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With this brief allusion to the doings and attractions of the Jubilee Convention, I fear I must bring my reminiscences of photography to a close; but before doing so I feel it inc.u.mbent on me to call attention to the fact that _two years_ after celebrating the jubilee of photography we should, paradoxical as it may appear, celebrate its centenary, for in 1791 the first photographic _picture_ that ever was made, seen, or heard tell of, was produced by Thomas Wedgwood, and though he was unable to fix it and enable us to look upon _that_ wonder _to-day_, the honour of being the first photographer, in its truest sense, is unquestionably due to an Englishman. Thomas Wedgwood made photographic pictures on paper, and there they remained until light or time obliterated them; whereas J. H. Schulze, a German physician, only obtained impressions of letters on a semi-liquid chloride of silver in a bottle, and at every shake of the hand the meagre impression was instantly destroyed. If we consider such men as Niepce, Reade, Daguerre, and Fox Talbot the fathers of photography, we cannot but look upon Thomas Wedgwood as the Grand Father, and the centenary of his first achievement should be celebrated with becoming honour as the English centenary of photography.
CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD
OF
INVENTIONS, DISCOVERIES, PUBLICATIONS, AND APPLIANCES, FORMING FACTORS IN THE INCEPTION, DISCOVERY, AND DEVELOPMENT OF PHOTOGRAPHY.
1432 B.C. Iron said to have been first discovered.
424 B.C. Lenses made and used by the Greeks. And a lens has been found in the ruins of Nineveh.
79 A.D. Gla.s.s known and used by the Romans.
697. Gla.s.s brought to England.
1100. Alcohol first obtained by the alchemist, Abucasis.
1287. Nitric acid first obtained by Raymond Lully. Present properties made known by Dr. Priestley, 1785.
1297. Camera-obscura constructed by Roger Bacon.
1400. Chloride of gold solution known to Basil Valentine.
1500. Camera-obscura improved by Baptista Porta.
1555. Chloride of silver blackening by the action of light. Doubtless it was the knowledge of this that induced Thomas Wedgwood and Sir Humphry Davy to make their experiments.
1590. Paper first made in England, at Dartford, Kent, by Sir John Speilman. It is said that the Chinese made paper 170 years B.C.
1646. Magic lantern invented by Athanasius Kircher.
1666. Sir Isaac Newton divided a sunbeam into its seven component parts, and re-constructed the camera-obscura.
1670. Salt mines of Staffords.h.i.+re discovered.
1727. J. H. Schulze, a German physician, observed that light blackened chalk impregnated with nitrate of silver solution and gold chloride.
1737. Solution of nitrate of silver applied to paper, by h.e.l.lot.
1739. Chloride of mercury made by K. Neumann.
1741. Platinum first known in Europe: M. H. St. Claire Deville's new method of obtaining it from the ore, 1859.
1750. J. Dolland, London, first made double achromatic compound lenses.
1757. Chloride of silver made by J. B. Beccarius.
1774. Dr. Priestly discovered ammonia to be composed of nitrogen and hydrogen; but ammonia is as old as the first decomposition of organic matter.
1777. Charles William Scheele observed that the violet end of the spectrum blackened chloride of silver more rapidly than the red end.
Chlorine discovered.
1779. Oxalate of silver made by Bergmann.
1789. Uranium obtained from pitch-blende by Klaproth.
1791. Thomas Wedgwood commenced experiments with a solution of nitrate of silver spread upon paper and white leather, and obtained impressions of semi-transparent objects and cast shadows. Sir Humphry Davy joined him later.
1797. Nitrate of silver on silk by Fulhame.
1799. Hyposulphite of soda discovered by M. Chaussier.
1800. John William Ritter, of Samitz, in Silesia, observed that chloride of silver blackened beyond the violet end of the spectrum, thus discovering the action of the ultra violet ray.
1801. Pota.s.sium discovered by Sir Humphry Davy.
1802. Examples of Heliotypes, by Wedgwood and Davy, exhibited at the Royal Inst.i.tution, and process published.
1803. Palladium discovered in platinum by Dr. Wollaston.
1808. Strontium obtained from carbonate of strontia by Sir Humphry Davy.
1812. Iodine discovered by M. D. Curtois, of Paris.
-- Nitrate of silver and alb.u.men employed by D. Fischer.
1813. Ditto investigated by M. Clement.
1814. Joseph Niceph.o.r.e de Niepce commenced experiments with the hope of securing the pictures as seen in the camera-obscura.
-- Iodide of silver made by Sir H. Davy.
1819. Sir John Herschel published the fact that hyposulphite of soda dissolved chloride and other salts of silver.
1824. Niepce obtained pictures in the camera-obscura upon metal plates coated with asphaltum, or bitumen of Judea.
-- L. G. M. Daguerre commenced his researches.
-- Permanganate of potash. Fromenkerz.
1826. Bromine discovered in sea-water by M. Balard.
-- Bromine of silver made.
1827. Niepce exhibited his pictures in England, and left one or more, now in the British Museum.