Page:Protestant Exiles from France Agnew vol 2.djvu/473

 crown glass and another of flint glass, is colourless (or, in Greek phrase, achromatic) when their focal distances are nearly as 2 to 3. His successive achievements he described in papers which the eminent optician, Mr. James Short, F.R.S., obligingly communicated to the Royal Society from 1753 to 1758. A paper of the year 1758 obtained for Mr. Dollond one of the highest honours of that Society, the Copley Medal. In the year 1761 he was made F.R.S., and also Optician to the king, but his enjoyment of those honours was of brief duration. The Encyclopaedia Britannica says, “Mr. Dollond’s appearance was somewhat stern, and his language was impressive, but his manners were cheerful and affable. He was in the habit of attending regularly, along with his family, the services of the French Protestant Church. He constantly sought his chief amusement in objects connected with the study of those sciences which he had so much contributed to improve. Perhaps he pursued them with an application somewhat too intense, for on 30th November 1761, as he was reading a new work of Clairaut on the theory of the moon which had occupied his whole attention for several hours, he had an attack of apoplexy which proved fatal.”

It appears that the famous business had been removed to a shop in the Strand. The following letter from Peter Dollond to the Earl of Bute has been preserved:—

“My Lord, — I take the liberty of acquainting your Lordship that my Father, John Dollond, Optician to his Majesty, died suddenly last Sunday Evening.

“And as your Lordship was pleased to honour my late Father by recommending him to his Majesty for that honourable Post, this goodness in your Lordship makes me presume to give your Lordship the trouble of this letter, earnestly requesting that your Lordship will be pleased to recommend me to His Majesty in the same manner. — I am, my Lord, your Lordship’s most obedient and most humble Servant,

“.”

“, December y$e$ 2$nd$ 1761.”

“P.S. — I have taken the liberty of inclosing a Certificat that Mr. Short has been so good as to give me."

This request was granted; and the new Royal Optician was an able representative of the former. He was the author of a pamphlet:—

Peter Dollond was born in 1730; he had a brother, John, and a married sister, Mrs. Huggins. John Dollond was admitted as a partner in 1766, and died in 1804, when his nephew, George Huggins, succeeded him. Peter Dollond died in 1820, and Mr. Huggins then assumed the name of Dollond; and the business still survives with the designation of, in Ludgate Hill. The above-named George Dollond was eminent as a scientific man; he was a prominent Fellow and Councillor of the Royal Society, and died on 13th May 1852, aged seventy-eight. He, like his uncle Peter, had been a Director of the French Hospital, and a younger George Dollond acceded to that honour in 1853.

Anne, daughter of Peter Dollond, was the wife of the Rev. George Waddington, Vicar of Tuxford, Notts, and mother of the ecclesiastical historian, Very Rev. George Waddington, D.D., Dean of Durham (born 1793, died 1869). and of Right Hon. Horatio Waddington, Under Secretary of State for the Home Department (born 1799, died 1867).  . — Andrew and John Fraigneau were French Protestants naturalized at Westminster on 5th January 1688, n.s. (see List xiv.). Mr. Wagner, with characteristic ability, has tracked them to their shops and houses in London. Jean Fraigneau, confiseur en Pall-Mall, married Madeleine Liege, and had a family of daughters. André Fraigneau, chapelier dans Rupert-street, married Catherine Billon, and had several sons, one of whom, Jean Fraigneau, was baptized in Hungerford French Church, on 10th November 1690. This infant, John Fraigneau, lived and