Microscope Museum

Collection of antique microscopes and other scientific instruments

 

    

Microscope 122 (assigned to Charles Baker; 1910s)

A close up of a device

Description automatically generatedA close up of a device

Description automatically generatedA close up of a device

Description automatically generatedA picture containing table, board, knife

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The business of Baker was founded in London in about 1765, Charles Baker, who was born in 1820, giving his name to the company from about 1851. When Charles Baker died in 1894 the firm continued under the same name but run by the Curties family until it became, in 1936, Charles Baker & Co. and subsequently, sometime in the 1940s, C. Baker Ltd. The firm’s address mostly given as 244 High Holborn, London (but sometimes 243 and 245, sometimes in combination). The firm produced optical and surgical instruments. In 1963, Vickers acquired the C Baker Ltd microscope factory and a new company called Vickers Instruments was formed. Microscope 122 is not signed but this instrument is very similar to other ‘jug handle’ models from Charles Baker from the 1910s-1920s. The instrument contains Charles Baker and Watson objectives. The body of the microscope contains what seems to be an inscription of a military broad arrow followed by the number ‘19’, suggesting that this instrument belonged to the British army and ‘19’ may correspond to the year 1919.

 

LAST EDITED: 11.09.2020