Record

RefNoAP/9/27/1
LevelItem
TitleUnpublished manuscript, 'An account of an electrical increaser' from Henry Upington to George Pearson
Date24 February 1817
DescriptionUpington's paper consists of a letter to Pearson and extracts of letters from Upington to Earl Stanhope [Charles Mahon], all written as a single piece of prose. Upington describes his invention of an 'electrical increaser' used to manifest weak amounts of elecric fluid so that they might affect an electrometer. Annotations appear throughout in graphite.

Subject: Physics

Written by Upington in Blair's Hill, Cork [Ireland]. Read to the Royal Society on 24 April 1817.

Whilst the Royal Society declined to publish this letter, it was published in full in the Philosophical Magazine and Journal in 1818: Upington, Henry. 'Account of an electrical increaser for the unerring manifestation of small portions of the electric fluid'. The Philosophical Magazine and Journal, vol 52, no 248, December 1818, pp. 47-52.
Extent4p
FormatManuscript
PhysicalDescriptionInk on paper
AccessStatusOpen
RelatedMaterialUpington, Henry. 'Account of an electrical increaser for th unerring manifestation of small portions of the electric fluid'. The Philosophical Magazine and Journal, vol 52, no 248, December 1818, pp. 47-52.
RelatedRecordAP/9/27
URLDescriptionPublished version available online at the Biodiversity Heritage Library
URLhttps://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/53091#page/57/mode/1up
Fellows associated with this archive
CodePersonNameDates
NA5829Pearson; George (1751 - 1828)1751 - 1828
NA687Mahon; Charles (1753 - 1816); 3rd Earl Stanhope1753 - 1816
Add to My Items

    Collection highlights

    Browse the records of some of our collections, which cover all branches of science and date from the 12th century onwards. These include the published works of Fellows of the Royal Society, personal papers of eminent scientists, letters and manuscripts sent to the Society or presented at meetings, and administrative records documenting the Society's activities since our foundation in 1660.

    The Royal Society

    The Royal Society is a Fellowship of many of
    the world's most eminent scientists and is the
    oldest scientific academy in continuous existence.
    Registered charity number 207043

    Website design ©CalmView



    CONTACT US

    + 44 207 451 2500
    (Lines open Mon-Fri, 9:00-17:00. Excludes bank holidays)

    6-9 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AG

    Email Us →

    SUBSCRIBE

    Subscribe to our newsletters to be updated with the
    latest news on innovation, events, articles and reports.

    Subscribe →

    © CalmView