Thursday 30 April 2009

Monday April 30, 1894

The Altazimuth Pavilion today D3161_1 © NMM
Mr Crisp came down to discuss final plans for new Altazimuth building. Went to Admy about reorganisation of Staff & appointment of successor to Le Brun. Crown lens of 28in O.G. released from constraint (on E side) and reversed to photo-position.



William Christie, Astronomer Royal




Wednesday 29 April 2009

Sunday April 29, 1894

Mr E. Buller & Mr Gray called about Mr Buller’s method of using[?] azimuths for navigation & to see the new buildings &c.


William Christie, Astronomer Royal
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RH says..... I have not been able to find out who Mr Buller and Mr Gray were, or anything about the former's navigational method. However, this entry is a good illustration of the Royal Observatory's role as one of the Admiralty's scientific departments, testing equipment and commenting on navigational methods. The ROG had, of course, been founded "for perfecting the art of Navigation".

Tuesday 28 April 2009

Saturday April 28, 1894

Found that crown lens in visual posn was not quite down to the bearing at upper part of O.G. It was brought down to this (the centreing [sic] screws being released to a sufficient extent) & the dotted[?] bearing pieces brought into contact & screwed down. Washers were afterwards put to the screws to clamp them more firmly.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal

Friday April 27, 1894

Point House Club dinner to Prof. Turner. Found in the morning that bearing pieces of crown cell of 28in O.G. in reversed posn had slipped. Turned it to visual posn & brought it down on the fixed bearing pieces in that posn placing two thicknesses of cartridge paper between slotted bearing pieces & the glass. This slipping of the lens would account for anomalies in the photos.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal
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RH says..... Further fiddling with the various pieces of the 28-inch reversible lens - and a wonderful improvised solution!

Sunday 26 April 2009

Thursday April 26, 1894

The Crown lens of the 28.in was readjusted for tilt. It was found that the ring between the lenses had not been put back when the lens was removed.

Frank Dyson, Chief Assistant
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RH says..... Doh!

On the matter of the photoheliographs raised in the previous post, my colleague Graham Dolan informs me that one of the Dallmeyer photoheliographs was mounted on the 28-inch telescope on 12 October 1883 and removed on 24 April 1894, when it was placed on the south wing of the New Physical Observatory with a new equatorial mounting. This would suggest that when Christie ordered that the photoheliograph be placed on the south wing
on 16 March, "at once" meant more than a month.


Dallmeyer Photoheliograph (Repro ID: B1636-17A © National Maritime Museum)
Part of the confusion about photoheliographs at Greenwich is because there were five identical instruments made for the 1874 transit of Venus expeditions. By 1894 three were floating about Greenwich, often with parts interchanged, and two were on loan - one to the Cape Observatory and one to the Science and Art Department. Most of one of these instruments is today mounted at the ROG in the Altazimuth Pavilion.

Friday 24 April 2009

Tuesday April 24, 1894

Photoheliograph taken off the 28 inch. – Instrument rebalanced.

Frank Dyson, Chief Assistant


RH says..... There were several photoheliograph telescopes at Greenwich - used for photographying the sun, as the name suggests - but I'm not sure which one this was and how long it had been attached to the 28-inch telescope. An earlier entry shows that one Dallmeyer Photoheliograph was mounted on the roof of the New Physical Observatory, while the Thompson 9-inch photoheliograph was presumably still attached to the Merz 12.8 telescope in the Lassell Dome.

Thursday 23 April 2009

Monday April 23, 1894

Photographs taken by Mr Maunder with the 28in Equatorial on Apr 21 shewing that an eccentricity of the image is produced by a tilt[?] of the crown-lens: it was readjusted by Mr Niblett

Frank Dyson, Chief Assistant



RH says..... Maunder is best known for his solar photography, but this is a reminder that, as head of the Photographic and Spectroscopic Department, his responsibilities extended elsewhere. G.E. Niblett, the Observatory's mechanic, was evidently an indispensible member of staff. Elsewhere Maunder wrote that Niblett's "skill is in constant requisition in devising, repairing, or keeping in order the many mechanical arrangements upon which so much depends". He was also in charge of the Observatory's electric lighting. The image shows his workshop in the New Physical Observatory, although this building was still incomplete as of 1894.
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The Workshop in the basement of the New Physical Observatory, from E. Walter Maunder's 'The Royal Observatory, Greenwich: a Glance at its History and Work' (1900)

