Simon Newcomb, America's First Great Astronomer
Abstract
In 1854, at age 19, Simon Newcomb stood outside the gates of the US Naval Observatory in Washington, DC, longing to go inside to see the telescopes and perhaps even meet one of the astronomers. But he had no idea how he might be received; he was not a US citizen and the only knowledge of astronomy that he could claim was what he had been able to glean on his own from a few aged books. He simply could not risk the humiliation of being turned away, he decided, and left without so much as making an inquiry. Seven years later, in the fall of 1861, Newcomb returned to the Naval Observatory to take up duties as a professor of mathematics. Canadian by birth, he still was not a US citizen, but his commission as a naval staff officer was signed by President Abraham Lincoln. And during the intervening years, Newcomb had spent countless hours studying math and astronomy on his own; worked as a "computer" at the Nautical Almanac Office in Cambridge, Massachusetts; graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University's Lawrence Scientific School; and made an arduous 4000-kilometer round trip from Cambridge to the wilds of central Canada as a member of an American scientific team organized to observe a total eclipse of the Sun.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Feb 01, 2009
- Accession Number
- ADA531990
Entities
People
- Merri S. Carter
- William E. Carter
Organizations
- United States Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station