Brass cylinder weight used for testing individual's perception of weight. Number '10' engraved on the base. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Weight, from weight perception apparatus 1893
Wooden tray with three slots for cylinder weights. The tray has the number '3' engraved on the top left corner. On the front base are engraved the numbers of the weights to be placed in the slots: '4, 7 ,10'. The tray also has small metal hooks, one on top right corner and one on bottom left corner. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Tray for weights, from weight perception apparatus 1893
Brass cylinder weight used for testing individual's perception of weight. Number '4' engraved on the base. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Weight, from weight perception apparatus 1893
Brass cylinder weight used for testing individual's perception of weight. Number '2' engraved on the base. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Weight, from weight perception apparatus 1893
Zinc sand tray in which children would create imaginative world's using sand and toys as part of Margaret Lowenfeld's 'World Technique' therapy, believed to date from the early days of her work, circa late 1920s - early 1930s Tray used for Lowenfeld's World Technique 1920-1930
Brass cylinder weight used for testing individual's perception of weight. Number '7' engraved on the base. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Weight, from weight perception apparatus 1893
Brass cylinder weight used for testing individual's perception of weight. Number '4' engraved on the base. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Weight, from weight perception apparatus 1893
'Morgan's Cranio-Cerebral' phrenological painted plaster bust, by A. L. Vago, London, England, 1889. Shows left side of brain exposed, right side of skull labelled with phrenological divisions. 'Morgan's Cranio-Cerebral' phrenological bust 1889
Earthenware phrenological bust by L.N. Fowler, 337 Strand, London, England, 1850-1930 (see note). Earthenware phrenological bust by L.N. Fowler 1850-1930
Key series of photographs for classifying people by build according to the Sheldon system which resulted in Sheldon and McDermot's Atlas of Man, c.1952. Key series of photographs for classifying people by build according to the Sheldon system circa 1952
Zinc sand tray in which children created imaginative worlds using sand and toys as part of Margaret Lowenfeld's 'World Technique' therapy, believed to date from the early days of her work, circa late 1920s - early 1930s Tray used for Lowenfeld's World Technique 1920-1930
Phrenological head, made from a skull, labelled in French, with an Italian summary, according to Spurzheim's system (35 divisions) 1815-1900 Phrenological head made from a skull 1815-1900
Plaster phrenological head, possibly of Pitt the British Prime Minister, 19th century Plaster phrenological head, possibly of William Pitt 1800-1899
Brass cylinder weight used for testing individual's perception of weight. Number '0' engraved on the base. Cambridge Instrument Co., Cambridge, 1893 Weight, from weight perception apparatus 1893
Papier-mâché "safety" chamber pot, by Thetford Pulp-Ware, England, from Brighton County Borough Asylum/St. Francis Psychiatric Hospital, Haywards Heath, 1920-1960. 'Safety' chamber pot from St. Francis Psychiatric Hospital 1920-1960