Our Mission: Cataloguing British Scientific Thought
We preserve and share the documentary heritage of Britain's scientific revolution for educators, researchers, and institutions worldwide.
Institutional Purpose
Preserving the Legacy of Empirical Thought
Founded on Scholarly Precision
Scientific Britain: The Enlightenment Archive started in 2018 to meet the need for centralized access to Britain's scientific heritage. Based in Carlton House Terrace, next to the Royal Society, we connect historical scholarship with modern education.
Our collection covers the foundational years of modern science, from Francis Bacon's empirical method to the scientific institutions that still shape global research. We focus on original manuscripts, contemporary accounts, and documents that show how scientific thought developed.
Digital Preservation Initiative
Knowing physical access limits education, we've digitized our manuscript collection. Each document is photographed using conservation standards, preserving the original and making it accessible worldwide.
Our digital archive has high-resolution scans with searchable text, letting you search keywords across centuries of scientific letters. This tech opens up materials once only available to specialists in physical archives.
"The Archive's work to make primary sources accessible changes how we teach science history. My students can now study Newton's actual calculations, not just read about them in textbooks."
Expertise and Leadership
Meet Our Research Team
Dr. Evelyn Thorne
Lead Archivist & Research Director
Dr. Thorne holds a doctorate in History of Science from Oxford University, with specialisation in 17th-century scientific correspondence. Her research focuses on the epistolary networks that connected natural philosophers across Europe, particularly the role of Henry Oldenburg in establishing scientific communication protocols. She has published extensively on the development of peer review processes and the institutional frameworks that supported early modern science.
- "Letters of Natural Philosophy: Correspondence Networks 1660-1700" (Cambridge, 2021)
- "The Oldenburg Archive: Scientific Communication in the Restoration" (Journal of History of Science, 2020)
Professor Alistair Finch
Historical Consultant & Advisory Board Chair
Professor Finch brings four decades of experience in institutional history of science, with particular expertise in the Royal Society's development from informal gathering to formal academy. His work examines how scientific institutions shaped both the content and practice of natural philosophy, establishing the organisational frameworks that defined modern scientific research.
- Fellow, Royal Historical Society
- Advisory Editor, British Journal for History of Science
- Consulting Historian, Science Museum, London
Educational Resources
Research Services and Institutional Partnerships
Archival Document Consultation
Supervised access to original manuscripts and rare texts for advanced researchers. Our research room accommodates visiting scholars with appropriate credentials and institutional support.
Educational Package Development
Curated digital resources designed for specific curriculum requirements. We collaborate with educators to develop materials appropriate for A-level through graduate-level instruction.
Museum Exhibition Support
Technical consultation and loan services for institutions developing exhibitions related to British scientific history. We provide historical context and documentation verification.
"Our collaboration with the Archive for the 'Instruments of Discovery' exhibition provided authentication and historical context that enhanced our visitors' understanding of 18th-century scientific practice. Their scholarly rigour is exemplary."
Location and Access
Visiting the Archive
Carlton House Terrace Location
Our archive is housed at 6 Carlton House Terrace, in the heart of historic London's scientific district. This prestigious Georgian terrace, originally designed by John Nash, places us adjacent to the Royal Society and within walking distance of the Institute of Contemporary Arts and the National Gallery.
The building's neoclassical architecture reflects the intellectual confidence of the Enlightenment period we study. Our research rooms overlook St. James's Park, providing scholars with an inspiring environment that connects them directly to the landscape familiar to the natural philosophers whose work they examine.
Research Room Access
Hours: Wednesday & Friday, 10:00 - 16:00
Booking: Minimum 48 hours advance notice required
Capacity: Maximum 8 researchers per session
Requirements: Academic ID, research proposal, white cotton gloves
Transportation
Underground:
Piccadilly Circus (Piccadilly & Bakerloo lines) - 3 minutes walk
Charing Cross (Northern, Bakerloo & Circle lines) - 5 minutes walk
Bus Routes:
Numbers 3, 6, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 23, 88, 159 serve nearby stops
Parking:
Limited metered parking available on surrounding streets. We recommend public transport for environmental and practical reasons.
Security Notice: All visitors must register at reception and be accompanied by Archive staff when accessing collection materials. Photography requires special permission and additional fees apply.
Support Our Mission
Help us preserve Britain's scientific heritage for future generations through research collaboration, educational partnerships, and institutional support.