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When
Henry penned the letter below, he was virtually unknown outside
the cientific community
of Albany, New York, where he was professor of mathematics
and
natural
philosophy at the Albany Academy. The letter resulted in his first
major
publication, "On the Application of the Principle of the
Galvanic Multiplier to
Electro-Magnetic
Apparatus, and Also to the Developement of Great Magnetic Power in Soft
Iron, with a
Small Galvanic Element," in the January 1831 issue of Silliman's
Journal.
In this article,
Henry announced a significant breakthrough in constructing
powerful
Nathan Reingold has put it. The article would bring Henry to the
attention
of the international scientific community and establish his
reputation as a
leading
American
scientist. electromagnets--"then
the equivalents of
our atom smashers, computers,
and rockets," as Nathan Reingold has put it. The article
would
bring Henry to the attention of the international
scientific community and establish his reputation as a leading
American scientist. |
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Prof. Silliman
Dear Sir
I have been engaged for some time past
in a series of experiments on
electro-magnetism
and particularly in reference to the developement of great magnetic
power
with a small
galvanic element. The results I wish to publish if possible in the next
No. of the Journal of
Science. I am anxious that they should appear as soon as possible since
by delaying the publication of the principles of these
experiments for nearly two years
I have lately had the
mortification of being anticipated in part by a paper from Prof. Moll
in
the last No of
Brewster's Journal.3 Please
inform me if I shall be too late for the next no. of the Journal
if I send my paper
within two weeks of the date of this letter--it will probably make five
or six pages. If it be not
too late I should like to have a small wood cut of a powerful magnet
which
I am constructing on electro-magnetic principles.
Both Mrs. Henry and myself retain a lively reccollection of the many
polite
attentions we
received in New Haven last Spring. We join in a respectful remembrance
to your self and
family.
I am with much respect
Your humble serv
Joseph Henry
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Silliman
Family Papers, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University
Library.
Published in
Nathan Reingold et al., eds. The Papers of Joseph Henry, vol. 1,
December
1797-October
1832: The Albany Years (Washington, 1972), pp. 301-302. |
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