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Where There's a Will, There's a Way!

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Where There's a Will, There's a Way! Synopsis

During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries many scientists, naturalists, engineers and inventors from humble backgrounds, largely self-taught, made significant contributions to British science. This 1873 book by James Cash (1839–1909) celebrates their achievements in natural history, while promoting a 'self-help' ideology, stressing how disadvantages could be overcome by those with ability and determination. Many of his subjects corresponded with great names such as William Jackson Hooker, and sent specimens or local information which helped build up the larger picture. Cash gives particular attention to men from the north of England, where many men engaged in the cloth trade were also notable plant collectors. His subjects include George Caley, a weaver self-taught in Latin and French, and whom Sir Joseph Banks employed to go to New South Wales as a collector; Edward Hobson, a factory worker; and John Horsefield, a self-taught weaver who memorised the Linnaean orders at his loom.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781108037907
Publication date:
Author: James Cash
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 238 pages
Series: Cambridge Library Collection - Education
Genres: Nature and the natural world: general interest
History of science