SHAC Autumn Meeting and AGM

This year marks the centenary of the death of William Crookes. Journalist, chemist, photographer, spiritualist, businessman, sometime Secretary of the Royal Institution and President of the Royal Society of London, Crookes was a key figure in the science of the second half of the nineteenth century and beginning of the twentieth. This meeting, organised by the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry, the Historical Group of the Royal Society of Chemistry and the Royal Institution, which is part of the ChemFest celebrations of the sesquicentenary of the periodic table, will examine various aspects of Crookes’s extraordinary career and his place in science.

The Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry’s AGM will also be held at this meeting and further details about this will be sent to members in the autumn.

Programme

13.15   SHAC AGM
13.30   Registration for Crookes Meeting
13:45   Welcome and Introduction: Frank James, (Royal Institution and Chair of SHAC)

First Session Chair: Anna Simmons (UCL)
13.50   Richard Noakes (Exeter University)
‘Two Parallel Lines’? The Trajectories of Physical and Psychical Research in the Work of William Crookes
14:30   Kelley Wilder (De Montfort University, Leicester)
William Crookes, a life in Photo-Chemistry
15.10   Refreshment Break

Second Session Chair: Peter Morris (Chair of RSCHG) 15.30   Frank James (Royal Institution and UCL)
William Crookes and Michael Faraday
16.10   Paul Ranford (UCL)
Crookes’s “Invisible Helper” – George Gabriel Stokes (1819-1903)
16.50   William Brock (University of Leicester)
The key to the deepest mystery of nature: Crookes, periodicity and the genesis and evolution of the elements
17.30   Close of meeting

There is no charge for this meeting, but prior registration is essential. Please email Robert Johnstone (robert.johnstone.14 [AT] ucl.ac.uk) if you would like to attend. If having registered, you are unable to attend, please notify Robert Johnstone.

The meeting will take place at Saturday 19 October 2019, at the Royal Institution, 21 Albemarle Street, London, W1S 4BS

OXFORD SEMINAR IN THE HISTORY OF
ALCHEMY AND CHEMISTRY


The Oxford seminar in the history of alchemy and chemistry will will take place during Trinity Term, and is organised with the support of SHAC. It’s convenors are John Christie, Oxford and Marie Thébaud-Sorger, MFO.

See here the programme:

Wednesday 22 May, 3.00-5.00pm


Jo Hedesan, Oxford

« Alchemy and Paracelsianism at the Casino San Marco in Florence under the patronage of Antonio de’ Medici (1576-1621) »


Ute Frietsch, Wolfenbüttel

« Alchemy as an organising principle of the Kunstkammer of Rudolf II »


Wednesday 29 May, 3.00-5.00pm

A prospect and preview of A Cultural History of Chemistry (6 vols., Bloomsbury, forthcoming)
With Peter Morris (Joint Editor-in Chief), John Christie (contributor, vol. 4).

Wednesday 5 June, 4.00-6.00pm

Pierre Teissier, Université de Nantes 

« Chemical Substitutions in XXth Century Materials Research »

Mat Paskins, LSE

« The Substitutes Directory: Narratives and Practices of Substitution »

Location :

Maison française d’Oxford

2-10 Norham Road

OX2 6RF Oxford

Cambridge Bibliographical Society – Talk on “Spiritus Anima”

The Cambridge Bibliographical Society will be hosting an event which may be of interest to SHAC’s members. On 1 May, Ed Potten and Tim Chesters will give a paper on “’Spiritus anima’ – an unrecorded seventeenth-century alchemist’s library at Clare College, Cambridge.”

The talk will take place on 1 May in Milstein Seminar Rooms, at the main University Library, 5.00-6.00pm, with refreshments from 4.30pm. All are welcome.

About their paper:
“The identity of the annotator of a collection of extraordinary seventeenth-century alchemical manuscripts, now in the Sloane Collection, has long eluded scholars. The recent discovery of a collection of sixty printed books in the Fellows’ Library at Clare College, Cambridge, all annotated in the same characteristic hand, utilizing the same complex system of cross-referencing and the same approach to organizing and recording knowledge, casts new light on the Sloane annotator, his methods and his identity. Ed Potten (University of York, and formerly Head of Rare Books at the University Library) and Dr Tim Chesters (Modern & Medieval Languages, University of Cambridge) will share their discoveries about this enigmatic annotator, accompanied by a display of books.”