Tuesday 21 April 2009

Saturday April 21, 1894

Went to Malvern in afternoon returning Thursday evening April 26.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal


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RH says..... Christie seems to be off on his holidays again, although, since Malvern was known for its water cure, this trip was very likely for reasons of health. Taking the waters at Malvern was popularised in the early 19th century by two doctors, James Wilson and James Manby Gully, and undertaken by many Victorians, including Darwin and Dickens. This image, from the Worcester County Record Office, shows St Anne's Well, Malvern's most popular spring, in about 1900.

Monday 20 April 2009

Friday April 20, 1894

Savile Comee meeting at 5.45

William Christie, Astronomer Royal



Mr Plummer here to determine longitude of Bidston

Frank Dyson, Chief Assistant

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RH says..... Christie continues with the social side of the Astronomer Royal's post, at the Savile Club, while Dyson was back working with William Plummer of Liverpool Observatory, as he had at the beginning of the year. Christie's report to the Board of Visitors in June 1894 recorded that when Plummer had been at the ROG from the 1st to the 9th of January, “cloudy weather prevented observations" but that when he "again visited Greenwich from April 20 to May 2" he "secured observations on six nights with the small transit in the Transit Pavilion for comparison with the transit-circle observer".

Sunday 19 April 2009

Thursday April 19, 1894

Dined at Fishmongers Company to meet Archbishop of Canterbury. Returned thanks for learned Societies.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal


RH says..... The Fishmonger's Company is one of the oldest of London's City Guilds, with its Hall near London Bridge. Christie was evidently there in formal capacity - a representative of science and learning - but also for social reasons. The Archbishop of Canterbury at this date was Edward White Benson, who was known as a public school headmaster before his church career took off.

Tuesday 14 April 2009

Christie on the Census

Flamsteed House, Royal Observatory, Greenwich in 1908 © NMM.RH says..... While there is a break in the journals, I have been trying to get an idea of Christie's domestic life at the ROG. He married Violette Mary, daughter of the iron manufacturer and MP Sir Alfred Hickman, shortly after becoming Astronomer Royal in 1881, but she died in 1888. They had two sons: the younger one died in childhood but the elder, who became a barrister, lived with his father. However, he is not included on the census records for 1891 or 1901, perhaps being away at school.

The 1881 census shows Christie - still Chief Assistant and still a bachelor - living at 12 Royal Parade in Blackheath with his siblings Faraday H. Christie (29) and Mary M.E. Christie (27), both described as artists and painters. By 1891 Christie would have been well established in Flamsteed House, but must have been away on the day the census was taken as the only residents listed are Annie Dean (24), housemaid, and Mary Ann Copin (27), cook. He was at home in 1901, this time with two different female servants - Eliza Levey (31), cook, and Jessie Gillingham (25), housemaid - but still no son. It was a very different home life to that of his predecessor George Airy, who in the 1851 census is listed as living in Flamsteed House with 12 other individuals - his wife, six of his children, four staff and his sister. A tight squeeze!

Monday 13 April 2009

Friday April 13, 1894

R.A.S. Council

William Christie, Astronomer Royal
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RH says..... A report of this RAS Council Meeting can be found online here. It's from The Observatory, a journal founded by Christie back in 1877. Christie does not seem to have taken an active part in this meeting and, in fact, the ROG's input seems to have been limited to the submission of a paper on 'Observations of Denning's Comet' and the election of 'F.W. Dyson, M.A., Fellow of Trin. Coll., Camb., Royal Observatory, Greenwich, S.E.'.

Friday 10 April 2009

Tuesday April 10 and Wednesday April 11, 1894

L., A.C., & myself searched for Comet Holmes. Telegrams came from Kiel & Edinburgh saying that they had searched in vain.


