John Mawe
John Mawe | |
---|---|
Born | 1764 |
Died | |
Citizenship | British |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mineralogy |
Institutions | RGSC |
John Mawe (1764 – 1829) was a British mineralogist who became well known for his practical approach to the discipline.
Biography
Mawe was born in Derby in 1764 to Samuel Maw(e). His mother died when he was ten and he was raised by his father's second wife, Francis (born Beigton). In early life he appears to have spent fifteen years at sea. In 1790, he became captain of the merchant vessel Trent, trading to St Petersburg[2].
In 1793, Mawe was apprenticed to the Derby mason Richard Brown (1736–1816), and married his daughter, Sarah, on 1 November 1794.[2] Brown & Mawe was the name of the retail business near Covent Garden in 1797 which sold objects created from Derbyshire marble at the factory in Derby. Mawe was manager of this business. This business was established in 1794. Geological diagrams of Derbyshire strata which are made from Derbyshire minerals were once thought to have all been created by White Watson but it is now thought likely that some of these objects in Derby Museum were actually created by Mawe & Brown.[3]
About the end of the century he made a tour of most of the mines in England and Scotland, collecting minerals for the cabinet of the king of Spain.[4] In 1800 he owned the Royal Museums spar shop in Matlock Bath which, through his agent, he was to enter into dispute with Thomas Pearson concerning surrounding mines.[5]
In August 1804 he started on a "voyage of commercial experiment" to Rio de la Plata funded by Portugal's Prince Regent. His missions was to assess the value of the gold and diamond industries that might revitalize Brazil's ailing economy.[6] Mawe had reached Cadiz when war broke out between England and Spain, and he was blockaded in the town where he was taken ill and nearly died. He sailed from Cadiz in March 1805 for Montevideo, and on reaching that town was imprisoned as an English spy. He procured his liberty soon after, but was interned, and did not obtain his release till the capture of Montevideo by William Beresford in 1806. He accompanied the expedition under John Whitelocke to Buenos Aires, and on his return to Montevideo purchased a schooner and sailed to Brazil, putting in at various ports on the way, including the island of Santa Catarina. He was well received in Brazil by the prince regent, who gave him permission to visit the diamond mines of Minas Geraes and other parts of the interior during 1809–10, and also granted him access to the government archives.[4]
Mawe returned to London in 1811, and opening a shop in The Strand, close to Somerset House, became well known as a practical mineralogist.[4] In 1813 he was elected to the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall, and in 1817 he received the diploma of the Jena Mineralogischen Gesellschaft.[2]
John and Sarah Mawe had two children, a son and a daughter. Their son, John Saint Mawe (1797–1820), died aged 22; Sarah requested in her will that she be buried beside him. Their daughter married Anthony Tissington Tatlow (1789–1828), who became a partner of Mawe's in a shop in Cheltenham in 1816.[2]
Mawe died in London on 26 October 1829. A tablet to his memory is in Castleton church, Derbyshire. His business was carried on by James Tennant the mineralogist[4], in partnership with Mawe's widow Sarah until 1840.[2] Sarah Mawe had the title of "Mineralogist to Her Majesty" until she retired.[7]
Works
Mawe's principal work was the account of his South American voyage, Travels in the Interior of Brazil, London, 1812; Philadelphia, 1816; 2nd edition, 1823.[4]
He also wrote:[4]
- 1. The Mineralogy of Derbyshire, 1802.
- 2. A Treatise on Diamonds and Precious Stones, 1813; 2nd ed. 1823.
- 3. A Catalogue of Minerals, 1815.
- 4. A Descriptive Catalogue of Minerals, 1816; 4th edit. 1821; reissued in 1823.
- 5. Familiar Lessons on Mineralogy and Geology, 1819; 10th edit. 1828.
- 6. Amateur Lapidary's Guide, 3rd edit. 1823; 1827.
- 7. Instructions for the use of the Blow-pipe and Chemical Tests, 4th edit. 1825.
- 8. The Voyager's Companion or Shell-Collector's Pilot, 1821; 4th edit. 1825.
- 9. The Linnæan System of Conchology, 1823.
He edited the 2nd edit. of Wodarch's Introduction to Conchology, 1822, and wrote a paper on The Occurrence of Diamonds, &c., in Brazil for Gilbert's Annalen lix. (1818), besides one On the Tourmaline and Apatite of Devonshire for the Quart. Journ. of Science, iv. (1818). He appears also to have issued at some time Directions to Captains of Ships, Officers, and Travellers; particularly to those engaged in the South Sea Fishery (for collecting shells). A manuscript paper On a Gold Mine in South America is preserved in the library of the Geological Society.[4]
A number of Mawe's publications were extensively illustrated by James Sowerby and his sons[8], who specialised in detailed colour plates.
References
- ^ Travels in the Interior of Brazil, Mawe, John; 1812
- ^ a b c d e Torrens, H.S. (2004). "Mawe, John (1766–1829), mineralogist and dealer in minerals" (HTML). Dictionary of National Biography (2004). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^ Torrens, Hugh S. (Winter 1992). "Early life and geological work of John Mawe 1766-1829 and a note on his travels in Brazil" (PDF). Bulletin of the Peak District Mines Society. 11 (6): 5. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ a b c d e f g Woodward, B.B. (1894). "Mawe, John (1764–1829), mineralogist" (HTML). Dictionary of National Biography Vol. XXVII. Smith, Elder & Co. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^ Further notes on the history of phosgenite and matlockite from Matlock, England, Peter S. Burr in the Mineralogical Record, January 1994, accessed 21 November 2007
- ^ Dolan, Brian (1998). "Pedagogy through print: James Sowerby, John Mawe and the problem of colour in early nineteenth-century natural history illustration". The British Journal for the History of Science. 31. Cambridge University Press: 275–304. doi:10.1017/S0007087498003306. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
- ^ "James Tennant". The Mineralogical Record. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
- ^ "James Sowerby (1757-1822)" (HTML). The Mineralogical Record Museum of Art. Mineralogical Record Inc. Retrieved 2007-11-21.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help)