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Nationalizing provincial weather: meteorology in nineteenth-century Cornwall


knocker

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Posted
  • Location: Camborne
  • Location: Camborne
Abstract.
This paper examines the development of a quantified, standardized and institutionalized meteorological science in nineteenth-century Britain, one that relied on sophisticated instrumentation and highly regulated observers and techniques of observation inits attempt to produce an accurate picture of the national weather. The story is told from one of the numerous points in British meteorology’s extensive collection network: from Cornwall,in the far southwest of England. Although the county had been an acknowledged centre of meteorological labour since the eighteenth century, it came increasingly under the influence of various London-based meteorological institutions in the 1830s and in 1868 was chosen as the site of one of the Royal Society of London’s few prestigious ‘first-order’ meteorological observatories. This case study presents us with the opportunity to witness the ways in which a national scientific enterprise was assimilated and interpreted in a particular local context. It gives us a chance to see how regulated forms of instrumentation and quantified measurement were translated in a particular place and, of course, how the non-place-bound ideals of metropolitan science occasionally faltered in the face of local values and preoccupations.
 
Edited by knocker
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Posted
  • Location: Camborne
  • Location: Camborne

The two observatories mentioned in Falmouth are still standing. The first is now a holiday let and the second a bed and breakfast. In the general photo of Falmouth the first can be seen rear centre.

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