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St John's Library contains:
Abbott Papers of Edwin Abbott Abbott
Adams Papers of John Couch Adams
Allen Papers of Frank James Allen
Anderson Papers of William Blair Anderson
Ashby Papers of George Ashby
Atkin Papers of Peter Atkin
Bailey Papers of Stanley John Bailey
Balls Papers of William Lawrence Balls
Barrere Papers of Jean-Bertrand Marie Barrère
Beaton Papers of Sir Cecil Beaton
Benians Papers of Ernest Alfred Benians
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Papers of John Couch Adams

Title Papers of John Couch Adams
Reference GBR/0275/Adams
Creator John Couch Adams (1819-1892)
Covering Dates 1701–1996
Extent and Medium 45 boxes; paper
Repository St John's College Library
Content and context

Adams was born at Lidcot farm, Cornwall, in 1819, the eldest son of a tenant farmer. He developed an early interest in astronomy and in 1831 was sent to his cousin's academy, where he distinguished himself in classics and spent his spare time on astronomy and mathematics. Adams's progress was such that his parents decided that he should be sent to university, and in October 1839 he sat for examinations at St John's College and won a sizarship. In July 1841, at the end of his second year, he wrote himself the following memorandum: 'Formed a design ... of investigating, as soon as possible after taking my degree, the irregularities in the motion of Uranus, which are yet unaccounted for; in order to find whether they may be attributed to the action of an undiscovered planet beyond it ...' Having won the highest mathematical prizes in his college, Adams graduated in 1843 as senior wrangler and won a fellowship. He could now return to his deferred investigation of Uranus. By October 1843 Adams, aged just 24, had arrived at a solution of the inverse perturbation problem and although his first result was approximate, it convinced him that the disturbances of Uranus were due to an undiscovered planet.

In February 1844 Adams applied to the astronomer royal, Sir George Biddell Airy, for more exact data on Uranus. With Airy's figures Adams then computed values for the elliptic elements, mass, and heliocentric longitude of the hypothetical planet. He gave his results to James Challis, Director of the Cambridge Observatory, in September 1845, and after two unsuccessful attempts to present his work to Airy in person, left a copy at the Royal Observatory in October. Airy replied to Adams a few weeks later but did not institute a search for the planet until July 1846.

In the meantime the French astronomer Urbain Jean Joseph Le Verrier had independently published several papers on Uranus and reached the same conclusions as Adams regarding an exterior planet. It was as a result of Le Verrier's efforts that Johann Gottfried Galle, of the Berlin Observatory, discovered Neptune on 23 September 1846, less than one degree distant from where Le Verrier had predicted it would lie. While Le Verrier was showered with honours, Adams's earlier prediction, which agreed closely with Le Verrier's, remained unpublished. First publicised in a letter from Sir John Herschel to the London Athenaeum in October 1846 it provoked a long and bitter controversy over priority of discovery and the issue became a public sensation. Adams and Le Verrier themselves, however, met at Oxford in 1847 and became good friends. Adams was offered a knighthood by Queen Victoria in 1847 but declined. In 1848 the Adams Prize was founded at Cambridge and the Royal Society awarded him its highest award, the Copley Medal.

Adams was elected President of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1851 and began work on lunar theory. On the expiration of his fellowship at St John's he moved to Pembroke College in 1853 and shortly afterwards presented to the Royal Society a remarkable paper on the secular acceleration of the Moon's mean motion, showing Laplace's 1788 solution to be incorrect. While this provoked a sharp scientific controversy, Adams was later proved to be right.

In 1858 Adams became Professor of Mathematics at St Andrew's University but returned to Cambridge in 1859 to become Lowndean Professor of Astronomy and Geometry. In 1861 he took over as Director of the Cambridge Observatory and two years later married Eliza Bruce of Dublin. In the 1860s and 70s he undertook work on the Leonid system, observations for the Astronomische Gesellschaft program, work on Bernoulli numbers and Euler's constant, and the arrangement and cataloguing of Newton's mathematical papers, presented to Cambridge University by Lord Portsmouth. While much of Adams's later work has been superseded, as the co-discoverer of Neptune he occupies a special place in the history of science.

The papers comprise Adams's correspondence, notes and diaries, correspondence after his death, transcripts of correspondence and papers made for Donald MacAlister, biographical and miscellaneous material.

Adams's papers were collected up after his death by Donald MacAlister, with the help of Mrs Adams, for the purpose of writing his biography. MacAlister also had transcripts made of papers in the files of the Royal Greenwich Observatory and elsewhere, and collected material from Adams's friends and colleagues. Some papers were given to St John's by Mrs Adams shortly before her death. In the 1930s MacAlister's collection of papers passed to William Smart, who presented them to St John's in 1959. In 1990 MacAlister's niece, Mrs Horne, presented more papers which had stayed with the family by accident (boxes 24-26). In 1996 the Royal Aeronautical Society offered St John's the papers connected with the Newton MSS Syndicate (box 27), which they had had since 1943.

Access and Use

Please cite as St John's College Library, Papers of John Couch Adams

Further information

FileMaker Pro database; printed indexes.

