The
Society was to meet weekly to witness experiments and discuss what we
would now call scientific topics. The first Curator of Experiments was
Robert Hooke. It was Moray who first told the King, Charles II, of this
venture and secured his approval and encouragement. At first apparently
nameless, the name The Royal Society first appears in print in 1661, and
in the second Royal Charter of 1663 the Society is referred to as 'The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge'.
The Society found accommodation at Gresham College and rapidly began
to acquire a library (the first book was presented in 1661) and a
repository or museum of specimens of scientific interest. After the Fire
of 1666 it moved for some years to Arundel House, London home of the
Dukes of Norfolk. It was not until 1710, under the Presidency of Isaac
Newton, that the Society acquired its own home, two houses in Crane Court, off the Strand.
In 1662 the Society was permitted by Royal Charter to publish and the
first two books it produced were John Evelyn's Sylva and Micrographia
by Robert Hooke. In 1665, the first issue of Philosophical Transactions
was edited by Henry Oldenburg, the Society's Secretary. The Society took
over publication some years later and Philosophical Transactions is now
the oldest scientific journal in continuous publication.
From the beginning, Fellows of the Society had to be elected,
although the criteria for election were vague and the vast majority of
the Fellowship were not professional scientists. In 1731 a new rule
established that each candidate for election had to be proposed in
writing and this written certificate signed by those who supported his
candidature. These certificates survive and give a glimpse of both the
reasons why Fellows were elected and the contacts between Fellows.