made in London
This photograph shows the concealed signature inside the wooden globe of a Bohnenberger gyroscope. The demonstration orbital globe is an example of the device designed by professor J.G. Bohnenberger of Tubingen University in 1817 to provide the correct dynamical demonstration of the precession of the equinoxes. It was provided to an American collector by the instrument suppliers W. & S. Jones of London.
By pushing an endoscope through the aperture left by one of the weight adjustment plugs, the inked inscription inside the hollow sphere may be read: 'Made by W. Stiles London / June 1831 / in the Reign of King William the 4th / & Commencg the glorious era of Reform'. Only part of this inscription can be seen at a time.
This was a time of great civil unrest with the eventual passage of the Reform Bill through Parliament in June 1832. W. Stiles can be identified with William Stiles (1786-1871), a mathematical and philosophical instrument maker of 29 Seward Street, off Goswell Road, London, who emerges as a subcontracting instrument maker.
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