Ref NoLDGSL/29
Title'Uncle Jack', tribute to Dr Lewis Moysey
Date[1918-1920s]
LevelFile
Extent1 vol
FormatDocument
DescriptionBound, typescript tribute to Dr Lewis 'Jack' Moysey, written by his elder brother and intended to be read by Moysey's young nephews/nieces. The first few pages are a brief biographical history of Moysey, the rest being extracts of letters from Lewis Moysey then after his death, from his friends and acquaintances. The front of the volume is marked 'LM' and underneath is the Latin phrase 'non sibi sed toti' meaning 'not for himself but for everyone/all'.
Administrative HistoryLewis Moysey, younger son of John Moysey of Guilford, was born in 1869 and educated at Repton School and later at Caius College, Cambridge, where he studied medicine. He practised for many years in Nottingham, but in his spare time became interested in the fossils of the Coal Measures, spending whatever time he could searching for them and in preparing them for his cabinet. His general scientific knowledge led him to appreciate the relative importance of the specimens, so that anything rare or unusual was at once recognized as such, and brought to the notice of the proper specialist. Consequently Carboniferous palaeontology owes much to him, not only by reason of his own contributions to the literature, but also by the material which he made available for other workers. Many rarities were obtained by an ingenious method by which the refractory nodules containing the fossils were heated, soaked, and then alternately frozen and thawed until they cracked readily. One of his palaeontological papers was published in the Society’s Quarterly Journal for 1910, and others appeared in the Geological Magazine. He also contributed a comprehensive appendix on the fossils from the Derbyshire & Nottinghamshire Coalfield to the Geological Survey Memoir on the district (1913). He joined the Geological Society in 1907, and in 1915 a portion of the Lyell Fund was awarded to him in recognition of the value of his work. Shortly before his death, he presented the whole of his collection of fossil plants to the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge, and the animal remains to the Museum of Practical Geology at Jermyn Street, London.

On the outbreak of war, he was called to the National Service, and was allotted regimental work in Britain until the final year of the war, when he was detailed for duty in the East. However he was killed before the start of the journey, drowning aboard the hospital ship ‘Glenart Castle’ when it was torpedoed in the Bristol Channel on 26 February 1918.
ProvenanceDonated by Isobel Robinson, 11 February 2015. Found in amongst family papers - Moysey is probably a distant relation.
Access ConditionsAccess is by appointment only. Please contact the Archivist for further information.
LanguageEnglish
ArchNoteDescription by Caroline Lam
Persons
CodePersonNameDates
DS/UK/1387MOYSEY; Lewis (1869-1918); physician, surgeon and geologist1869-1918
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