Joseph Henry letters, 1836-1878

Mss.B.H39p

Date: 1836-1878 | Size: 47 item(s)

Abstract

The letters in this small collection concern the Smithsonian Institution, the Colorado Territory, and Humboldt's observations, among many other topics.

Background note

Joseph Henry (1797-1878, APS 1835), a physicist, was the first secretary and director of the Smithsonian Institution, a post he retained for over three decades. Henry was a leading experimental scientist whose contributions include several discoveries in the field of electromagnetics. He has been credited with the invention of the electromagnet and the telegraph, among other things.

Henry was born in 1797 in Albany, New York, the son of William Henry, a teamster, and his wife Ann Alexander. Around 1804 he was sent to live with his maternal grandmother and his uncle in the nearby village of Galway, where he attended a country school. Henry's father died when he was thirteen. He subsequently returned to Albany, where he was apprenticed to John F. Doty, a watchmaker and silversmith. However, when his master's business failed he did not complete the apprenticeship and instead contemplated a career in theater, his true passion at the time. From around 1813 to 1816 he was involved with the Green Street Theater in Albany.

When Henry was sixteen years old he stumbled across a book that would have a profound influence on his subsequent life. The book was George Gregory's Lectures on Experimental Philosophy, Astronomy, and Chemistry (1808), an exposition of science designed for a wide audience. Henry later wrote that this book "opened to me a new world of thought and enjoyment, invested things before almost unnoticed with the highest interest, fixed my mind on the study of nature and caused me to resolve at the time of reading it that I would immediately commence to devote my life to the acquisition of knowledge." He enrolled in night classes and attended Albany Academy from 1819 to 1822. He also worked as a tutor, and he headed a surveying party in New York State from the Hudson River to Lake Erie. In 1826 he accepted the appointment of professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Albany Academy. Four years later he married his cousin, Harriet Alexander. The couple had six children, four of whom lived to adulthood.

Henry's research at Albany Academy focused on electromagnetic phenomena. In 1831 he announced that he had produced an electromagnet of previously unmatched power. This accomplishment demonstrated how such magnets could be electrically activated over long distances. Henry also invented the first electric motor, and he discovered mutual electromagnetic induction and electromagnetic self-induction. Henry subsequently provided advice, support, and encouragement to Samuel F. B. Morse's (1791-1872, APS 1848) efforts to develop a telegraph. Henry eventually changed from admirer to enemy due to bitter disputes over Morse's patents. Contrary to Morse's claims, Henry always maintained that Morse deserved credit not for priority of conception, but rather for the ability to realize an efficient system of telegraphy. William Tecumseh Sherman, for one, agreed that Henry deserved credit for the invention. He noted in his address at Henry's memorial service in 1878 that "wherever man goes, or human thought travels, the poles and continuous wires will remind him that to Professor HENRY of all men we are most indebted for the inestimable blessings of the telegraph." In any case, these accomplishments brought him to the attention of other scientists in the United States and Europe.

In 1832 Henry accepted the appointment of professor of natural philosophy at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University). In addition to natural philosophy, he lectured on geology and architecture. He also continued his research on electromagnetism. More specifically, he studied the phenomenon of lateral discharge, the tendency of electricity to diverge from its most direct course. This topic was of both theoretical and practical interest since lightning paths were generally viewed as instances of lateral discharge. As a result, Henry was frequently consulted about more effective ways of protecting buildings from the effects of lightning strikes. He also investigated the theory of induction, especially the screening of induction by conductors, the creation of higher order induced currents, and induction over long distances. By using lightning storms as his source of electricity, he was able to demonstrate induction over distances of an estimated twenty miles. Among his other discoveries were the concept of the transformer and the oscillatory nature of the discharge of a capacitor. In 1835 Henry was elected to the American Philosophical Society. In the 1830s and 1840s he published several essays on electricity and magnetism in the Society's Transactions. Henry evidently used instruments from the cabinet of optical and philosophical apparatus owned by the Philadelphia merchant and financier and fellow APS member Charles Nicoll Bancker (1778?–1869, APS 1825) for some of his experiments.

In addition to research in the field of electromagnetism, Henry conducted experiments on ultraviolet light, the use of soap bubbles to explore molecular cohesion, work on the capillarity through solids, and the demonstration of the interference of heat. He also took the first empirical measurements of the temperature differences between the solar surface and sunspots by utilizing thermoelectric apparatus. He was able to demonstrate that sunspots were cooler than the surrounding surface; in addition, he found evidence of the phenomena of limb darkening, the apparent coolness of the sun at its limb. Henry spent most of 1837 on a trip to Britain, France, and Belgium, where he met many leading scientists of the day, including Michael Faraday (1761-1867, APS 1840). Henry was a member of the Scientific Lazzaroni, an informal group of scientists and science administrators who attempted to establish standards for the American scientific community and increase the level of public support for research. Other members of the group included his close friend Alexander Dallas Bache (1806-1867, APS 1829), Louis Agassiz (1807-1873, APS 1843), and John Fries Frazer (1812–1872, APS 1842). Henry chose Bache as head of the U.S. Coast Survey in 1843; Bache, in turn, actively promoted the election of Henry as first secretary of the newly created Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., a post he assumed in 1846. Henry served as the Institution's first secretary for over thirty years, until his death in Washington, D.C. in 1878. The Institution was funded by the bequest of James Smithson for "the increase and diffusion of knowledge." The legislation that established it in August 1846 provided for a building to house a museum, a library, an art gallery, a chemical laboratory, and lecture rooms. It laid out a system of governance but it was left to Henry to describe a definitive program. Henry hoped to make the Institution a center of American science. To this end he strove to ensure that James Smithson's bequest was used to support original scientific research and publication, rather than to create a national museum or library. By the late 1850s most of the Institution's library was transferred to the Library of Congress, and the Smithsonian retained only a working collection. Similarly, over subsequent years the herbarium was transferred to the Department of Agriculture, and the art collection moved to the Corcoran Gallery of Art. At the same time, Henry offered the Smithsonian as curator of the national collections on the condition that the federal government paid the direct costs. The initial appropriation was passed in 1857, and in 1859 the Great Hall of the Smithsonian building was designated the "National Museum of the United States." Subsequently, the federal appropriation increased to meet the rising costs of exhibition and conservation.

As the Institution's secretary, Henry was committed to support research in different fields, including anthropology, archaeology, botany, zoology, meteorology, geophysics, and astronomy. As he wrote in the Smithsonian Annual Report for 1855, "Indeed, it is an important part of the duty of this Institution to encourage special lines of research into every department of the varied domain of nature." He was especially interested in publishing material that commercial publishers rejected and learned societies could not afford to publish. He chose as the first volume in the series Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, Ephraim George Squier and Edwin Hamilton Davis's Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley: Comprising the Results of Extensive Original Surveys and Explorations (1848). The book, which Henry himself edited, constitutes a landmark in the study of mound builders specifically and American scientific research generally.

Under Henry's leadership the Institution took on the role of patron for fields that lacked other sources of support. For example, in cooperation with the federal government, Henry established a national network of meteorological observers in 1849. At its peak in 1870, there were over 500 participants; that same year, Congress established a national weather service in the War Department. In 1873 the Smithsonian turned its activities over to the federal government. In addition, Henry's support for early surveys of the western states eventually resulted in the establishment of the United States Geological Survey and the Bureau of American Ethnology.

Henry's work at the Smithsonian was not always easy; in addition to limited resources and a lack of experienced staff, he suffered personal and financial woes, clashed with subordinates, and faced significant public criticism of his leadership, including his emphasis on basic research. Despite these challenges, Henry declined offers of prestigious positions at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Virginia, and the College of New Jersey at Princeton. More significantly, Henry was able to keep intact his vision of an institution dedicated to basic research.

During his thirty-two year tenure as secretary of the Smithsonian, Henry's occasionally served as a consultant for the government, including for issues related to the Capitol such as protection from lightning, building materials for an extension, and its interior acoustics. During the Civil War he was a member of the Permanent Commission of the Navy Department, which advised the department on innovations in military technology. While with the Light-House Board he conducted investigations of fog-signals and illuminants in an attempt to find an inexpensive substitute for the sperm oil burned in the lighthouse lamps. Henry was a founding member of the National Academy of Sciences (1863), a society that grew out of the efforts of the Lazzaroni. He served as the Academy's vice president from 1866 to 1868 and president from 1868 until his death. He also served as president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1849-1850), and president of the American Association for the Advancement of Education (1854). In 1871 he was elected the first president of the Philosophical Society of Washington. He was an original member of the Light-House Board, serving as its chair from 1871 to 1878. He received honorary degrees from Union College in 1829 and Harvard University in 1851.

In December 1877 Henry became ill with Nephritis; he died in 1878 in Washington, D.C. His funeral on May 16, 1878, was attended by the President, Vice-President, the Cabinet, the members of the Supreme Court, Congress, and the senior officers of the Army and the Navy. Congress honored Henry again in the 1880s, when it commissioned the completion of a statue of Henry, and in the 1890s, when he was chosen as one of sixteen figures "representative of human development and civilization," to be memorialized in the Main Reading Room of the Library of Congress, along with such notables as Columbus, Isaac Newton, Herodotus, Michelangelo, Plato, and William Shakespeare.

