Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,257 pages of information and 244,498 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Peter Dollond

From Graces Guide
Split lens micrometer by Peter Dollond, on display at the London Science Museum

Peter Dollond (1731-1820) of Dollond and Co was an English maker of optical instruments.

1731 February 24th. Born at Kensington the son of John Dollond

Working together with his father and subsequently with his younger brother and nephew, George Dollond, he successfully designed and manufactured a number of optical instruments. He is particularly credited with the invention of the triple achromatic lens in 1763, still in wide use today, though known as the Cooke triplet after a much later 1893 patent.

Peter Dollond initially worked at silk weaving with his father, but his father's passion for optics inspired him so much that in 1750 Peter quit the silk business and opened an optical instruments shop in Kennington, London. After two years, his father gave up silk, too, and joined him.

Dollond telescopes, for sidereal or terrestrial use, were amongst the most popular in both Great Britain and abroad for a period of over one and half centuries. Admiral Lord Nelson himself owned one. Another had sailed with Captain Cook in 1769 to observe the Transit of Venus.

The Peter Dollond compound chest microscope is based on improvements to the Cuff-style microscope introduced by British scientific instrument designers Edward Nairne and Thomas Blunt around 1780. Another design was for the Peter Dollond compound monocular Eriometer around 1790 used to accurately measure the thickness and size of wool fibres.

After successfully defending a legal challenge to the patent he held for the achromatic lens the business prospered and he successfully sued his rivals for patent infringement. Dollond's reputation, especially with his father being a Fellow of the Royal Society as a result of his invention of the achromat, provided the company with the de facto right of refusal on the best optical flint glass. This privilege permitted Dollond to maintain an edge in quality over competitor's telescopes and optical instruments for many years.

c.1807 Featured in the painting of 'Men of Science Living in 1807-8', reproduced as an engraving by George Zobel, and William Walker[1]

Peter Dollond's wife was Ann Phillips and they had two daughters, Louise and Anne

1820 July 2nd. Peter Dollond died[2]


Dollond & Co merged with Aitchison & Co in 1927 to form Dollond and Aitchison, the well-known British high street chain of opticians, now part of Boots.

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. National Portrait Gallery [1]
  2. Parish register