- A compound microscope by Cuff, image from the Wellcome Trust
- The aquatic microscope made by Cuff for Abraham Trembley, on display at Musée d'histoire des sciences de la Ville de Genève
John Cuff (c. 1708 – c. 1772) was an important English scientific instrument maker, particularly of microscopes.[2][3]
He was apprenticed to the optical instrument maker James Mann.[4] Cuff eventually set up his own establishment as a "Spectacle and Microscope Maker, At the sign of the Reflecting Microscope and Spectacles opposite Serjeant's Inn"[5] "(1737-57) & Double Microscope, three Pairs of Golden Spectacles & Hadley's Quadrant opposite Salisbury Court (1757-8) both in Fleet St & Strand, all in London, England."[4] In 1743, he advertised that he made and sold "Wholesale and Retale, all Manner of curious Optical Instruments".[5]
Cuff failed to gain membership in the Royal Society,[6] but at a Society meeting in the winter of 1738–1739, he encountered Johann Nathanael Lieberkühn, a German physician who was promoting two microscopes of his own invention.[7] Cuff soon made improvements to the designs.[7] In 1745, the Swiss naturalist Abraham Trembley visited London and asked him to design a microscope that would make it easier to observe aquatic creatures as they were moving about.[7] Two years later, Cuff produced the "aquatic microscope", "invented by him for the Examination of Water Animals."[7]
The naturalist Henry Baker complained to him about the shortcomings of Baker's Culpeper-type microscope: "Pulling the body of the Instrument up and down was likewise subject to Jerks, which caused a Difficulty in fixing it exactly at the Focus: there was also no good Contrivance for viewing opake Objects".[6] Under Baker's direction, Cuff designed and produced an improved "Double Microscope" that quickly supplanted the Culpeper type and became much sought-after not only in England but all over Europe.[6][8] While superior to other microscopes of the time, optically it was no improvement,[9] and like them, it still "suffered from severe chromatic and spherical aberration."[10]
Unfortunately, Cuff was apparently not much of a businessman: despite Baker's support, he had to declare bankruptcy in 1750.[6] In 1757, Benjamin Martin opened a competing shop next door to Cuff's establishment on Fleet Street and drove him out of business the following year.[6][8]
According to the Royal Collection Trust, the German painter Johan Zoffany was commissioned by King George III, a purchaser of Cuff's microscopes, to depict him.[1] However, doubts have been expressed whether the painting titled John Cuff actually is a portrayal of him, and it has also been known as The Lapidaries or Two Old Men.[2]
Cuff's instruments are found in several major collections of scientific instruments, including: