A D V E N T U R E S in C Y B E R S O U N DStephen Gray : 1666 - 1736
From the 1690s to 1716 Gray devoted his scientific energies to astronomical observations, quantitative and accurate, of eclipses, sunspots, the satellites of Jupiter, and the like. He was in constant correspondence with Flamsteed. It is clear that Gray was an accomplished observer, to the extent that Trinity College, Cambridge, hired him as an assistant in its planned observatory. In the latter years of his life he devoted himself to electricity. In 1729 he discovered that electricity could be conducted. Threads are what he used for this. He was awarded the Copley Medal in 1731 (the first award) and again in 1732 for his research on electricity. In his early letters to the Royal Society there is a lot of natural history.
1. Dates Born: Canterbury, 1666, Died: London, 7 Feb. 1736 2. Father Occupation: Artisan Mathias Gray was a dyer, described (on what evidence I do not know) as a rapidly rising artisan 4. Education Schooling: No university education. Probably studied in London or perhaps in Greenwich under John Flamsteed. Somewhere he acquired working Latin. 6. Scientific Disciplines Primary: Electricity, Astronomy Subordinate: Natural History 7. Means of Support Primary: Art Secondary: Miscellaneous, Patronage Until disabilities made it impossible, he was a dyer like his father. In 1707-8, Gray was resident in Trinity, as an assistant to Cotes in setting up the observatory there. I list this and the following item under Miscellaneous. About 1715-19 (the exact dates are impossible to establish) he appears to have been resident with Desaguliers in Westminster, again serving him as an assistant. Pensioner of the Charterhouse through the patronage of Prince of Wales, 1719 until his death. 8. Patronage Types: Scientist, Court Official, Gentry, Eccesiastic Official For the most part his long relationship with Flamsteed does not appear as patronage. It is impossible to imagine his appointment at Trinity without Flamsteed's assistance, however. The positions with Cotes and Desaguliers occupy that hazy border between patronage and mere employment. On the nomination of the Prince of Wales, he became pensioner of the Charterhouse in 1719. In his later years Gray was frequently resident with John Godfrey, Esq., (who had also been, note, a patron of John Harris) of Norton Court, Kent, and with the Rev. Granville Wheler, a properous cleric, both of whom aided his experiments in electricity and gave him financial support. 9. Technological Involvement Type: Instruments Gray's early letters are filled with talk about instruments of various kinds, mostly involving magnification. He is credited with a microscope in which a drop of water was the lens. He ground lenses. He worked hard at improving sand and water glasses as devices better to measure time. Some small instruments for electrical experiments. 10. Scientific Societies Membership: Royal Society Informal Connections: Intimate and lasting friendship (and correspondence) with Flamsteed. Cooperation with Wheler in electrical experiments. Friendship with Henry Hunt. Hunt supplied him with the Philosophical Transactions and transmitted to their editor the communications they called forth from Canterbury. 63 manuscript letters survive, at the British Library, the Greenwich Observatory, and the Royal Society. Royal Society, 1732-36. First receipient of the Copley medal, 1731, and then again in 1732. Sources
Not Available and Not Consulted
Compiled by: Richard S. Westfall Department of History and Philosophy of Science
edited by Dr Russell Naughton
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