From the Collection: Groundbreaking Soil

May 5, 2023

As a museum worker, it’s always nice to have things in your collection that are a little unconventional.  Books and artworks are great, but there’s something fun about having a few taxidermied animals and Victorian hair catchers.  Still, even I’m…

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From the Library: “Radial Velocity of the Andromeda Nebula”

May 5, 2023

If you were to list the great astronomers of the last century, just based on your own memory, it’s a safe bet that Vesto Slipher would not be a name you come up with. Vesto Melvin Slipher, “V.M.” to most…

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Unprofessional Science

May 5, 2023

In a previous post, I mention the “professionalization of science,” a cultural shift in which Dudley had a part to play. It immediately raises the question, what exactly does “un-professional science” look like? What came before? We actually have a…

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Harry Raymond (1876-1961)

May 5, 2023

A great “thank you” to Dorothy Matsui of Redmond, WA, for finding us and sending us material from her grandfather, Harry Raymond.  Raymond was an astronomer for Dudley from 1905 until 1939, meaning his career spans the creation of the…

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From the Collection: Polsey Clock

May 5, 2023

This piece is a bit of a mystery. It comes down to us simply as the “Polsey Clock.” Our other clocks come from famous makers, but Polsey is virtually unknown. It’s also very plain, somewhat battered, and missing a few…

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Odds and Ends: Elizabeth Cady Stanton

May 5, 2023

Throughout its history, Dudley Observatory has had a weird sort of half-fame. Yes, it’s a modest observatory in smAlbany, but there have been a lot of eyes upon it. Particularly during the early phase, with the initial promise of an observatory…

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From the Collection: Meteorites

May 5, 2023

Dudley has a nice collection of meteorites.  Modest is number, but with a good range.  Granted, the bulk of them are micrometeorites embedded in some kind of material, but we’ve still got a fair number that are actually visible to…

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Ormsby MacKnight Mitchel

May 5, 2023

Founding of the Cincinnati Observatory (quoted below) The Cincinnati Observatory was founded by Ormsby MacKnight Mitchel, who, as a Professor at Cincinnati College in 1842, generated public enthusiasm for astronomy through a series of public lectures. At that time, there were…

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From the Collection: Riefler Clock

May 4, 2023

While a telescope may be the most valuable piece of equipment found in an observatory, a close second is the clock.  Through most of Dudley’s history, the type of astronomical work it was doing required precise, consistent timekeeping.  Not surprisingly,…

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Dr. James Armsby

May 4, 2023

In a previous post, I mentioned that Dudley had benefited from two institution builders, the first being Ormsby Macknight Mitchel.  Mitchel was an energetic founder of observatories and lecturer on the topic of astronomy, and his enthusiasm is likely what started…

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