Index Terms
Astronomy
Mathematics
Adams, John Couch (1819-1892) astronomer
Adams, Eliza (1827-1919) wife of J.C. Adams
Airy, Sir George Biddell (1801-1892) Knight, astronomer
Bashforth, Francis (1819-1912) mathematician
MacAlister, Sir Donald (1854-1934) 1st Baronet, physician and medical administrator
St John's Library/Adams contains:
Box 1 Correspondence about the collection; folder of photographs of Newton manuscripts; stray, unidentified letters, parts of letters and enclosures from letters.
Creator: Various.
15 items; paper.
1847–1959
Box 2 Correspondence between J.C. Adams and Sir George Biddell Airy.
Creator: John Couch Adams and Sir George Biddell Airy.
110 letters; paper.
5 Nov. 1845–12 June 1888
Box 3 Letters from Francis Bashforth and others to J.C. Adams.
Creator: Francis Bashforth, 1819-1912.
78 letters; paper.
29 Nov. 1846–17 Jan. 1890
Box 4 Letters from J.C. Adams, and some from Eliza Adams, to Francis Bashforth.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
96 letters; paper.
16 June 1849–10 May 1890
Box 5-15 Correspondence received by J.C. Adams, A-Z by author.
Creator: Various.
11 boxes; paper.
2 May 1837–21 Aug. 1890
Box 16 Adams's own drafts and copies of correspondence sent.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
122 letters; paper.
13 June 1840–2 July 1890
Box 17 Adams's undergraduate notebooks and notebooks used by him when teaching.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
7 notebooks; paper.
1839–1842
Box 18 Adams's research notebooks on astronomical subjects.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
9 notebooks; paper.
1846–1856
Box 19 Adams's research on astronomical and mathematical subjects (loose papers).
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
35 papers; paper.
1712–1886
Box 20 Adams's early diaries, papers relating to University administration, general memorabilia.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
93 items; paper.
17 Feb. 1837–1892
Box 21 Adams's diaries.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
23 diaries; paper.
1854–1890
Box 22 Eliza Adams's diaries.
Creator: Eliza Adams, 1827-1919.
11 diaries; paper.
1877–1911
Box 23 Juvenilia.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
330 items; paper.
1819–1839
Box 24-26 Papers given by Mrs Horne, in 1990, including correspondence, early diaries, correspondence post mortem etc.
Creator: Various.
3 boxes; paper.
17 Feb. 1837–2 July 1913
Box 27 Papers relating to the Newton Manuscripts Syndicate.
Creator: Various.
95 items; paper.
1875–1996
Box 28 Correspondence, mostly to and from Eliza Adams, after J.C. Adams's death.
Creator: Various.
105 items; paper.
18 Jan. 1892–30 Sep. 1946
Box 29 Correspondence, mostly to and from Eliza Adams and Donald MacAlister, after J.C. Adams's death.
Creator: Various.
125 letters; paper.
10 Feb. 1892–2 Apr. 1907
Box 30-32 Correspondence and papers of the Adams Memorial Committee.
Creator: Adams Memorial Committee.
3 boxes; paper.
21 Jan. 1892–26 Sep. 1900
Box 33 Transcripts of papers and letters from the Royal Greenwich Observatory, made for Donald MacAlister.
Creator: Various.
48 items; paper.
12 July 1846–29 Jan. 1847
Box 34 Transcripts of letters from the Royal Greenwich Observatory, made for Donald MacAlister.
Creator: Various.
80 letters; paper.
12 Nov. 1846–21 Apr. 1893
Box 35-38 Transcripts of letters from J.C. Adams, A-Z by recipient, and transcripts of miscellaneous correspondence, made for Donald MacAlister.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
4 boxes; paper.
11 July 1840–15 Sep. 1978
Box 39 Transcripts of J.C. Adams's diary and scientific papers, made for Donald MacAlister.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
51 items; paper.
7 Aug. 1837–1890
Box 40 Transcripts of articles about J.C. Adams, made for Donald MacAlister.
Creator: Various.
6 items; paper.
13 Nov. 1846–13 May 1895
Box 41 Text of Donald MacAlister's biography of J.C. Adams, and correspondence relating to it.
Creator: Various.
9 items; paper.
19 Feb. 1847–1900
Box 42 Biographical papers by members of the Adams family, William Smart and others.
Creator: Various.
61 items; paper.
1862–23 Mar. 1977
Box 43-44 Miscellaneous printed material including: items originally sent enclosed with letters, cuttings and articles about Neptune, obituaries of Adams's colleagues and contemporaries.
Creator: Various.
2 boxes; paper.
1701–1896
Box 45 Miscellaneous printed pamphlets and bound books, mostly referred to in the correspondence.
Creator: Various.
8 items; paper.
1870–1900
W.16 'Manuscripts on the perturbations of Uranus by J.C. Adams 1841-1846 arranged and described by R.A. Sampson 1901'. The contents of these MSS are described by Sampson in his article 'A description of Adams's manuscripts on the perturbations of Uranus', Memoirs of the Royal Astronomical Society Vol. LIV (1901), 143-170, and 20 pages are also reproduced in facsimile.
Creator: John Couch Adams, 1819-1892.
1 volume; paper.
1841–1901

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