12 May 1871 A.D. Westminster Abbey, London: Sir John Herschel was laid to rest in Westminster Abbey alongside Sir Isaac Newton, a fellow scientist and fellow believer
12 May 1871 A.D. Westminster Abbey, London: Sir John Herschel was laid to rest in Westminster
Abbey alongside Sir Isaac Newton, a fellow scientist and fellow believer
Graves, Dan. “John
Herschel Laid to Rest Beside Newton.” Christianity.com.
Jun 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1801-1900/john-herschel-laid-to-rest-beside-newton-11630557.html. Accessed 7 May 2015.
John Herschel was bullied at school so his parents had him tutored at
home. Born the only child of the astronomer William Herschel, who discovered
Uranus and cataloged the objects of the northern sky, John grew up knowing the
most famous scientists of his day. The young man shot past his rivals in
mathematics and science. At Cambridge, he placed first in mathematics exams. At
twenty-one, he became the youngest person admitted to the Royal Society.
Traveling the European continent, he met other great scientists. He was
so impressed with French mathematics that he translated three volumes worth of
papers into English. Abandoning Newton's clumsy calculus, he adopted the
clearer system created by Newton's German rival, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and
convinced the English to do so, too. These were small potatoes for the man who
became world-famous as an astronomer.
William Herschel had urged his son to enter the ministry, which he saw
as a safe civil service career. John balked. He tried his hand at law instead.
When his father died, John used his inheritance to strike out on his own. He
sailed to South Africa with his wife, Margaret Stewart to scan the southern
skies as William had scanned the northern. The pair lived there for several
years. The British government offered John a salary, but he refused it,
preferring to stick to his own researches.
With techniques learned from his father, John ground lenses and built
some of the largest telescopes in the world. Through these scopes, he compared
stellar magnitudes (true brightness) by contrasting them with the moon's image
which he reduced to a pinprick for contrast. John was fascinated with double stars.
He logged over 1,200 new examples. The importance of double stars (binaries) is
that they rotate around each other. By observing their rotations, he could
calculate their masses and prove that Newton's laws applied to distant stellar
bodies.
John also cataloged many nebulae (gas clouds and galaxies) and showed
that most consisted of faint stars. He made calculations of the density of the
Milky Way and tried to determine its structure. He tied together all of the
day's astronomical knowledge in a popular textbook. Space does not permit us to
list all of his contributions to science and technology. For example, when he
heard the first report on daguerreotype photography, he was able to develop a
similar process within a week and to create a completely new photographic
processes afterwards.
John was happy with his wife, Margaret Stewart. She was the daughter of
a Scottish Presbyterian. Under Margaret's influence, John underwent a genuine
conversion experience. Men like John Herschel give the lie to the notion that
great scientists cannot be genuine Christians. His faith fired him with zeal for educational
reforms in South Africa--zeal that spurred the development of public education
in that nation. One reason that John wanted public education was "to fit
[students] for a higher state of existence, by teaching them those [things]
which connect them with their Maker and Redeemer." He said of the Bible,
"All human discoveries seem to be made only for the purpose of confirming
more and more strongly the truths that come from on high and are contained in
the sacred writings."
Upon his death, on this day, May 12, 1871, Sir John Herschel was laid to
rest in Westminster Abbey alongside Sir Isaac Newton.
Bibliography:
Asimov, Isaac. Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and
Technology. New York: Doubleday, 1964.
Ball, Robert Stawall. Great Astronomers. London: Isbister and
Co., 1901.
Buttmann, Gunther. The Shadow of the Telescope; a biography of John
Herschel. Translated by B. E. J. Pagel. Edited and with an introd.
by David S. Evans. New York: Scribner, 1970.
Graves, Daniel. Scientists of Faith. Grand Rapids, Mi.:
Kregel, 1996. "Herschel, John Fredrick." Dictionary of National
Biography. Edited by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee. London: Oxford
University Press, 1921-1996.
"Herschel, John Fredrick William. " Dictionary
of Scientific Biography. Editor Charles Coulston Gillispie. New
York: Scribner's, 1970.
Herschel, John Frederick William. "Outlines of Astronomy" in Treasury
of World Science. Editor Dagobert. D. Runes. New York: Philosophical
Library, 1962, pp449-458.
Kunitz, Stanley J and Howard Haycraft. British Authors of the
19th Century. New York: W. W. Wilson, 1936.
McPherson, Hector. Makers of Astronomy. London: Oxford
University, 1933.
New Dictionary of Thoughts. Compiled by tyron Edwards, revised and enlarged by C.N. Catrevas and
Jonathan Edwards. New York: Standard Book Company, 1949.
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