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EXHIBITION COMMEMORATIVE OF THE ABBÉ HAÜY,

LATE

CRYSTALLOGRAPHER AND MINERALOGIST.

ATE in February the Library opened in the Stuart Gallery a display of books and pamphlets by the Abbé Haüy. A number of portraits of the Abbé were also exhibited. This exhibition was made in commemoration of the 175th anniversary of the birth of the founder of the sciences of crystallography and mineralogy, and served as part of the commemoration meeting held in the American Museum of Natural History, by the New York Academy of Sciences in co-operation with Section E of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the New York Mineralogical Club. The following is a brief outline of Abbé Haüy's life.

Réné-Just Haïy, commonly known as the Abbé Haüy, from his having been an honorary canon of Notre Dame, was born at Saint-Just, a small market town in the department of the Oise, on the 28th of February, 1743. His parents were poor, his father being only a humble weaver. The boy's love of singing and music was the means of drawing attention to him in his native town. On the advice of a Premonstratensian prior the mother took him to Paris, where the kindness of friends enabled young Haüy to secure the post of chorister in a church of the quarter Saint-Antoine. The interest of his patrons later secured for him a scholarship in the college of Navarre, where he studied simultaneously the ancient languages and the sciences, particularly physics. His industry and good conduct at this college gained him further notice, and he received the appointment of mastership of the fourth class in Latin in his twenty-first year. Some time after he was transferred to the college of the Cardinal Lemoine in a similar but higher capacity. At this college Haüy became the friend and companion of Charles François L'Homond, or Lhomond, one of the regents and a distinguished botanist. This friendship led to Haüy's taking up the study of botany, in which he obtained considerable proficiency. The pursuit of this study necessitated frequent visits to the "Jardin du Roi" now the "Jardin des Plantes." On one of these visits he was led to attend a lecture on mineralogy by Daubenton, where, as Cuvier says, “he unexpectedly found himself in the presence of a new object of study, more congenial to his first taste for physics than even that of plants." Happening to let fall a beautiful specimen of calcareous spar belonging to a friend, M. France de Croisset, he was led by examination of the fragments to the geo

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Au Savant Auteur des Fraites de Physique et de Minéraloyu,

I.A. H. Lucas son Elive.

ABBÉ RÉNÉ-JUST HAUY

February 28th, 1743-June 3rd, 1822

metrical law of crystallization associated with his name. The conformity of the superposed plates of crystalline matter with the planes of the central prism had revealed to him the secret of their development, and caused him to cry out "Tout est trouvé" (all is found). He was therefore the first to show that the structure of crystals was regulated by invariable laws, thus putting the study of crystallography on a scientific basis. "From the moment," says Sir John Herschel, "that the genius of Haüy discovered the general fact that they could be cloven or split in such directions as to lay bare their peculiar primitive or fundamental forms, from that moment mineralogy ceased to be an unmeaning list of names, a mere laborious cataloguing of stones and rubbish." The value of his discovery, the mathematical theory of which is given by Haüy in his Traité de minéralogie, was immediately recognized by Daubenton and Laplace, and on their advice it was communicated to the French Academy in November, 1783, and published in the following year under the title: Essai d'un théorie sur la structure des crystaux, appliquée a plusieurs genres de substances crystallisées. Haüy also greatly increased our knowledge of pyro-electricity by his work on the Théorie de l'électricité et du magnétisme, d'apres les principes de M. Aepinus, published in 1787. When the Revolution broke out in 1792 Haüy was thrown into prison for refusing to take the required oath, and for a time his life was in danger. From this peril he was saved by the intercession of his friend and pupil Étienne Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, and the remark of a citizen, that "it were better to spare a recusant priest, than to put to death a quiet man of letters." In 1794 the Convention appointed him Keeper of the Cabinet of the School of Mines, and it was in this capacity that he prepared his principal work, Traité de Minéralogic, published in four volumes in 1801. (An Extrait of this work was published in 1797.) In 1802, under Napoleon, he became professor of mineralogy in the Museum of Natural History, and in the following year, at the request of the government, he prepared his Traité élémentaire de physique, a work which passed through three editions during the author's lifetime. Many honors were showered upon him. by the rulers of the different European states, but amidst all he preserved the modest simplicity which had distinguished his early life. By the government of the Restoration he was deprived of his appointments and pension, and his latter days were in consequence clouded by poverty. The strong courage and high moral qualities which had helped him in his youth did not desert him in his old age, and he lived cheerful and respected till his death in Paris, from the result of a fall, on the third of June, 1822.

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