by Jenny Bulstrode
Astrolabes and Stuff is proud to present its first ever guest post! For this we must thank Jenny Bulstrode, a student in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at Cambridge.
Astrolabes and Stuff is proud to present its first ever guest post! For this we must thank Jenny Bulstrode, a student in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at Cambridge.
Quadrants, sextants, octants, none of them really meant much
to me until last year. They’re all descendants of astrolabes. They’re all based
around a circle with a scale marked on it. They’re all just fans of metal with bits
on. The only way I could see the Navy using one was as an elaborate bottle
opener.
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No, I'm still not sure what it is |
If anyone asks all you generally need to
know is this versatile bit of kit was a tool for measuring the angle between
two distant objects. This made it handy for everything from telling the time to
surveying. Last year I found out a bit
on how they were used but rather more on how one particular eighteenth century
instrument maker, John Bird, made them, and why we should care. It’s these last
two points I want to share with you.
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‘Now use your hands to warm the metal.. except you Bob, your hands are too clammy’ (not Bird’s original words) |
Metal
expands when heated. Enough to get the lid off that gherkin jar by running it under
the hot tap, more than enough to mess up the precision process of marking a
scale on a circle. John Bird used the warmth of his hands to standardise the
expansion of his tools and the circle he was working on. As if that doesn’t
seem odd enough, he then wrote about it, in his instruction manual.
Temperature control was so important Bird wouldn't allow a
fire to warm the room. Even candles were forbidden because they gave out too
much heat. (Actually my mum has a similar policy for controlling utility
bills). With little light to work by Bird detected points and traced guideline
scratches using his fingertips. Magnifying lenses were widely used by eighteenth
century instrument makers, including Bird, but what he really had faith in was
his sensitive touch.
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Almost as though fingertips were designed to move tiny puncture marks in metal… |
Finally, when checking back revealed a point slightly out of
position, Bird would ‘coax’ it into place. Extraordinary as it sounds, through
fingertip pressure on the brass, he would shuffle the point along. His
fingertips worked to control, detect, and even correct the scale marking
process.
All very touching (see what I did there?) but what’s the
point? Three things stand out to me. Firstly, John Bird was one of the last circle
dividers working exclusively by hand. Towards the end of his life new,
automated machines started taking up the job. That’s the old story of
mass-production taking over, right? Except for nearly a century after his death
these ‘automated’ machines used handmade circles, including Bird’s, to cut
copies from. The action of the machine had to be guided, by hand. In fact even
when the machines made errors, which they did, often, the points were still
‘coaxed’ into place. Bird might’ve died but his hands were still very active...
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Not a bomb, just a highly controlled loaf |
Secondly, handmade does not just mean
surprisingly expensive bread. Of course it means those elements of delicacy, care,
and exclusivity we associate with a walnut and fig pavé but it can also
mean industrial quality control. When Bird used his hands to control the
expansion of the metal he was setting an industrial standard. Granted it was
one based on his body temperature but the principle for control was the same.
Finally, and above all: Bird achieved an unprecedented level
of precision in his instruments. In fact, he divided circles so precisely he
was commissioned to make the Mural Arc at Greenwich. This Arc set the standard
for British Mean Time. I think if there is a point to be taken from all this it
is that a huge idea like ‘Time’ can be traced back, defined even, to something
as human as the pressure of a man’s fingertip.
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While instrument makers were busy constructing time with their hands, Time the avatar went to all the good parties |