Short courses at British Society for the History of Pharmacy

The British Society for the History of Pharmacy is hosting two short courses which may be of interest to SHAC’s members.

The first course covers a three-day programme on the history of pharmacy and the pharmaceutical industry from 1-3 July. The programme and the application form can be downloaded here.

The second course is about ethics and philosophy of medicine and runs from 1-2 July. The programme and the application can be found here.

The Worshipful Society of Apothecaries of London is also hosting a three-day conference on the history and future of medicine, from 1 to 3 May. For more information and to apply, click here.

CfP: SHAC Postgraduate Workshop 2019


The Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry invites submissions for the 10th Annual Postgraduate Workshop. This year’s topic will be“Society and the Creation of (al)Chemical Knowledge.”

The workshop will take place on 29-30 November, 2019, and will be hosted by the Ritman Library in Amsterdam (the Netherlands).

The deadline for applications is 1 June, 2019.
More information about the workshop and about applying can be found here.

SHAC Special ICHC Award Scheme

Applicants are invited to apply for grants under a new Special Award Scheme from the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (SHAC) to support attendance of early-career scholars and independent scholars at the 12th International Conference on the History of Chemistry in Maastricht on 29 July to 2 August 2019. Awards of up to £500 will be made as a contribution towards the cost of travel, accommodation and registration fees for those giving a paper at the conference. Early-career scholars are defined as post-graduate students (both masters and doctoral students) and those who have obtained a PhD since January 2014.

Applicants must be members of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry in good standing at the time of making an application and if successful through the period of the award. For more information and application forms please contact grants[AT]ambix.org stating that you are applying for a grant to attend ICHC.

Details of how to join the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry can be found at https://www.ambix.org/subscription/ . Membership enquiries should be made to newjoiner[AT]ambix.org

The deadline for applications is Sunday 7 April 2019. Please note this an earlier deadline than for the 2019 SHAC Award Scheme. It is expected that applicants will be advised of the outcome of their application in time to register for early-bird conference fees which are available until 1 May 2019.

An activity report must be submitted at the end of the conference. This will usually be published in SHAC’s Chemical Intelligence Newsletter.

Please note that applying for a Special ICHC12 Award does not preclude applying to the usual SHAC Award Scheme for 2019.

SHAC Spring Meeting 2019

Matter, Ideas and Nature:  A Conference in Memory of David Marcus Knight

Durham University, 14-15 June 2019

SHAC’s spring meeting is being organised jointly with Durham University’s Department of Philosophy and will take place at Durham University’s Business School on Friday 14 and Saturday 15 June 2019.

The registration fee for the meeting will be £20.

Please visit the following link to book a place at the conference

https://www.dur.ac.uk/conference.booking/details/?id=1205

FRIDAY 14TH JUNE

10:00 Introduction
Matthew Eddy and Robin Hendry
10:30 David Marcus Knight (1936-2018): An Appreciation
Prof William H. Brock (Leicester University)
11:30 Voyaging in Strange Seas: Science and Storytelling
Ms Sarah Day (Journalist and Novelist)
12:30 Lunch
13:30 Whitehead and Wells on the ‘Invention of Invention’
Prof Peter Bowler (Queens University Belfast)
14:30 Young Wallace: New light on the globe-trotting land-surveyor to whom Darwin wrote ‘May all your theories succeed’
Prof Jim Moore (Open University)
15:30 Break
16:00 Beyond the Exotic Anomaly: The European Reception of the
Kangaroo
Dr Sophie Forgan (Linnean Society of London)
17:00 Trust in Science 
Prof Nancy Cartwright (Durham University)
18:00 End
19:30 Conference Dinner

SATURDAY 15TH JUNE

10:00 Trust in Chemistry Prof Robin Hendry (Durham University)
11:00 The Very Young Humphry Davy 
Prof Frank A. J. L. James (University College London and the Royal Institution)
12:00 Lunch  
13:00 The Life of Thomas Garnett
Prof Robert Fox (Oxford University)
14:00 Rethinking Joseph Black’s Matter Theory
Prof Matthew Daniel Eddy (Durham University)
15:00 Closing Remarks
Matthew Eddy and Robin Hendry
15:30 End