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azimuth compass

  • Images (12)

azimuth compass

Date: circa 1765
Inventory Number: 0095
Classification: Compass
Subject:
geomagnetism, navigation, research expeditions, solar eclipses,
Maker: Edward Nairne (1726 - 1806)
Maker: Daniel Scatliff (I) (fl. 1760 - 1767)
User: John Winthrop (1714 - 1779)
User: Samuel Williams (1743 - 1817)
Cultural Region:
England,
Place of Origin:
London,
City of Use:
Cambridge,
Dimensions:
23.5 x 32 x 28 cm (9 1/4 x 12 5/8 x 11 in.)
bezel and gimbal ring diam: 24 cm (9 7/16 in.)
Material:
glass, oak, brass, lead,
Bibliography:
The Apparatus of Science at Harvard, 1765-1800
Description:
This compass is mounted in brass gimbals and installed in a Wainscott box on a short post allowing the bowl and sighting vanes to move together. The azimuth with slit and hair sights rotates on the compass rim. The compass card is printed with a fleur-de-lys pointing north and is decorated in the east direction. The outer edge of the printed card is marked in degrees, by increments of tens. The card is held in place by a silvered brass circle, marked every 30' and numbered in tens.
The paint color and lead weight on this instrument are identical to another one by Nairne in the collection (# 0094). The compass and its gimbals may be removed from the box and mounted on a post or railing to facilitate the use of the azimuth sights.
In Collection(s)
  • Solar Eclipse Expedition 1780 / 1980
  • Exhibit 2005--CHSI's Putnam Gallery
Signedon gimbals: E. NAIRNE LONDON

on compass card: Made by Daniel Scatliff Near Old Stairs Wapping
Inscribedstamped on box: 8-21
painted on box: MA9
FunctionMarine or azimuth compasses determined the sun's azimuth in order to correct for magnetic declination of the compass. They were used for steering the ship on course.
Historical AttributesAn "Azimuth Compass best sort in Wainscott box ... 5.15.6" appears directly below the mariners' compass (# 0094) on Joseph Mico's August 1765 invoice of apparatus purchased by Harvard College from Edward Nairne.

Professor Samuel Williams may have taken this azimuth compass on his expedition to observe a total solar eclipse in October 1780 behind enemy lines in Penobscot Bay, Maine.
Curatorial RemarksThe following information helps in dating this instrument: on 2 October 1760, Daniel Scatliff received a patent (#752) for a Quadrant for taking observations at sea.
Published ReferencesDavid P. Wheatland, The Apparatus of Science at Harvard, 1765-1800 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1968), 156.
Related WorksRobert F. Rothschild, "Colonial Astronomers in Search of the Longitude of New England," Maine Historical Society Quarterly 22 (1983): 175-205.

Robert F. Rothschild, "What Went Wrong in 1780?" Harvard Magazine 83 (January-February 1981): 20-27.

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