Society of Arcueil


The Society of Arcueil was a circle of French scientists who met regularly on summer weekends between 1806 and 1822 at the country houses of Claude Louis Berthollet and Pierre Simon Laplace at Arcueil, then a village 3 miles south of Paris.

Members

In 1807, when the first collection of "Mémoires de Physique et de Chimie de la Société d'Arcueil" was published, a list of contributing members read:
In the course of the following years they were joined by:
had initiated the practice of informal deliberation with his fellow scientists, including his junior assistants, in his laboratory at the Paris Arsenal.
Laplace, and Berthollet with his open laboratory, continued this spirit of fellowship at Arcueil. They were the senior moderators in a scientific debate of novel magnitude; combining the framework of physico-mathematical model with experimental investigation.

Roots

The roots of the active progress of the Society of Arcueil lay with Napoleon Bonaparte's special attention to sciences in general and - as an artillery officer - to mathematics in particular.
Laplace had been Bonaparte's final examiner at the Ecole Militaire where Gaspard Monge, his professor, had encouraged him to finish the two-year course of mathematics in one.
Napoleon became acquainted with Berthollet during his campaign in Italy, when Berthollet and Monge were part of the commission sent by the French Directory to select and dispatch Italian art treasures, manuscripts and scientific documents to Paris.
Laplace, Berthollet and Monge became instrumental in having Napoleon elected to the First Class of the Institut de France when Lazare Carnot's place fell vacant in 1797.
Napoleon in turn invited them to follow him to Egypt and instructed Berthollet to conduct the recruitment of the scientists that were to compose the "Institut d'Egypte".
The way Berthollet effectively directed the practical installation of the Institute at Qassim Bey's Palace in Caïro, cemented the friendship with Bonaparte in a way that proved its worth in the patronage of the Arcueil Society. When Berthollet, in 1807, concluded that the arrangement for research facilities at Arcueil had cost him more than he could afford, Napoleon, alerted by Laplace and Monge, immediately lend him 150.000 francs to break even.
The informality of the "Institut d'Egypte" found its continuance at Arcueil where Berthollet from his Egyptian-decorated study remained in charge of the publication of the "Description de l'Egypte ".

Science Under Bonaparte

The quantitative applications of the new science of chemistry had important significance for the state economy.
The exploitation of beet sugar, for example, was developed with the boycott of English trade in mind. From the publication of Franz Achard's letter on beet sugar in Annales de chimie et de physique and the first presentation of a sample to Napoleon during a session of the First Class of the Institute till the first viable production by Jules Paul Benjamin Delessert in 1812, the subject was one of the scientific priorities in France.
The industrial fabrication of dye from home grown indigo plant at Toulouse was a direct heritage from the "Institut d'Egypte."
Mathematical instruments were a special favourite with Napoleon, and were often awarded medals at the industrial fairs held at the instigation of Chaptal. Members of the Society of Arcueil were frequently invited to judge on such occasions.
In 1806, at the third exhibition in the series, some 1.400 participants attended; up from 220 in 1801. Special attention was given to textile printing adapted by Christophe Oberkampf and his nephew Samuel Widmer with the introduction of roller instead of block printing. This particular industrial process integrated the bleaching by chlorine invented by Berthollet, as well as the application of new dyeing methods. In 1806 Oberkampf's factory printed fabrics at the rate of 7,5 metres a minute, a viable alternative to English import.
Laplace and Monge were also instructed to supervise Robert Fulton's experiments with the Nautilus,subsidized in France.
Following Volta's visit to Paris in 1801 important work on the Voltaic pile, involving the Arcueil circle, was carried out under Bonaparte's auspices rewarding Paul Erman, Humphry Davy, Gay-Lussac and Louis Jacques Thenard in the process.
The scientific work in general was of first importance to the education at the Ecole Polytechnique, the home base of many Arcueil scientists.
The enhancing of the quality of iron and steel, with Collet-Descotils -the precursor in the discovery of iridium- in charge as chief engineer at the "Ecole des Mines", and above all the development of gunpowder were of prime military significance.
The French expertise in explosives was well judged by the Allies when later they dispatched Jöns Jacob Berzelius to Paris to update general knowledge. In 1819 he spent two full months as a guest of Berthollet in the laboratory at Arcueil experimenting, but above all sounding Pierre Dulong whose memoir on a new detonating substance had appeared in the 1817 volume of "Mémoires de Physique et de Chimie de la Société d'Arcueil".

"''Memoires''..."

There were three volumes of "Mémoires de Physique et de Chimie de la Société d'Arcueil": 1807, 1809 and 1817 -the last date testifying to the political difficulties following the demise of Napoleon I of France.
The "Mémoires..." published some important new ideas: Malus on the polarisation of light ; Gay-Lussac on the free expansion of gases ; Humboldt and Gay-Lussac on terrestrial magnetism ; Gay-Lussac's law of combining volumes of gases ; Thenard and Biot's observation on the comparison of aragonite and calcite ; Gay-Lussac and Thenard on the discovery of the amides of metal ; Candolle on heliotropism.
Equally important was the special thread, woven into the overall discourse, that held together the brilliant cross-reference among friends.

Foreign visitors

There had often been attempts to correspond between the French and the English scientists notwithstanding the state of war between their countries.
At the first opportunity the English correspondents of Arcueil returned to Paris, among them John Leslie and Charles Blagden who died of apoplexy during a visit to Berthollet at Arcueil. Mary Somerville who wrote a popular account of Laplace's "Mécanique Céleste" dined at Arcueil with her scientific "heroes".
Jöns Jacob Berzelius had already been invited by Berthollet to come and study at Arcueil in 1810, but it was not till 1818 that the Swedish government judged it appropriate for him to travel to France. At Arcueil Berzelius engaged in a steadfast friendship with Dulong.
In 1820 Dulong wrote to Berzelius:
It was the testimony of a changing mood and when John Dalton, who had strong differences of opinion with the Society, visited Arcueil in 1822, he received a hearty welcome. It was the last major social event for the Society of Arcueil.
Berthollet died on November 6, 1822 and with him went an inspiring power of adherence.

Post Scriptum

The Society of Arcueil however, through the younger generation, was still to illuminate such work as that of Liebig, Pasteur, Fresnel, Niepce, Daguerre, Léon Foucault... as well as many others in the field of scientific education.