October’s Café Sci will take place next Monday, at St Patrick’s Irish Club at 7:30 and will be presented by Mike Frost who is, amongst other things, a member of The Royal Astronomical Society.

On February 18th 1737 there was an eclipse of the Sun visible from Warwickshire. It was one of an extraordinary series of British eclipses which occurred in the eighteenth century, and inspired a generation of astronomers and cartographers to produce ever-more elaborate charts and maps of the eclipse tracks.

Henry Beighton, surveyor, engineer, draftsman and mathematician, drew one such chart to illustrate the 1737 eclipse. Mike found this chart in the papers of Roger Newdigate, a young aristocrat who lived in Arbury Hall, Nuneaton.

Mike will use the story of these two fascinating historical figures, and the map that connects them, to trace the flowering of mathematical talent in the wake of Newton, Halley and others. In the case of Beighton and Newdigate, these talents played a direct part in bringing the industrial revolution to Warwickshire.

In memory of John Holroyde, the night’s takings will be donated to The Friendship Project for Children and Cancer Research UK.