skip to content

Darwin Correspondence Project

Search: contains ""

400 Bad Request

Bad Request

Your browser sent a request that this server could not understand.


Apache Server at dcp-public.lib.cam.ac.uk Port 443
Search:
in keywords
1 Items

1.3 Thomas Herbert Maguire, lithograph

Summary

< Back to Introduction This striking portrait of Darwin, dating from 1849, belonged to a series of about sixty lithographic portraits of naturalists and other scientists drawn by Thomas Herbert Maguire. They were successively commissioned over a…

Matches: 11 hits

  • … < Back to Introduction This striking portrait of Darwin, dating from 1849, belonged to …
  • … study of natural history among the working classes’. The museum’s ethos was strongly religious and …
  • … author of one of the Bridgewater treatises, as its first president, and his friend Revd John Stevens …
  • … 1850). Henslow’s parish was only about fifteen miles from Ipswich, and he continued to lecture there …
  • … leading scientists of the day who had contributed to the Ipswich Museum enterprise, including …
  • … India proofs’, with profits from the sales going to the museum. The Gardeners’ Chronicle …
  • … Ransome. His ambitions for the promotion of science in Ipswich were not restricted to the Museum and …
  • … Association’s decision to hold its July 1851 meeting in Ipswich. Furthermore, this date coincided …
  • … as the BAAS series. When Prince Albert himself visited the Ipswich conference in 1851 amid great …
  • … the public about developments in natural history, the Ipswich Museum project was also intended to …
  • … 913–914. ‘Review. Portraits of Honorary Members of the Ipswich Museum. Published by George Ransome, …
letter