Bennet had broad interests in natural philosophy and was associated with, though not a member of, the Lunar Society and the Derby Philosophical Society. He was particularly close to Erasmus Darwin. Darwin suggested that Bennet make electrical measurements as part of an investigation into electricity and weather. Bennet then worked assiduously to establish his expertise in electricity, achieving a reputation sufficient to take part in a meeting with Tiberius Cavallo, William Nicholson and Volta in London in 1782.[1]
New Experiments
Bennet published New Experiments on Electricity in 1789. In it, he described:[1]
A theory of electricity that anticipated Volta's contact theory. Bennet's work was a key element in leading Volta to the contact theory and the development of the voltaic pile.[1]
Bennet described experiments with an electrophorus and the generation of electricity by evaporation. Bennet extended his thinking into various theories about electricity and weather, with electrical explanations of the aurora borealis and meteors. He interpreted lightning as the release of electrical charge from clouds, and went on to hypothesise that rain was caused by lightning and also that earthquakes had an electrical origin.[1]
1789 edition of New Experiments
Illustrated figure from Bennet's New Experiments (plate I)
Illustrated figure from Bennet's New Experiments (plate II)
Politics
Among Bennet's other patrons were Joseph Banks, George Adams and the Wirksworth squires, the Gell family. The Gells, Kaye, Banks, Adams, and the Dukes of Devonshire and Bedford were all establishment figures whose hostility to the radicals of the Lunar and Derby Philosophical Societies intensified in the British reaction to the French Revolution. Bennet found it increasingly necessary to take sides, signing the Gells' petition against Jacobinism in 1795. Bennet's scientific work ends around this date, possibly from ill-health but also possibly from his inability to resolve the tensions among his erstwhile supporters.[1]
Personal life
He married Jane (died 1826) and the couple had six daughters and two sons. Bennet died of a "severe illness".[1]
Elliott, P. (1999). "Abraham Bennet F.R.S. (1749-1799): a provincial electrician in eighteenth-century England". Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 53 (1): 59–78. doi:10.1098/rsnr.1999.0063. S2CID144062032. Subscription required for full article. Abstract accessed 26 May 2014.
Shurlock, F. W. (1925). "Abraham Bennet FRS". Science Progress: 452–464.
Walker, W.C. (1936). "The detection and estimation of electric charges in the eighteenth century". Annals of Science. 1: 66–100. doi:10.1080/00033793600200071.