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Microscope Museum Collection of antique microscopes and other
scientific instruments |
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Microscope
523 (Henry Crouch; Medical student’s binocular
microscope, c. 1875)
Henry Crouch learned his
trade as an apprentice with Smith, Beck & Beck. Henry left his masters
and formed his own company, probably in early 1862. His younger brother,
William, joined him. The original H. and W. Crouch shop was located on
Commercial Road, London, and their earliest instruments bear that address.
The Crouch brothers initially produced copies of the microscopes that Henry
had made for Smith, Beck & Beck. The partners soon focused on producing
good-quality, less-expensive microscopes for the middle-class microscopists
and students. Henry joined the Royal Microscopical Society in 1863, and the Quekett Microscopical Club in 1866. Advertisements as
early as September 1864 indicated a move to 64A Bishopsgate Street. For
several years afterwards, the Crouches retained the Commercial Road location
as their factory, although not as a retail location. The Crouch brothers
dissolved their partnership in 1866, with Henry retaining the optical
business. Henry Crouch’s business moved ca. 1868, to London Wall, then to
Barbican in early 1873. About 1886, Henry incorporated as Henry Crouch
Limited. Crouch sold the business in 1907 to S. Maw, Son
and Sons. Henry then worked for that firm, supervising manufacture of
microscopes and other equipment. Many Crouch microscopes that already existed
were additionally stamped with the new owner’s name, and newly made ones were
imprinted on the foot with “S. Maw, Son and Sons”. During the early 1900s,
Henry Crouch began producing microscopes with horseshoe shaped, “continental”
feet. Henry died in 1916. Microscope
523 is signed with
“HENRY CROUCH, LONDON”, and has the serial number 974, being dated to c.
1875. The mirror is missing. A similar microscope was described by G. Turner
in his 1989 “The great age of the microscope (Catalogue of the RMS
collection)” (Figure 1). Here, we can read the description: “A medical
student's microscope, it has a curved foot with trunnions supporting the
limb. Coarse focus is by rackwork moving the Wenham binocular body-tube in a
dovetail. Fine focus is by a short lever on the nosepiece. Interocular
distance is varied by connecting bar and slit [missing in microscope 523]… The stage rotates and has an upper
surface of black glass [missing in microscope 523].”
Figure 1.
Henry Crouch’s student binocular microscope as featured in Turner GE (1989)
The great age of the microscope (Catalogue of the RMS collection), Bristol. |
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