Register      Login
Historical Records of Australian Science Historical Records of Australian Science Society
The history of science, pure and applied, in Australia, New Zealand and the southwest Pacific
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Mary Proctor and the Cawthron observatory project: a lost history of the Mount Stromlo Observatory

Martin Bush A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, the University of Melbourne. Email: martin.bush@unimelb.edu.au

Historical Records of Australian Science 33(1) 12-22 https://doi.org/10.1071/HR21007
Published: 11 January 2022

Journal Compilation © Australian Academy of Science 2022 Open Access CC BY-NC-ND

Abstract

Between 1912 and 1914, the Anglo-American popularizer of astronomy, Mary Proctor, undertook a tour of Australia and New Zealand in order to promote a solar observatory project that would ultimately be realized as the Mount Stromlo Observatory in Australia. Proctor came at the request of Walter Geoffrey Duffield, who would go on to be the first Director of the Mt Stromlo Observatory and who saw the need to raise funds and public support for the project. Proctor’s tour was high-profile and nearly saw the realization of a solar observatory as part of the Cawthron Institute at Nelson, New Zealand. Despite this, Proctor’s tour is absent from histories of Mount Stromlo and, until recently, had also been overlooked in New Zealand. I argue that this historical lacuna speaks to a number of historiographical biases: for success over failure; against the role of public activities in scientific work; and downplaying the contribution of women. Mary Proctor was a significant transitional figure in the history of early twentieth-century science-communication who should be more widely recognised.


References

Allen, C. W. (1981) ‘Duffield, Walter Geoffrey (1879–1929)’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/duffield-walter-geoffrey-6027/text10301.

Anonymous (1908) A solar observatory, Western Mail (Perth), 18 September 1908, 32.

Anonymous (1912a) An idle woman’s diary, National Advocate (Bathurst) 30 August 1912, 1.

Anonymous (1912b) Miss Proctor’s lecture, Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney), 20 November 1912, 22.

Anonymous (1912c) National Council of Women, Brisbane Courier (Brisbane), 9 November 1912, 7.

Anonymous (1912d) Other worlds than ours, Argus (Melbourne), 6 August 1912, 10.

Anonymous (1912e) Other worlds than ours, Queensland Times (Ipswich) 15 November 1912, 6.

Anonymous (1912f) Personalia, New Zealand Times (Wellington), 16 December 1912, 7.

Anonymous (1912g) Political ‘at home’: overseas visitors entertained, Sun (Sydney), 11 July 1912, 12.

Anonymous (1912h) Popular astronomy: Miss Proctor’s visit: a civic reception, Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney), 20 August 1912, 8.

Anonymous (1912i) Reception to Miss Proctor: the solar observatory, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 21 August 1912, 11.

Anonymous (1912j) Solar observatory: Sir W. MacGregor’s opinion, Mail (Brisbane), 14 November 1912, 5.

Anonymous (1912k) The realm of woman: the social world, Mail (Adelaide), 12 October 1912, 2.

Anonymous (1912l) The social circle: record of the week, Herald (Melbourne), 30 July 1912, 3.

Anonymous (1913) Observing the Sun, New Zealand Times (Wellington), 10 April 1913, 9.

Anonymous (1914a) Distinguished astronomer: visit to Melbourne, Argus (Melbourne), 19 February 1914, 8.

Anonymous, (1914b) Meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society, Observatory, 37, 187–200.

Anonymous (1914c) New observatory: dominion’s enterprise: Australian apathy regretted, Sun (Sydney), 10 February 1914, 4.

Anonymous (1915) New Zealand Gazette, 14 October 1915, 3489.

Anonymous (1920) The Cawthron Lectures, vol. 1, Nelson.

Anonymous (1925) The Cawthron Lectures, vol. 2, Nelson.

Anonymous (1933) The Achievements of the Cawthron Institute by T. H. Easterfield, Nelson.

Anonymous (1945) Silver Jubilee of the Cawthron Institute, 1920–1945, Nelson.

Anonymous, (1958) Report of the Council on the work of the session 1957 July 1 to 1958 June 30 to be presented to the members of the Association at the Annual General Meeting, 1958 October 29, Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 68, 283–298.

Bhatal, R., Sutherland, R., and Butcher, H. (2013) Mt Stromlo Observatory: from Bush Observatory to the Nobel Prize, Melbourne.

Bigg, C. (2010) ‘Staging the heavens: astrophysics and popular astronomy in the late nineteenth century’, in The Heavens on Earth: Observatories and Astronomy in Nineteenth Century Science and Culture, eds Bigg, C. and Aubin, D., Durham, NC, 304–24.

Bush, M. (2017) The Proctor-Parkes incident: politics, Protestants and popular astronomy in Australia in 1880, Historical Records of Australian Science, 28, 26–36.
The Proctor-Parkes incident: politics, Protestants and popular astronomy in Australia in 1880Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Bush, M. (2021) Mary Proctor: an astronomical popularizer in the shadows, Notes and Records of the Royal Society10.1098/RSNR.2021.0042.

Daugherty, T. (2019) Dante and the Early Astronomer, New Haven, CT.

DeVorkin, D. (2018) George Ellery Hale’s internationalism, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union: International Astronomical Union, 13, 153–160.
George Ellery Hale’s internationalismCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Frame, T., Faulkner, D., and Bessell, M. (2003) Stromlo: an Australian Observatory, Crow’s Nest, NSW.

Golinski, J. (1998) Making Natural Knowledge: Constructivism and the History of Science, Chicago.

Haynes, R., Haynes, R., Malin, D., and McGee, R. (1996) Explorers of the Southern Sky, Cambridge.

Lightman, B. (2009) Victorian Popularizers of Science: Designing Nature for New Audiences, Chicago.

Lojkine, A. J. (1957) Mount Stromlo Observatory: a History and Description of the Observatory; Its Work, and Its Equipment, Canberra.

MacKay, D. (2011) An Appetite for Wonder. Nelson, New Zealand.

Nall, J. (2019) News from Mars: Mass Media and the Forging of a New Astronomy, 1860–1910, Pittsburgh.

Orr, M. A. (1915) Stars of the Southern Skies, London.

Proctor, M. (1906) A famous Astronomer in his workshop, New York Times (New York City), 9 September 1906, 23.

Proctor, M. (1912) Solar observatory, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 27 November 1912, 15.

Proctor, M. (1914) Story of the Cawthron Solar Observatory project, Popular Astronomy, 22, 433–435.

Rigg, T. (1949) Cawthron Institute, Tuatara, 2, 2–8.

Shteir, A., and Gates, B. (1997) ‘Introduction: charting the tradition’ in Natural Eloquence: Women Reinscribe Science, eds. A. Shteir and B. Gates, Madison, Wisconsin.

Tebbutt, J. (1912) The appointment of state astronomers, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 2 July 1912, 7.

Tebbutt, J. (1914) Astronomy in Australia, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 13 February 1914, 4.

The Solar Physics Committee of The Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science (1909) Memorandum upon the proposed solar observatory in Australia, Adelaide.

Unus, W. (2018) Carr V. Van Anda and the advancement of science news coverage, Southwestern Mass Communication Journal, 33, 1–16.