Collection Information

Physical description

48 items.

48 items.

Provenance

Purchased from Elliot ($281.50) and accessioned, 09/18/1967 (1967 1874ms). See in-house shelf list for additional accession numbers and dates.

Related material

This collection forms only part of the holdings of Henry papers at the American Philosophical Society Library. There are over 275 additional items in other collections, including letters to, from, and about Henry.

Early American History Note

This small collection contains an assortment of Joseph Henry correspondence, mostly from prominent Americans writing to Henry. Most of the early letters are relatively short notes, with longer, more detailed letters beginning in the correspondence from the 1850s. The most prominent topics of discussion are the Smithsonian Institution, the establishment of Colorado as a territory, and Humboldt's work. Among the prominent correspondents are Robert Hare, Louis Aggasiz, and Alexander Dallas Bache. Two letters are addressed to Mrs. Henry.

Indexing Terms


Corporate Name(s)

  • Smithsonian Institution.

Genre(s)

  • General Correspondence

Geographic Name(s)

  • Colorado -- History -- To 1876.

Personal Name(s)

  • Agassiz, Alexander, 1835-1910
  • Alexander, J. H. (John Henry), 1812-1867
  • Bache, A. D. (Alexander Dallas), 1806-1867
  • Brewer, T. M. (Thomas Mayo), 1814-1880
  • Buren, John van
  • Hare, Robert, 1781-1858
  • Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878
  • Horsford, Eben Norton, 1818-1893
  • Humboldt, Alexander von, 1769-1859
  • Humphreys, A. A. (Andrew Atkinson), 1810-1883
  • King, Charles, 1789-1867
  • Leidy, Joseph, 1823-1891
  • Maclean, John, 1800-1886
  • Mayer, Brantz, 1809-1879
  • Ranlett, Charles E
  • Seaton, William Winston, 1785-1866.

Subject(s)

  • Colony and State Specific History
  • Natural history.
  • Physics.
  • Science and technology


Detailed Inventory

 Papers
  
 Buren, John Van, 1810-1866.
Letter to Prof. Joseph Henry
December 20, 1836 
 Buchanan, George.
Letter to [Joseph Henry]
August 8, 1837 
 Kelland, Philip, 1808-1879.
Letter to Prof. Henry
August 1, 1847 
 Humphreys, A. A. (Andrew Atkinson), 1810-1883.
Letter to Prof. Henry
November 8, 1848 
 Marsh, J. Y..
Letter to Prof. Henry
November 13, 1848 
 Seaton, William Winston.
Letter to Prof. Henry
Thursday, [February 1849] 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Brants Mayer
October 11, 1851 
 Hare, Robert, 1781-1858.
Letter to Mrs. Joseph Henry
January 9, 1853 
 Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873.
Letter to [Joseph Henry]
February 3, 1853 
 Unidentified.
Letter to Joseph Henry
April 22, 1853 
 Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe, Mrs..
Letter to Prof. Henry
October 10, [1853] 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to T[homas] M[ayo] Brewer
January 26, 185510-1/4x7-3/4

Smithsonian Institution, A.L.S. 3p. Reference to abusive article in Putnam's. Concerns Smith. Inst. and a congressional committee. Refers to Gray, Jewett, Rhees, Upham.

General physical description: 10-1/4x7-3/4

 De Bow, J. D. B. (James Dunwoody Brownson), 1820-1867.
Letter to Prof. Henry
October 21, 1855 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Brantz Mayer, Baltimore
November 25, 18568-1/4x5-1/4

A.L.S. 1p. Asks for manuscript of Humboldt.

General physical description: 8-1/4x5-1/4

 Boffin, M. F..
Letter to [Joseph] Henry
May 20, 1858 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to B[enjamin] F. Wade
February 8, 185910-1/4x8

A.L.S. 1p. and end. Would like to meet Lane before he leaves the county. Does not know two other men.

General physical description: 10-1/4x8

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Al[exander] C[atlin] Twining, New Haven
October 11, 18599 3/4 x 7 3/4

Smithsonian Institution, L.S. 1p. end. Will be pleased to receive Twining's materials on the aurora.

General physical description: 9 3/4 x 7 3/4

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to A. I. Crossman
October 20, 18609-3/4x7-1/4

Wash., D.C.; A.L.S. 1p. Thanks Crossman for Z[achariah] Allen's Memorial of Roger Williams and a speciman of root from William's grave.

