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Observatory House telescope, Windsor Road, Slough. About 1790
Observatory House, Windsor Road, Slough. About 1910
Observatory House, Windsor Road, Slough. About 1910
Sign for Herschel's Telescope. July 2006
The remains of William Herschel's telescope. 2006
 
Next 5 search results
Letter from Sir John Herschel to John Tatem. 1823
Letter from Sir John Herschel to John Tatem. 1823
Front page of "A Treatise on Astronomy". 1851
Plaque by the Herschel Monument, Slough. 2005
Herschel Monument, Herschel St., Slough. 2005
 
 
 
   
Prints of hands and fingers made by W. J. Herschel
 
   
Prints of hands and fingers made by W. J. Herschel
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Brief Description: Part of Sheet One of a "Collection of selected finger-prints 1858-1877 and later" to accompany a book called "The Origin of Finger Printing" 1916.
Subject Date: September 2005
Publication: The origin of finger-printing
Owner: Slough Library
Contributor: Slough Library
 
Full Description: These finger and handprints were taken as part of experiments undertaken by Sir William James Herschel while researching finger and hand prints. William James Herschel was born in Slough on 9th January 1833, the grandson of astronomer William Herschel, and the son of John Herschel, also an astronomer. His father asked him to choose a career other than astronomy, so he joined the East India Company, and in 1853 was posted to Bengal. Following the Indian Mutiny of 1858, Herschel became a member of the Indian Civil Service, and was posted to Jungipoor. In July 1858 he drew up a contract with a local man, Mr Konai, for the supply of road-making materials. In order to prevent Konai denying his signature at a later date, Herschel made him put a hand-print on the document. Herschel continued to experiment with hand-prints, soon realising that only fingers needed to be used. He collected prints from friends and family, and came to the conclusion that a person's fingerprints do not change over time. He suggested to the governor of Bengal that fingerprints should be used on legal documents, in order to prevent impersonation and the repudiation of contracts, but this suggestion was not acted upon. In 1877, Herschel was appointed Magistrate of Hooghly. He instituted the taking of pensioners' fingerprints, so that their pensions could not be collected by an imposter. He also began the fingerprinting of criminals, so that their jail sentences could not be carried out by a hired impostor. Herschel returned to England in 1878, and in 1880 published a letter in 'Nature', explaining his experiences with fingerprinting. In 1916, the year before he died, he published an account of his work entitled 'The Origin of Fingerprinting'. Although he developed the technique of fingerprinting, Herschel only ever used it as an administrative tool. He did not realise that it could be used to catch criminals - it was Francis Galton and Edward Henry, building on the foundations that Herschel had laid, that turned fingerprinting into a tool for fighting crime.
 
Collection: 21st Century Collection
Place:
Dimensions: 22 x 33.5 cm
Subject: Science
Name Subject: Fingerprinting ; Sir William James Herschel ;
Content Type: Print black and white.
Location: Slough Library
Local Ref: I1526
Unique ID: sl-sl-1526_herschelfprint-i-01-000.tif
 
 
 
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