MS letter with transcript and negative photographs. Anderson is in London as tutor to Lord Doune, and looks forward to Lang's visit.
MS letter, with transcript. On Anderson's hopes of the Chair of Latin or Hebrew at Glasgow College - he felt that he was "jockied out" and was instead elected Professor of Oriental Languages - his visit to France and the Catholic converts he has met there.
Using the pseudonym 'Moses Nosredna' Anderson corresponded with William Gardiner who had published a ridiculous paper on the moon, to deter him from further folly.
Includes calendar of contents.
MS letter in Hebrew, with translation. Pinto greets his "master and teacher, learned in the Torah. Rabbi Anderson" and promises to do service both by day and night". Translation by Professor Noah Morris, 1938.
Another copy of the text of Anderson's Discourses of natural and artificial systems in natural history delivered to the Literary Society in Glasgow College, 1774, without the initial details about the Society but prefaced by several comments dated 1797 and 1798 on the importance of the work and its possible publication as a memorial to Professor Anderson, who died in 1796.
Refers to experiments in magnetism.
Includes mention of visits and letters received and made and books read, as well as the results of his experiments.
Contents: I. Of war as a scientific art; II. Of the improvement of artillery. The latter title is not actually present in the volume.
MS copy made by John Anderson, Glasgow College, 1 October 1760, of a catalogue of curisosities, 1703. Prefaced 'Copy of a small tattered book lent to me by the Reverend Mr. Peter Woodrow, Minister at Turbowtoun [ie Tarbolton], which he says is a catalogue of the curiosities collected by his father the Minister of Eastwood'. Lists natural history objects, fossils and antiquities.
Sans titreDraft of protest by John Anderson, Joseph Black and Thomas Hamilton over the payment of 50 merks to Robert Dick, former Professor of Natural Philosophy, and James Mair from the crop of 1754.
On the verso is a draft class ticket by John Anderson to James Caldwell for the latter's work in the Hebrew class.
The merk was a unit of Scots currency.
These were probably calculations for experiments in Anderson's first course of lectures in natural philosophy.
The volumes list the apparatus required for each experiment, which Anderson's laboratory assistant or 'operator' would be expected to set out for him. One volume (MS 30.4) has also been used for notes on astronomy.