Simon Newcomb

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Biography

American astronomer

  • Country
  • United States
  • Nationality
  • American
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 12 March 1835
  • Place of birth
  • Nova Scotia
  • Death date
  • 1909-07-11
  • Death age
  • 74
  • Place of death
  • Washington· D.C.
  • Cause of death
  • Natural causes
  • Children
  • Josepha Newcomb Whitney
  • Education
  • Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences·Harvard University
  • Knows language
  • English language
  • Member of
  • National Academy of Sciences·Prussian Academy of Sciences·Russian Academy of Sciences·American Academy of Arts and Sciences·Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences·Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences·Royal Physiographic Society in Lund·Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities·Academy of Sciences of Turin·Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences·Accademia nazionale delle scienze

Movies

Books

Awards

Quotes

In 1858 I received the degree of D. S. from the Lawrence Scientific School, and thereafter remained on the rolls of the university as a resident graduate.

One hardly knows where, in the history of science, to look for an important movement that had its effective start in so pure and simple an accident as that which led to the building of the great Washington telescope, and went on to the discovery of the satellites of Mars.

My father followed, during most of his life, the precarious occupation of a country school teacher.

What we now call school training, the pursuit of fixed studies at stated hours under the constant guidance of a teacher, I could scarcely be said to have enjoyed.

The result was that, if it happened to clear off after a cloudy evening, I frequently arose from my bed at any hour of the night or morning and walked two miles to the observatory to make some observation included in the programme.

So far as the economic condition of society and the general mode of living and thinking were concerned, I might claim to have lived in the time of the American Revolution.

My father was the most rational and the most dispassionate of men. .

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