home-made compound microscope
Date: circa 1867
Inventory Number: 1028
Classification: Microscope
Dimensions:microscope: 36 × 18 × 35 cm (14 3/16 × 7 1/16 × 13 3/4 in.)
blue board box: 41 × 22.9 × 38.7 cm (16 1/8 × 9 × 15 1/4 in.)
Accessories: 3 Tolles oculars (low power, 30.1 mm O.D.; medium power, 30.1 mm O.D., solid front with scale, single eye lens; high power, 24.7 mm O.D., single front, solid eye lens); 1 ocular (without a lens) ; 1 objective (without a lens).
Description:
This unusual microscope has a large wooden base board on which is mounted a cradle for the brass optical assembly. The stage is made from a horseshoe magnet, and the slide is held by brass clips to a strip of iron that adheres to the magnet. The light source is a candle. A large disk of pasteboard (covered in marbled paper) is placed over the front end of the optical tube to shield on wanted light from the user's eyes.
On either side of the wooden cradle are compartments to hold 3 spare oculars, a piece of cork, glass slides, and a case for an objective. Two of the oculars are marked with "PAT'D SEPT. 25 1855," which is the patent date for Robert B. Tolles's solid eyepiece.
One of the oculars that fits into the 30.5 mm tube is merely a combination of stops without any provision for lenses. Likewise, one objective is a shell without a lens.