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Reference
(The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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BJ 3
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Title
(The name of the record)
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Sir Edward Sabine: Correspondence and papers
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Date
(When the record was created)
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1818-1877
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Description
(What the record is about)
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Personal letters and papers of Sir Edward Sabine, and official correspondence, papers and letter books of his Magnetic Department.
The correspondence is mainly from the period preceding James Clark Ross' Antarctic expedition and the period immediately after. The papers relate mainly to the establishment of magnetic observatories overseas and to various scientific observations, reflecting the liaison between the Magnetic Department and the overseas observatories. Included is a particularly rich collection of letters to Sabine from Dr Humphrey Lloyd of Trinity College, Dublin.
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Arrangement
(Information about the filing sequence or logical order of the record)
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Arrangement
The letters are divided into personal correspondence and that which came into and emanated from the Magnetic Department.
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Related material
(A cross-reference to other related records)
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Aspects of the later stages of Sabine's career are reflected in his dealings with the Kew Observatory, records of which may be found in
BJ 1
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Held by
(Who holds the record)
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The National Archives, Kew
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Legal status
(A note as to whether the record being described is a Public Record or not)
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Public Record(s)
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Language
(The language of the record)
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English
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Creator(s)
(The creator of the record)
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- Sabine, Edward, 1788-1883
- Magnetic Department, 1839-1877
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Physical description
(The amount and form of the record)
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84 files and volumes
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Subjects
(Categories and themes found in our collection (our subject list is under development, and some records may have no subjects or fewer than expected))
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- Topics
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Polar
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Personal and family papers
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Custodial history
(Describes where and how the record has been held from creation to transfer to The National Archives)
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This series is part of a larger collection of records inherited from the Kew Observatory by the Meteorological Office.
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Administrative / biographical background
(Historical or biographical information about the creator of the record and the context of its creation)
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Sir Edward Sabine was one of the first great bureaucrats of organised science. In 1818 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and within two years had participated, as astronomer, in two voyages to the Arctic under William Edward Parry. In 1827 he became a captain in the Royal Artillery and in 1834 commenced, together with James Clark Ross and Humphrey Lloyd, the first systematic magnetic survey of the British Isles.
From 1836 Sabine, with the support of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, began to press the government to establish magnetic observatories at selected stations in both hemispheres, and to despatch a naval expedition to make a magnetic survey of the Antarctic region. The scheme was approved in 1839, the expedition was despatched under Ross, and the observatories were set up at strategic places around the globe under the direct administration of a Magnetic Department, under Sabine, situated at Woolwich, Kent. In the same year Sabine was appointed General Secretary of the British Association for the Advancement of Science.
Sabine remained actively involved in the field of terrestrial magnetism and was promoted to Major-General in 1856. Between 1858 and 1861 he supervised another magnetic survey of the British Isles, after which he was elected President of the Royal Society in 1861 and promoted to General in 1870.
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Record URL
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https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C2866/