General physical description: 9-3/4x7-1/4

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Robert Hare
January 5, 1861 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to H. B. Anthony
March 21, 186110x7-3/4

L.S. 2p.and end. Wishes maps printed with Newberry's report on the Colorado country.

General physical description: 10x7-3/4

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Cha[rle]s E. Ranlett, Thomaston, Maine
March 22, 18619-3/4x8

Wash., A.L.S. 1p. Thanks for information on storms in Labrador and Greenland.

General physical description: 9-3/4x8

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to William Mitchell, Nantucket, Massachusetts
July 18, 186111x8-1/2

A.L.S. 2p.and end. Thanks for his meteorological observations. Friendly letter.

General physical description: 11x8-1/2

 King, Charles, 1789-1867.
Letter to Prof. Henry
October 10, 1861 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to A. L. Holley
August 8, 18629-1/2x5-1/2

Washington, D.C. A.L.S. 1p. Will write Gen. Sabine. "Best wishes for the success of your mission."

General physical description: 9-1/2x5-1/2

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Maj. General [Sir Edward] Sabin[e], London
August 8, 186211x9-1/2

A.L.S. 3p. Concerning E. A. Stevens and his steam boat. Introduces A. L. Holley. Iron clad steam battery of Stevens'.

General physical description: 11x9-1/2

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to [Alexander Catlin] Twining, New Haven
December 15, 186210 1/2 x 8 1/4

Smithsonian Institution, A.L.S. 1p.end. Encloses letter from J.P. Lesley of A.P.S. in reply to inquiries about Girard College (wanting). Politics involved in running institutions.

General physical description: 10 1/2 x 8 1/4

 Alexander, J. H. (John Henry), 1812-1867.
Letter to Prof. Henry
January 25, 1864 
 Leidy, Joseph, 1823-1891.
Letter to Prof. Henry
March 8, 1864 
 Dawson, J. M..
Letter to Prof. Henry
October 28, 1864 
 Newmarch, William, 1820-1882.
Letter to Joseph Henry
January 21, 1865 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Pliny Earle, Northampton, Massachusetts
December 22, 18668x5

A.L.S. 2p.and end. Suggests the report on the Northampton Hospital for the Insane be presented to European institutions.

General physical description: 8x5

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Ja[me]s Orton, Rochester, New York
March 26, 186710x7-3/4

Washington, L.S. 2p. Cannot help him in his proposed expedition to Ecuador and Peru, due to losses by fire suffered by the Smithsonian.

General physical description: 10x7-3/4

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to A. L. Child, Glendale, Nebraska
December 5, 18688-7/8x5

Smithsonian Institution, L.S. 1p. Regrets omitting Child's use of rain guage in 1867.

General physical description: 8-7/8x5

 Saussure, Henri de, 1829-1905.
Letter to Prof. Henry
May 15, 1871 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Mrs. C. W. Pennock, Howellville, Pennsylvania
February 24, 187210-3/4x8-1/2

Washington, L.S. 2p. Wishes to have the collection of her husband for the Smithsonian.

General physical description: 10-3/4x8-1/2

 Arrow, Fred (Frederick).
Letter to Prof. Henry
August 27, 1872 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to James Orton, Poughkeepsie, New York
December 19, 18729-3/4x7-3/4

Washington, L.S. 2p. Best wishes for the success of his expedition and attempt to help him.

General physical description: 9-3/4x7-3/4

 Agassiz, Alexander, 1835-1910.
Letter to [Joseph] Henry
October 5, 1874 
 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to Jno. A. Lynch, Washington, D.C.
October 10, 187610x8

Washington, D.C., L.S. 1p. Concerning proposed changes to the Capitol.

General physical description: 10x8

 Maclean, John, 1800-1886.
Letter to W. J. Rhees
May 13, 1878 
 Bache, A. D. (Alexander Dallas), 1806-1867.
Letter to Prof. Henry
January 5 
 Humphreys, A. A. (Andrew Atkinson), 1810-1883.
Letter to Joseph Henry
February 2 
 Horsford, Eben Norton, 1818-1893.
Letter to Carrie [Henry]
Wednesday 
 Wilson, Daniel, Sir, 1816-1892.
Letter to Prof. Henry
Saturday 
 Harvey, William H.(William Hen.
Note to Mrs. Henry
n.d. 
 H[enry], J[oseph],. Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Affidavit that Dr. Robert Hare "is one of the most distinguished chemists of our country"
n.d.3-3/4x8

A.D.with initials. 1p.and end.

General physical description: 3-3/4x8

 Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878.
Letter to ?
n.d.