Science Week: Science and Ecclesiology Museum - Talk and Tour

Science Week: Science and Ecclesiology Museum - Talk and Tour

Special Science Week Talk & Tour of the Science and Ecclesiology Museum by Dr Neil Trappe, Associate Professor of Experimental Physics at MU

By Maynooth University, Fac. of Science & Engineering

Date and time

Thu, 16 Nov 2023 18:00 - 20:00 GMT

Location

St Patrick's College, Maynooth

The Science and Ecclesiology Museum St Patrick's College W23 NX63 Maynooth Ireland

About this event

Museum curator Dr Neil Trappe, Associate Professor in Experimental Physics at Maynooth University will be hosting some very special talks and tours of the Science and Ecclesiology Museum during Science Week 2023.


These Talks and Tours will run on Thursday, November 16 at the following times:

  • 6pm
  • 6:30pm
  • 7pm

Each Talk and Tour will last 30 minutes. Click 'Get Tickets' to book your timeslot. Visitors are free to explore the museum any time from 6 - 8pm on November 16. Details on Science Museum location are at the bottom of this Eventbrite page.


Located on the beautiful grounds of St Patrick's College in Maynooth, the Museum of Ecclesiology was established in 1934, by a resolution of The Trustees of the College with Dr. William Moran, Professor of Dogmatic Theology being appointed as museum curator. The museum was to be a repository for various objects of Ecclesiastical and College interest, especially those which were linked with the researchers and pioneering work of former Maynooth Professors.

In 1942, on the resignation of Dr. William Moran, the Trustees appointed the Very Rev. Dr Patrick J McLaughlin, Professor of Experimental Physics and later Vice- President of the College, to be curator. This was to be the beginnings of a strong science presence in the College museum. Dr McLaughlin began to transfer apparatus belonging to the renowned Professor of Natural Philosophy, Rev. Professor Nicholas Callan to the museum. These included induction coils, electromagnets, the ‘repeater’, condensers, electric motors and batteries- amongst these his cast-iron cells, which were also manufactured by E.M. Clarke of London, who sold them commercially.

Fr Michael Casey, Professor of Chemistry proceeded him after to be curator from 1975 until his death in 1998. Under his careful watch, the staff of the Experimental Physics department went through all the cupboards and moved all items of scientific instruments that were deemed historic to the museum.

Since then, the museum has been able to develop two main collections.

There is first, the large group of scientific instruments mostly associated with Nicholas Callan of which a full catalogue for this collection was published in 1994 ‘The Scientific Apparatus of Nicholas Callan & other historic instruments’. The museum now has the largest collection of scientific instruments on public display in Ireland, most of which were manufactured in Ireland between 1880 and 1920

The second part of the Museum is a collection of ecclesiastical artifacts from the past three centuries of which a catalogue has also been prepared ‘St Patricks College Maynooth Museum of Ecclesiology: A catalogue of Ecclesiastivcal items spanning two centuries of the College history’ .

In September 1999 Dr N.E. McKeith was appointed museum curator, reflecting the continued interest in the museum by the Department of Experimental Physics. Dr Neil Trappe, Associate Professor in Experimental Physics at Maynooth University is now the museum curator, and we are delighted to be able to open the museum for talks and tours during Science Week 2023.

Interested for more? Follow our Museum Blog ‘Sacred and Scientific; Reflections on the National Science and Ecclesiology Museum Maynooth’



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