Whipple Museum
@whipplemuseum.bsky.social
1.1K followers 130 following 14 posts
We're Cambridge University's home for the history of science. Open Mon-Fri, 12.30-16.30. Next Saturday opening, 18 October, 10.00-16.00.
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Reposted by Whipple Museum
bonfieldkeith.bsky.social
Out to the Whipple Library @whipplemuseum.bsky.social as part of Open Cambridge for '500 years of science in print' 📚
Thank you to Jack & Liz from the #Library for showing, explaining & allowing us to touch (only some) some of the libraries absolute treasure 📜
#science #archive #printing #knowledge
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
Whipple Scribble this Thursday! Sketch or just unwind with a friend at our after-hours drawing session. ✏️

Thu 18 Sept, 5:30–7:30pm
📍 Kick off with a optional intro tour at 5:30pm
🎟 Free, booking essential.
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/whipple-sc...
Whipple Scribble
After-hours sketching at the Whipple Museum, Cambridge. Free - Donate What You Can!
www.eventbrite.co.uk
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
✨ 1618 Day, Saturday 20 Sept, 10–4pm ✨

Step back into the 17th century and discover the stories of our beautiful Jacobean building (once Cambridge’s Free School). Explore historic instruments, uncover hidden corners of the museum, and enjoy family activities, curator talks, and special tours.
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
✏️ After-hours sketching at the Whipple Museum
Thu 18 Sept, 5:30–7:30pm

Sketch among telescopes, globes & centuries-old instruments in Cambridge’s history of science museum.

Free, all welcome! Optional 20-min intro tour at 5:30pm! ✨

Booking essential: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/whipple-sc...
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
🔍 Whipple Highlights Tour
Wed 13 Aug, 1pm and Thur 21 Aug, 3:30pm

What is an orrery? Why does the clock chime 13? And what’s with the green specs and horses’ teeth? Explore the Whipple in 10 objects!

Get your tickets here:
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/whipple-hi...
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
We’re open tomorrow—here’s what’s on! ⭐️

🌈 Bridging Binaries Tour: LGBTQ+ History of Science
🕜 1:30pm | 🎟 Free (book via website)

🔬 Curator’s Talk: Physics & Glass
🕝 2:30pm | 🎟 Free, no booking needed – just meet us at the front desk
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
🔍 Whipple Highlights Tour
📅 Sat 16 Aug, 10:30am, Free

What is an orrery? Why does the clock chime 13? And what’s with the green specs and horses’ teeth? Explore the Whipple in 10 objects—curious artefacts, big scientific ideas, and famous Cambridge connections.

www.eventbrite.com/e/whipple-hi...
Whipple Highlights Tour
This free tour showcases a selection of must-see museum objects – your perfect introduction to the Whipple.
www.eventbrite.com
Reposted by Whipple Museum
bbienias.bsky.social
H is for the History of Science – no better place than Cambridge if you have a passion for HoS. Whipple Museum, Hawking, Newton (we’ll get to that)…
#HistoryOfScience #WhippleMuseum @whipplemuseum.bsky.social
Whipple Musuem, Cambridge
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
We’re open this Saturday – and there’s something new to see! 👀

Explore Human Body in the Learning Gallery: from electric nerve zappers to vitamin C syrup jars, an ivory eye, and a full papier-mâché person! 🧠⚡️

📍 Free School Lane, Cambridge
10am - 4pm
🎟 Free entry!
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
✨ Physics & Glass ✨

Now on at the Whipple Museum, Physics & Glass is a tribute to the art of the scientific glassblower. Glass has been one of the most important materials in the history of physics, and this display highlights some of the most intricate pieces in the Whipple’s collection.
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
After-hours sketching at the Whipple Museum
Thursday 8 May, 5.30-7.30pm
Free!

Ever fancied sketching among telescopes, globes, and ancient scientific instruments? Step into Cambridge University's home for the history of science for a relaxed, creative evening.

www.eventbrite.com/e/whipple-sc...
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ Museum Tour, this Wednesday! ⭐️📣
We’re thrilled to announce the return of the Bridging Binaries LGBTQ+ Tours at the Whipple Museum.

📍 Every Wednesday, 2.30pm.
Tours are aimed at an adult audience.
Book your FREE tickets our website.
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
This Saturday get hands-on with creative activities that will help shape our new Learning Gallery installation—join us for Lightworks! 🎨🔭

🎨 Lightworks Workshop: Exploring Light, Colour & Lenses
🔎 Led by artist James Tunnard
📅 15 March
⏰ Drop in between 10–12pm & 1–3pm
💫 Free
📸 My Linh Le for UCM
Young visitor using a red telescope in the Learning Gallery.
Reposted by Whipple Museum
valuepast.bsky.social
📖What kinds of scientific instruments were used around the turn of the nineteenth century in Greece, then a province of the Ottoman Empire? Artemis Yagou (Deutsches Museum) outlines the uses of scientific instruments and the associated emerging practices and mentalities in Greece.
Scientific Instruments in the Greek Enlightenment
In diesem Beitrag skizziert Artemis Yagou die Verwendung wissenschaftlicher Instrumente und die damit verbundenen neuen Praktiken und Mentalitäten in Griechenland um die Wende zum 19. Jahrhundert.
valuepast.hypotheses.org
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
What’s On at the Whipple Museum this February Half Term? 🖼 🔦 🌟

We’re taking part in #TwilightAtTheMuseums with Cambridge University Museums!

Grab your torch and explore our collections after dark with our space-themed family trail, Space Explorers. 🔭🪐☄️

Wednesday 19 Feb, 5-7pm.
Free, drop-in.
Reposted by Whipple Museum
xinyiwenhps.bsky.social
Just realised that our amazing Whipple Museum of History of Science is on Bluesky. Follow @whipplemuseum.bsky.social for more #HistSci, #HistMed, #SciArt, broken scientific instruments in Cambridge, and more! 📜 🗃️
A box of microscopic slides. Very thin little drawers with little handles, each drawer contains a couple of slides Spherical equinocial sundial by Hans Volmar, German,
18th century
Wh.O660

Compound microscope
by Edmund Culpeper, English, circa 1735
Whipple was particularly interested in the early history of the microscope, collecting nearly 200 examples from the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.

Astrolabe
Persian, signed M. Akhbar
1236 AH (1820 AD)
Wh.0599
whipplemuseum.bsky.social
📣🌟 Exhibition Talk 📣 🌟
The Cavendish Laboratory and the Birth of the Atomic Age.

Meet the remarkable scientific community behind the Cavendish Laboratory’s astonishing physics in this talk with Whipple Museum curator Dr Hannah Price.

Free, no need to book.
Saturday, 15 February, 2025 - 2pm
Reposted by Whipple Museum
scarlettlw.bsky.social
Went on a 'science museum crawl' around Cambridge (UK)! Here are some highlights!
📍University Museum of Zoology
📍 Whipple Museum of the History of Science
📍Sedwick Museum of Earth Science

#museums 🐡 🧪
A skeleton of a dodo in a display cabinet An Iguanodon skeleton replica on its hind legs in a museum A gold old fashioned microscope in a glass cabinet A blue plaque crediting the discovery of the double helix to Francis Crick and James Watson. There is graffiti on the bottom saying Franklin
Reposted by Whipple Museum
xinfan.bsky.social
Great exhibition about a significant moment in history! — Whipple Museum in Cambridge.
Reposted by Whipple Museum
hscottfordsmand.bsky.social
And we’re back on: 1st term day included a tour of the Whipple Museum✨ organised by the #STS Cambridge Network (SCaN)
We got an intricate story on networks of knowledge underlying the discovery of 🧬, learnt about the Cavendish lab, saw the Globe Room, AND an exciting new acquisition (see ALT) #hps
Pinboard exhibition display from the exhibition on The Cavendish Lab - done as a way to exhibit the kind of collaboration and culture that existed around the lab, and made its journey from newly founded, scorned upon, “practical” space, towards a world-renowned site of scientific excellence possible. A cyclotron from the cavendish - and early form of particle accelerator, used to accelerate electrons and similarly sized particles. Terrestrial globe from 1690 New acquisition: a Spanish portable sundial, which has been moderated by someone to work in the southern hemisphere, and inscribed with useful coordinates traced along the west coast of South America, targeting, in particular, sites of relevant to Spanish extractivist imperialism, i.e. ports used for exporting raw materials and other goods.