The Glass Universe: A Unique Scientific Library

Dava Sobel

Smithsonian Institution (Washington, DC)

Thursday, December 14, 2017 5:00 pm EST

Lecture Hall at the S. Dillon Ripley Center
1100 Jefferson Dr, SW
Washington, DC 20560
 

Please join the Smithsonian Libraries for our 24th Annual Dibner Library Lecture.
 
In the 1870s, before women had the right to vote or a firm standing in the workplace, a lucky few found employment at the Harvard College Observatory. The first female assistants were born to the work—as the wives, daughters, and sisters of the resident astronomers.
 
Over time other ladies joined the group, thanks to the director’s farsighted hiring practices and the introduction of photography to astronomy. Instead of observing through the telescope by night, the women could analyze the stars in daylight on glass photographic plates. Harvard's female workforce grew accordingly, and its individual members won national and international acclaim for their discoveries.
 
The most famous among them—Williamina Fleming, Antonia Maury, Annie Jump Cannon, Henrietta Leavitt, and Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin—are the heroines of this story. The work was not only performed by women, but also funded by female philanthropists such as Anna Palmer Draper and Catherine Wolfe Bruce. The half-million glass plates captured through a century’s worth of observing still occupy their own building at what is today the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
 
This event is free. RSVP is requested. Please RSVP here or contact silrsvp@si.edu or 202.633.2241.