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STEPHEN HALES (1677-1761)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 835 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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STEPHEN HALES (1677-1761)  ,
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English physiologist, chemist and inventor, was born at Bekesbourne in Kent on the 7th or 17th of September 1677, the fifth (or
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sixth) son of Thomas Hales, whose
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father,
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Sir Robert Hales, was created a
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baronet by Charles II. in 1670 . In
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June 1696 he was entered as a pensioner of Benet (now Corpus Christi) College, Cambridge, with the view of taking
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holy orders, and in
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February 1703 was admitted to a fellowship . He received the degree of master of arts in 1703 and of bachelor of divinity i_i 1711 . One of his most intimate friends was William Stukeley (1687-1765) with whom he studied anatomy, chemistry, &c . In 1708-1709 Hales was presented to the perpetual curacy of
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Teddington in Middlesex, where he remained all his
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life, notwithstanding that he was subsequently appointed rector of Porlock in Somerset, and later of
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Faringdon in Hampshire . In 1717 he was elected
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fellow of the Royal Society, which awarded him the Copley medal in 1739 . In 1732 he was named one of a committee for establishing a colony in
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Georgia, and the next
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year he received the degree of doctor of divinity from Oxford . He was appointed almoner to the princess-dowager of Wales in 1750 . On the
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death of Sir Hans Sloane in 1753, Hales was chosen
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foreign associate of the French Academy of Sciences . He died at Teddington on the 4th of
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January 1761 . Hales is best known for his Statical Essays . The first
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volume,
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Vegetable Staticks (1727), contains an account of numerous experiments in plant-physiology—the loss of
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water in
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plants by evaporation, the
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rate of growth of shoots and leaves, variations in root-force at different times of the day, &c .

Considering it very probable that plants draw " through their leaves some

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part of their nourishment from the air," he undertook experiments to show in " how
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great a proportion air is wrought into the composition of animal, vegetable and
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mineral substances "; though this " analysis of the air " did not lead him to any very clear ideas about the composition of the atmosphere, in the course of his inquiries he collected gases over water in vessels
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separate from those in which they were generated, and thus used what was to all intents and purposes a " pneumatic trough." The second volume (1733) on Haemostaticks, containing experiments on the " force of the
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blood " in various animals, its rate of flow, the capacity of the different vessels, &c., entitles him to be regarded as one of the originators of experimental physiology . But he did not confine his attention to abstract inquiries . The quest of a solvent for calculus in the bladder and kidneys was pursued by him as by others at the period, and he devised a form of forceps which, on the testimony of John Ranby (1703-1773), sergeant-surgeon to George II., extracted stones with " great ease and readiness." His observations of the evil effect of vitiated air caused him to devise a " ventilator " (a modified
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organ-bellows) by which fresh air could be conveyed into gaols, hospitals,
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ships'-holds, &c.; this apparatus was successful in reducing the mortality in the Savoy prison, and it was introduced into France by the aid of H . L . Duhamel du Monceau . Among other things Hales invented a " sea-gauge " for sounding, and processes for distilling fresh from sea water, for preserving corn from weevils by fumigation with
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brimstone, and for salting animals whole by passing brine into their arteries . His Admonition to the Drinkers of
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Gin,
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Brandy, &c., published anonymously in 1734, has been several times reprinted .

End of Article: STEPHEN HALES (1677-1761)
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