
records. Philip Carpenter (1776-1833) opened an optical and scientific
instrument shop in about 1808 in Birmingham and his heirs sold it to Robert
Field, Senior, in 1837. The business became Robert Field and Son in
1845. The firm traded from 113 New Street, Birmingham, from 1845 until 1851,
and then from Suffolk Street until well after 1863. The 1851 census found the
whole family at the New Street location. Robert Field, Sr., died in 1851 and
the business was thereafter operated by Robert Field, Junior, as “R. Field
and Son”. Robert Field, Jr. probably sold the business in the early 1870s
and died in 1883, at the age of only 54 years old. R. Field & Son is
primarily known for the prize they won from the Society of Arts in 1855. The
Society of Arts, in London, requested applications for two different
microscope types and Field was awarded the top prize for each (Figure 1). One
prize was for a compound student microscope to be provided for 3
Guineas or less. The other award was for a mechanically and optically simple school
microscope, to be provided for 10 shillings, 6 pence, or less. R. Field and
Son also sold a compound version of the school microscope, which
presumably sold for a higher price. The pattern of Field’s student
prize-winning compound microscope became immensely popular and was widely
copied by other manufacturers, being known as the Society of Arts
pattern. In addition, the Field businesses produced more complex, expensive
microscopes, and a wide variety of other scientific and mathematical
instruments. Microscope 277 is signed with ‘R Field & Son, Birmingham’,
and with the serial number 501. This instrument is also engraved with the
inscription ‘Society of Arts Prize’ (Figure 1). The instrument can be dated
to c. 1860. The mirror of this microscope doesn’t look to be the original.
Figure
1. R
Field & Son’s microscopes that were awarded by the Society of Arts:
compound student microscope (left) and simple school microscope (right) as
pictured on the W.B. Carpenter’s 1868 edition of ‘The Microscope and Its
Revelations’. References Robert
Field (http://microscopist.net/FieldR.html), last accessed on
13.08.2020 Bar
Limb Microscope; Maker: Robert Field & Son; Model: 'Society of Arts
Prize' Microscope (https://www.microscope-antiques.com/soa.html), last accessed on
13.08.2020 Microscopio Robert Field &
Son Opticians (https://sites.google.com/site/coleccionguillermocrovetto/home/ingleses/r-field), last accessed on
13.08.2020 R.
Field & Son, "Society of Arts" Microscope ~1850 (https://www.microscopehistory.com/field--son-society-of-arts), last accessed on
13.08.2020 LAST
EDITED: 02.10.2022 |
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