Before the AAVSO
Amateur observers of variable stars in the United States from 1875 to 1910.
The full text of this article appears in the Journal of the AAVSO,
Vol. 27, No. 2, 1999.
For 35 years before the formation of the AAVSO, independent amateur variable
star astronomers in the United States were making significant contributions
to the field. The most notable of these skilled and dedicated individuals
were: Seth C. Chandler, Jr. of Cambridge, Mass.; Edwin F. Sawyer of
Brighton, Mass.; and Paul S. Yendell of Dorchester, Mass. Other
accomplished amateur variable star astronomers at this time were John H.
Eadie of Bayonne, New Jersey; Henry M. Parkhurst and Arthur C. Perry of
Brooklyn, N.Y.; John A. Parkhurst of Marengo, Illinois; and William E.
Sperra of Randolph, Ohio.
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| Seth C. Chandler, Jr. |
Chandler was a skilled mathematician and a tireless computer. He is best
known today for his three early variable star catalogues, and for his
determination of the Earth's variation of latitude. In 1878 he published a
series of articles on how to observe variable stars. Between 1881 and 1885,
Chandler worked as a volunteer observer and researcher at the Harvard
College Observatory. Despite his great skill and expertise in astronomy, he
preferred to remain an independent amateur, while he earned his living as an
actuary for an insurance company. He won international acclaim for his
accomplishments in astronomy.
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| Edwin F. Sawyer |
Sawyer--a bank clerk all his life--was known as an accurate and hard-working
observer. He began making variable star observations in 1865. Sawyer was
"discovered" in 1876 by Chandler, who encouraged him to do more observing.
In 1892 Sawyer published a catalogue of magnitudes of 3,415 southern stars.
Yendell--who worked as a store clerk, soldier, bank clerk, and
draftsman--began variable star observing in 1887, also at the urging of
Chandler. Between 1888 and 1916 Yendell contributed over 125 variable star
notes to the Astronomical Journal. Between 1894 and 1906 he wrote over 140
pages of articles about variable stars and observing methods in Popular
Astronomy.
Eadie contributed several hundred variable star observations to the Harvard
College Observatory (HCO) between 1880 and 1911. Of these early observers,
Yendell and J. A. Parkhurst (who went on to become a professional
astronomer) later contributed observations to the AAVSO once it was formed.
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| Benjamin A. Gould |
The discoveries and comments of Chandler, Sawyer, Yendell, and other
accomplished amateurs appeared in the U.S. mainly in The Astronomical
Journal, edited by Benjamin A. Gould, and published in Boston. Gould (born
in 1824) was the first American astronomer to receive part of his training
in Germany. He became a pupil and friend of Encke, Gauss, Struve,
Argelander, and others. Of particular importance for Gould's work was his
acquaintance with, and the influence of, the German astronomer Argelander.
It was Argelander--through publication of his star catalogue, the
Unranometria Nova in 1843--who encouraged worldwide interest in the study of
variable stars. Gould's own important work, the Uranometria Argentina
(1879)--a catalogue of southern stars--was an extension of Argelander's
catalogue.
From Germany and from Argentina, Gould brought his interest in variable
stars to the United States where he supported the variable star work of the
early amateur observers. The first amateur astronomer in the United States
to answer Gould's 1856 call for variable star observations was Stillman
Masterman, of Maine. Masterman's observations appeared in Gould's journal
between 1857 and 1861. A promising amateur career was cut short when
Masterman died at the age of 32.
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| Edward C. Pickering |
In 1882, Harvard College Observatory (HCO) Director Edward C. Pickering
published "A Plan for Securing Observations of the Variable Stars" in which
he proposed enlisting the help of volunteer observers. He did not, however,
actually propose the establishment of a formal organization of amateur
observers.
Throughout the 1880s and 1890s, Pickering, Yendell, J. A. Parkhurst, and
others, made appeals to amateur astronomers, similar to Gould's and
Pickering's, to take up variable star observing, and either publish their
observations or contribute them to HCO or other observatories for further
study. Appeals for observers and "how to observe variable stars" articles
began to appear in the prominent astronomy journals of the day: The Sidereal
Messenger, Astronomy and Astro-Physics, and Popular Astronomy.
With the emergence of new observing techniques such as photography and
spectroscopy, thousands of new or suspected variable stars were being
discovered during the 1890s. This proliferation of discoveries overwhelmed
the resources of observatories such as HCO, and underscored the need for
many more amateur astronomers to become involved in observing variable
stars. Chandler, Pickering, and others involved in variable star work were
aware of the rapidly expanding field. They agreed that more observations of
these stars would be vital towards understanding them, and they agreed that
variable star work could be done by amateurs with modest means.
The key to involving many more amateurs in variable star observing--while
ensuring the quality and consistency of measurements--would be to provide
standard sequences of comparison stars that have assigned magnitudes. For
the novice observer, this would make variable star measurement a much
simpler activity than having to follow the cumbersome step method, and it
would do away with the laborious reductions needed to derive a light curve.
In 1891, Pickering published sequences of comparison stars, and by 1906 he
was making charts available with comparison stars marked on them, and
instructing observers in the simpler observing technique of comparing the
variable star to comparison stars of known, standard magnitudes.
Between 1906 and 1910, Pickering reported, about 6000 observations of long
period variable stars were "kindly communicated by other astronomers." Among
them were: Professor Anne S. Young of Mt. Holyoke College; Frank E. Seagrave
of Providence, R.I.; John H. Eadie of Bayonne, N.J., and several
astronomers, assistants, and students at Vassar College, including Ida
Whiteside, Helen Swartz, Psyche R. Sutton, Professor Mary Whitney, Professor
Caroline Furness, and others. The AAVSO archives show that Ida Whiteside,
Helen Swartz, and Professor Mary Whitney, contributed over 3,200 variable
star observations to Pickering from 1902 through October 1911. Ida Whiteside
alone sent reports of at least 2,507 observations of variable stars to HCO
between 1904 and 1909. Helen Swartz, of Norwalk, Connecticut (who became a
high school mathematics teacher there), was later both a Charter Member and
a Life Member of the AAVSO, and Caroline Furness was a Charter Member. helen
Swartz was also one of the first Council members of the AAVSO when it was
formally organized in 1917.
By 1910, the contributions of new amateur variable star observers were
eclipsing those of the earlier expert amateurs by sheer number of
observations made. Quantity as well as quantity was important in order to
obtain light curves of these stars that were as complete as possible.
Circumstances had now come together to make the time right for the
organization of amateur variable star observers:
- professional astronomers had an urgent need for
more observations of variable stars;
- the prospect of making a real contribution towards scientific
research fired the enthusiasm of amateur astronomers;
- and the availability of standard sequences of
comparison stars and charts made it possible for
even the novice observer to take up this work.
It was amateur astronomer William Tyler Olcott who took up the challenge and
offered his services to Pickering help collect observations, and distribute
charts and give advice to other interested amateurs. In the November, 1911
issue of Popular Astronomy, Olcott offered to correspond with anyone
interested in organizing to observe variable stars.
Now with an organization envisioned, a handful of dedicated volunteer
observers, and a worthwhile scientific purpose defined, the AAVSO was about
to achieve "first light."