1. National Museum of Science & Industry Review;N Cossons,1993
2. John Symons, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine: A Short History (London: The Wellcome Trust, 1993), pp. 46, 48–50.
3. See, for example, Richard J. Harris, ‘Empathy and History Teaching: An Unresolved Dilemma?’, Prospero 9 (2003), pp. 31–8. It is debatable whether older dioramas in the agriculture gallery, for example, were also explicitly conceived as social historical. For an account of these, see Jane Insley, ‘Little Landscapes: Agriculture, Dioramas and the Science Museum’, Icon: Journal of the International Committee for the History of Technology 12 (2006), pp. 5–14.
4. Ghislaine Skinner, ‘Sir Henry Wellcome’s Museum for the Science of History’, Medical History 30 (1986), pp. 383–418.
5. For example, Christopher Lawrence, ‘Physiological Apparatus in the Wellcome Museum 1. The Marey Sphygmograph’, Medical History 22 (1978), pp. 196–200.