Catalogue Number: 3260 Frames and lenses. A practical treatise for optometrists Category: Book Sub-Category: Book of historical note Author: LOCKWOOD Robert Minturn Year Of Publication/Manufacture: 1905 Time Period: 1900 to 1939 Place Of Publication/Manufacture: New York Publisher/Manufacturer: Frederick Boger Pub. Co. Description Of Item: Original (?) brown coloured paper covered card cover, 170 x 135 mm, 87 pages plus two preliminary pages and one unnumbered last page advertising the author's earlier books. Nine black and white illustrations. Historical Significance: Lockwood published 8 books each on an different aspect of optometry - the human eye, frames and lenses, transpositions, subjective tests and retinoscopy. This book is an example of the kind of help optometrist tutors provided to aspiring optometrists in the early 20thC. Lockwood was one of the earliest American optometrists to write especially for his profession. Robert Minturn Lockwood (1857-1920), was born in New York City and soon showed gifts for mathematics and languages but his education was limited by family circumstances. He followed his father in electrical manufacturing and later worked with telephone companies including the Bell Telephone Company. In 1900 he became business manager of the Jenner Medical College in Chicago, where he also taught physics and medical Latin and where he was informally encouraged to study optometry. He then taught mathematics and optics at the Illinois College of Ophthalmology and Otology (which offered optometry courses in 1890s), where he concurrently studied optometry. He moved to New York where he practised optometry and also began his career as an optometry medical writer, writing books and writing for optometry and optical journals. He also taught at the New York Institute of Optometry. See Ryer E LeR. Robert Minturn Lockwood. Amer J Optom 1929; 6(3), 145-148, See his books Cat nos. 288, 1022, 1840, 3260. How Acquired: Donated by Optometry Australia Date Acquired: Jan 2017 Condition: Fair to good. Joints have been reinforced Location: Archive office. Pamphlet and ephemera filing cabinet. Drawer 7 |