Richard Reeve or Reeves (fl. 1640–1680) was an instrument maker in London in the 17th century. He worked with Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke. His son was also Richard Reeve (fl. 1680).

Accuracy

Reeve's telescopes and microscopes had a wide reputation for accuracy. Hooke worked with him in a technical advisory capacity.[1] As Richard Reeve of Long Acre, his firm was the foremost fashioner of optical instruments between 1641 and 1679 and a "perspective-glass maker to the King".[2]

Reeve was also optician to James Gregory.[3] Samuel Pepys, who purchased a microscope from him in August 1664, called him "the best he knows in England, and he makes the best in the world." Five pounds 10 shillings was "a great price", but Reeve threw in a Scotoscope (camera obscura), "and a curious curiosity it is to [see] objects in a dark room with."[4]

Family

Reeve's son was also an instrument maker, known as Richard Reeve Jr (fl. 1680). However, the man referred to as "Young" Reeve in Pepys' entry of 23 March 1659/60, would be the older Richard's son John, who took over the family business in 1679 and ran it until about 1710.[5]

The older Richard was arrested in 1664 for murdering his wife, but secured a royal pardon, probably at great cost.[6]

References

  1. Jardine, Lisa (2000). Ingenious Pursuits: Building the Scientific Revolution. Abacus. p. 368. ISBN 978-0349113050.
  2. A. D. C. Simpson (1985): "Richard Reeve, the English Campani, and the Origins of the London Telescope-Making Tradition in Longitude Zero 1884–1984. Proceedings of an International Symposium Held at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, 9–13 July 1984 to Mark the Centenary of the Adoption of the Greenwich Meridian." Vistas in Astronomy. An International Review Journal, Oxford, 28 (1–2), pp. 357–365
  3. Morrison-Low, A. D. (2007). Making scientific instruments in the Industrial Revolution. Ashgate Publishing. p. 139. ISBN 9780754657583. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  4. Richard Reeve Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  5. Companion entry and Glossary, plus the "Shorter Pepys".
  6. The Renaissance Mathematicus. Retrieved 22 September 2020.


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