Almost 111 years ago, on November 18, 1887, classes were suspended at this fledgling university so students and faculty could attend the dedication of the Charles Demarest Holden Observatory. The main speaker on that occasion was Dr. Simon Newcomb of Washington DC; his talk was entitled "The Place of Astronomy in the Sciences." Also, undergraduate Henry Sibley, class of 1889, wrote a poem to celebrate the dedication:
| This was a major event, worthy of one's best poetic efforts. Holden
Observatory was the second building on the new college campus and the first
building in a wave of new buildings. Two years later (1889) Crouse College
was built, followed by the University Library (now Tolley Administration
Building). In 1890 the campus consisted of the Hall of Languages, Holden
Observatory, Crouse College and the Library (Tolley). All of the original
buildings, with the exception of the Hall of Languages, were designed by
Archimedes Russell, one of central New York's most successful architects.
Mr. Russell also designed 2 of Cornell University's first four buildings,
the County Court House on Montgomery Street in Syracuse plus others notable
buildings in the city.
The observatory was a gift of Erastus Holden a Syracuse Coal Dealer
and first Vice President of the Syracuse University Board of Trustees,
in memory of his son Charles. Charles Holden was a freshman in the class
of 1877, co-founder of the SU crew team, and star basketball player, who
died of a heart ailment before he graduated.
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After World War II use of the telescope seems to have fallen off. From 1947 through the 1950's the basement of Holden was used for storage of radioactive isotopes - University scientists were experimenting with radioactivity in a variety of ways, including the preservation of food by killing bacteria.
Throughout its life this gem of a building has been threatened by progress.
I can do no better than close with the lyric poem, slightly revised, presented 111 years ago by Henry Sibley:
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Astronomy is about time, and about eternity. The rhythm
of the days and months, the cycle of the seasons, all have their origins
in the Earth's relation to the larger Universe. But no one can look at
a starry night sky without also pondering questions far beyond those of
the rhythms of our daily life on Earth.
This observatory was built as an act of memory, and an act of hope. Rededication is also about memory and about hope. We are here to remember the efforts of our predecessors, to commemorate their hopes for the future, and to act on our own hopes for our future. Last week I went to Bird Library to find some books that would help me to picture what thoughts about astronomy would have motivated Chancellor Sims to seek an observatory as only the second building at Syracuse University, what thoughts might have motivated the Holden family to choose an observatory as a memorial for their son Charles, and what might have motivated America's leading astronomer, Simon Newcomb, to make the long journey from Baltimore to speak at its dedication. |
Two things about the book struck me right away. The first was the complete absence of photographs of the sky. This makes sense - it was only in 1880 that the very first photograph was made through a telescope. The second odd thing was how little was said (because how little was known) about the wider Universe beyond the Solar System. Mostly, the stars served as a backdrop for the story of our little neighborhood.
Reading more carefully revealed a more subtle difference - a different attitude toward time than one finds in today's textbooks. Part of that comes from the much greater emphasis placed on the many rhythms of the sky: the day, the month, the year, and the motions of the planets, asteroids, and comets.
That emphasis on time was also exemplified by Holden Observatory itself. In addition to the Alvan Clark telescope whose refurbishment we celebrate with today's ceremony, there were other instruments as well. The east wing of the building held a transit, used for observing the time of passage of a star across the meridian (the North-South line through the sky.) The roof used to slide back to give the transit a view of the whole meridian, and you can still see the narrow vertical windows in the north and south walls that formed part of that slit. The transit itself was thought to be lost, but was discovered just two days ago by Lou Buda in a storeroom in the basement of the Physics Building.
A transit would be useless without a good clock to mark the times; we read in the records of the observatory dedication that it was equipped with two good clocks, and that a third was soon added.
When you visit the telescope upstairs in the dome, you will see another hallowed form of time-keeping. The drive that keeps the telescope pointed at a star as the Earth turns is an all-mechanical affair, driven by a weight on a cable. Its speed is regulated by a flyball governor, a device invented by James Watt a century earlier. Its peaceful whirring is the closest you will hear to the sound of the Earth spinning on its axis.
An old-fashioned sense of cosmic time scales is also present in the 1887 book of Newcomb and Holden. The Sun's source of energy was not understood at all; the book reckons that the Sun only has been able to shine at its present rate for a mere 18,000,000 years. I'm proud to say that an S.U. student wrote neatly in the margin, "How does this agree with Geology?" Indeed it didn't, and the reconciliation of astronomy with geology was a part of the great scientific discoveries of the early part of the 20' century. Of course, Newcomb and Holden hadn't an inkling of the expansion of the Universe that has led to our present notions of a beginning of the entire Universe about 15 billion years ago.
A modem eye will note with surprise the authors' comfort with the glacial pace of change in our view of the Universe. The one great discovery they report about the Universe of stars and beyond was made by William Herschel in 1785, a full century previously. Newcomb wrote elsewhere, "We may fairly anticipate that each successive generation of astronomers, through coming centuries, will obtain a little more light on the subject." What a contrast to our present-day expectations of a new scientific revolution every decade.
Yet, in spite of this apparent complacency, everyone present near this
spot in 1887 was engaged in an act of hope for the future. The founding
of the Holden Observatory, like E.S. Holden's founding of the Lick Observatory,
was part of a great movement, whose object was to build our understanding
of the world. That their work has bome such rich fruit is the ultimate
cause for us to honor their memory today, and to pledge to carry on in
their spirit.