Frank Dyson, Chief Assistant

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RH says..... Comet Holmes had been discovered in 1892 by Edwin Holmes, a British amateur astronomer. It was confirmed by, among others, E.W. Maunder at the ROG. The telegrams came from Kiel Observatory and the Royal Observatory in Edinburgh: the mention of the latter is timely for me as I have just been at a conference in the ROE focusing on the magnificent Crawford Library. The current building on Blackford Hill was not completed by 1894, and the ROE would still have been based on Carlton Hill in the centre of the city.


The Edinburgh Observatory on Carlton Hill in about 1818, four years before George IV visited and designated it a Royal Observatory.

Monday 6 April 2009

Friday April 6, 1894

The 30 inch photographic reflector and 26 inch photographic refractor mounted together at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. © Science Museum/Science and SocietyMr Sewith from Controller’s Departt inspected electric light installation. Mr E.E. Putland from Messrs Johnson & Phillips was present.Received model of proposed 26in Photo-telescope from Sir H. Grubb.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal




RH says..... The Controller's Department was part of the Admiralty, which administered the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. They were evidently required to check all work done on the Admiralty's budget. The firm of Johnson & Phillips, as you will see if you click on the link above, still exists, although now based in Pakistan. The firm supplied and laid cable for Trans-Atlanic communication, as you will see from this site - which also includes biographies of the firm's founding partners.
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The accompanying image shows the completed 26-inch telescope, alongside the 30-inch that Sir Henry Thompson also donated. They were mounted together in the dome of the New Physical Observatory in 1897.

Sunday 5 April 2009

Thursday April 5, 1894

Map of MayfairWent to Admy but after waiting some time could not see Mr Awdry. Savile Club election.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal

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RH says..... Two rather contradictory indications of the Astronomer Royal's status: the Assistant Secretary to the Admiralty was too busy to see him, but he was being invited again into the heart of fashionable Mayfair. His need to speak to Awdry was undoubtedly related to his plans for staff reorganisation or building works.

Friday 3 April 2009

Tuesday April 3, 1894

Mr Cass brought down a letter from Account. Gen. instructing me to draw the cheques. I replied next morning to Secy of Admy pointing out that this was not within my duties.The Crown lens of 28in O.G. (Photogr. Posn) was brought nearer to flint lens by taking off the separating ring 0.4in thick on face of flint cell.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal
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RH says..... The financial issues highlighted in the previous post were clearly not solved. To confuse the issue, the Astronomer Royal was a Crown appointment, meaning that although the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, was answerable to the Admiralty, Christie, in theory, was not. The terms of his Royal Warrant, unsurprisingly, said nothing about drawing cheques.

Thursday 2 April 2009

Monday April 2, 1894

Mr C. Cass from the Admiralty (Account. Gen’s Departt) came to take over temporarily Mr Le Brun’s duties. Mr Dyson (to whom Mr Criswick had handed over the cash balance placed in his hands by Mr Le Brun on March 20) transferred the cash balance (which I counted over) to Mr Cass.

William Christie, Astronomer Royal
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Mr Cass took charge of the accounts.
Frank Dyson, Chief Assistant
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RH says..... Now we know why Criswick forgot to draw the cheques to pay the computers: this was not normally part of his job. Since Le Brun left, there had been no clerk at the Observatory - although before his arrival in 1893 there had been an even longer hiatus. Clerks and financial responsibility had been a bit of a sore point since 1892, when W.J. Wickison, a clerical assistant at the ROG since 1887, stole £188 and was dismissed. The Admiralty's correspondence at the National Archives records that "there is no doubt that Mr Christie’s superintendence was lax in the extreme", but also that, perhaps rightly, "his scientific duties required his more particular attention" and that he should therefore be provided with proper support in the form of an ex-Admiralty "Retired Assistant Paymaster". As a stop-gap, Le Brun and Cass were loaned out to the ROG while the Admiralty thrashed out "the broader question [of] whether the Observatory and its cost might not very fairly be transferred to the Treasury and to the Civil Service Estimates".