In 1836, James Booth started a student laboratory in Philadelphia where men could obtain practical training in chemistry - especially analytical chemistry - by personal instruction. With him were associated successively Martin H. Boyé (1812-1909), Thomas H. Garrett, and Andrew A. Blair. In 1878 the firm became Booth, Garrett & Blair. This letter from Thomas H. Garrett concerns local parsonage water analysis.
Booth, Garrett, and Blair Analytical and Consulting Chemists. “Letter from Booth, Garrett, & Blair, Analytical and Consulting Chemists, to James Curtis Booth,” May 16, 1885. Papers of James Curtis Booth, Box 2, Folder 7. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/rv4gi63.
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