ABSTRACT

’G. Adams in Fleet Street London’ is the signature on some of the finest scientific instruments of the eighteenth century. This book is the first comprehensive study of the instrument-making business run by the Adams family, from its foundation in 1734 to bankruptcy in 1817. It is based on detailed research in the archival sources as well as examination of extant instruments and publications by George Adams senior and his two sons, George junior and Dudley. Separate chapters are devoted to George senior’s family background, his royal connections, and his new globes; George junior’s numerous publications, and his dealings with van Marum; and to Dudley’s dabbling with ’medico-electrical therapeutics’. The book is richly illustrated with plates from the Adams’s own publications and with examples of instruments ranging from unique museum pieces - such as the ’Prince of Wales’ microscope - and globes to the more common, even mundane, items of the kind seen in salesrooms and dealers - the surveying, navigational and military instruments that formed the backbone of the business. The appendices include facsimiles of trade catalogues and an annotated short-title listing of the Adams family’s publications, which also covers American and Continental editions, as well as the posthumous ones by W. & S. Jones.

part I|156 pages

George Adams Senior

chapter 1|11 pages

Family Background

chapter 3|32 pages

Royal Connections

chapter 4|26 pages

Adams’s Globes

part II|113 pages

George Adams Junior

chapter 6|39 pages

Continuation of the Business

chapter 7|52 pages

Essays and Lectures

chapter 8|13 pages

Instruments for van Marum

chapter 9|7 pages

Hannah Adams and the Succession

part III|62 pages

Dudley Adams

chapter 10|34 pages

Globe Maker and Instrument Maker

chapter 12|15 pages

Electrician and Political Reformer