Antique W. Watson & Sons – Edinburgh-H Brass Microscope – circa 1907, Cased
£565
Amazingly good original condition and completely unmolested example of Watson's popular Edinburgh-H model and a rare find in this condition. The instrument dates to around the middle of the Edwardian era - about 1907. Perfect example for a Watson collector.
Circa
1907
Maker
W. Watson & Sons
Country of manufacture
UK and Ireland
Description
Watson Edinburgh-H c1907 serial no. 9101 – antique stand “H” that’s a really good find.
Offered for sale is a beautifully presented and also quite early example of Watson’s Edinburgh Student’s Stand-H model microscope in brass – it dates to around 1907 based on its serial number 9101. It’s marked W. Watson & Sons and therefore just pre-dates the firm’s move to limited company status which occurred in 1908. This is a particularly good example with very few signs of wear and excellent lacquered brass-work that’s almost spotless. which is amazing considering the instrument’s age – I hope that the listing photos do the instrument justice and showcase its excellent condition.
The Edinburgh pattern model of microscope was produced by Watson between 1887 and around 1945; its long production run giving us a firm clue regarding just how good this model of microscope was in its heyday and over that long production cycle Watson regularly updated and improved the model, so what you see here is a fairly early example with some of the original Edinburgh features such as: an anodised brass tripod, stage attached via brass bolts to the upper limb and mirror on a swinging support arm. The Edinburgh stand was originally developed by Watson in collaboration with a professor and lecturer in bacteriology at the University of Edinburgh, hence the Edinburgh designation. With its signature rear cross-member giving that classic “H” look and nice lacquered brass-work, the Edinburgh H is a fine example of British optical engineering with a design and style essentially dating back to the Victorian era.
Turning to the technical details, the construction is an anodised brass tripod with bun feet that are attached by small brass screws. From the tripod rise twin uprights to a pivot with tension adjustment. The upper limb is also in anodised brass, with stage bolted to the underside of the limb and sub-stage fittings attach to the underside of the stage. The coarse focus is via rack and pinion with good smooth action that holds in position on adjustment. Fine focus is operated via a separate brass thumb-wheel located at the rear of the upper limb which operates an internal lever system acting against sprung resistance. The focusing technique being to achieve near focus with the coarse thumb-wheels, then fine-tune with the single rear thumb-wheel, which only has a fairly small range of movement via its vernier screw mechanism.
With the optics, this Watson microscope comes fitted with a period graduated brass eyepiece draw-tube inside a brass main optical tube and there’s two vintage Watson eyepieces that with adequate illumination produce very good images:
– 6x magnification
– 10x magnification
It’s also got four period objectives in total and a period Watson triple turret which rotates freely with a nice positive feel as the objectives slot into their viewing positions. The objectives are all by Watson as follows:
– 1 inch para in brass – 6x magnification
– 2/3rds inch para in brass – 10x magnification
– 1/6th inch para in brass – 40x magnification
– 1/12th inch in brass – 100x magnification – oil immersion required
(all objectives have their correct brass canisters)
Overall therefore, the range of magnification available with this Watson ranges from about 60x with the lowest power lens combination, up to around 1,000x with the highest power combination and with the benefit of very good illumination and an immersion technique when using the 1/12th inch objective.
The fully mechanical stage is an original Watson design in brass with twin thumb-wheel adjusters on the right hand side of the stage that have just the right feel and give excellent x/y sample movement. It’s fitted with specimen clips that are showing some age, but are fine for holding slides steady during inclined viewing and when the axes are being moved around. The freely running x/y controls also offering fine control of specimen positioning, which is a real advantage for higher magnification work.
Turning to the sub-stage, we have a top-mount Watson Abbe-type condenser in a ring-carrier with centering controls comprising twin brass thumb-screws, which sits in a height adjustable rack and pinion mount with single-sided brass thumb-wheel to adjust the height along with a swing-out feature allowing easy swapping or maintenance of the condenser hardware. I’ve shown the swing-out feature in the listing photos. The condenser assembly also has a working iris to control lighting levels and there’s a 35mm swing-out carrier fitted for adding coloured, opaque of dark-field filters. Lighting is via a plano-concave mirror on a height and swing-adjustable brass support arm with slider and gimbal, with period silvering that’s in very good condition to both sides.
The instrument’s controls and friction surfaces have been very lightly lubricated and operate smoothly with a nice feel and there’s very little in the way of age-related signs of wear to all moving parts. This instrument presents exceptionally well with lovely gleaming brass-work showing remarkably few signs of tarnishing and spotting for its age and has obviously been very well looked after throughout its life. Overall, it’s in excellent shape for an instrument that’s almost 120 years old. This example is essentially a very nice collectible antique Watson Edinburgh Stand-H model in the right condition for a collector or connoisseur and it’ll make a great usable and display item and is offered at an attractive price point for an Edinburgh-H model of this age in such fine condition. It also presents really well while being used as a desk-top instrument and will also display rather nicely in a library of home office setting.
There’s an original Watson storage case with this example, with intact carry-handle and lock and key present which is always nice to have. Overall the case has just the right aged look with patina and some retained exterior sheen, so complements the microscope perfectly.
Owing to the weight and delicacy of this antique Edinburgh-H microscope and its case, it will be partially dismantled, very well wrapped for shipping and dispatched by insured courier upon receipt of cleared funds.
Thanks for looking.
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Dealer information
Arcboutant Scientific
Howard Nutton based in Glasgow Scotland with a background in Natural Science along with previous career in risk management. I obtained my first antique microscope in 1988 - it was a Watson Edinburgh model H serial number 23604 - dating it to 1917. Since that time I've owned and restored hundreds of similar instruments. As Arcboutant Scientific now also making available personally curated fine examples, principally of antique microscopes and associated scientific equipment by quality English and Continental makers, to collectors world-wide.