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Microscope Museum Collection of antique microscopes and other
scientific instruments |
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Microscope 262 (J Casartelli & Son; cloth counting glass; c.
1910)
Guiseppe
Luigi Casartelli (1823 – 1900) emigrated as a child from Italy to Liverpool,
England, joining a relative’s scientific instrument firm business. He changed
his name to Joseph Louis Casartelli and later moved to Manchester where he
established himself as a manufacturer of optical equipment, trading at 43
Market Street for many years. Around 1850, Casartelli produced microscopes,
telescopes and other optical devices. By the 1870s-80s, Casartelli’s business
focussed on supplying the heavy industries of Manchester, including fittings
for steam engines, mining equipment and optical instruments for the fabric
industry. One of Casartelli’s sons, Joseph Henry, was made a partner of the
company and the business became “J. Casartelli and Son” in 1896. Casartelli’s
business moved to 18 Brown Street, Manchester in 1922, acquired the business
of another family member in Liverpool in 1929, but was liquidated during the
Great Depression in 1933. Parts of the business continued under different
ownerships, including the Liverpool business as ‘J. Casartelli & Son
(Liverpool)’ (later ‘Casartelli Instruments Ltd.’, in 1984, which closed in
1989), and the original business became ‘J. Casartelli & Son Ltd.’ (and
then ‘John Casartelli (M/c) Ltd.’ in 1939). Microscope 262 is a microscope
cloth counting glass, engraved with ‘J. CASARTELLI & SON, MANCHESTER’ and
‘RD 14755’. The box of the instrument contains the same inscriptions. The
instrument should be dated from c. 1910 and would be used for counting
threads in fabrics (the number of threads per unit of length provides
evidence of a higher quality of cloth). This instrument contains a scale
along which a pointer moves so that the number of threads per unit of length
can be counted. The lens is suspended above the pointer, which moves via a
screw. This instrument,
with the same model number 14755, was sold by several retailers such as John
Nesbitt (Figure 1).
Figure 1.
Microscopic cloth counting glass, Reg. No. 14755, as featured in a 1924 John
Nesbitt’s catalogue. |
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