Astronomy - USA (2020-05)

(Antfer) #1

ASTRONOMY.COM 55


added two pages containing 80


drawings of double stars, com-


ets, clusters, and nebulae to the


Atlas. Mattison produced nine


editions, the last one in 1876.


Gone too soon


Burritt died January 3, 1838,


in Galveston, Texas. Late in


the previous year, he had orga-


nized and led a group of 30


colonists, which included one


of his sisters and a brother, to


Houston, Texas, to settle there.


In 1836, Texas seceded from


Mexico and became an inde-


pendent republic. It wouldn’t


become part of the U.S. until



  1. Burritt was drawn to


Texas because the government


had passed laws that granted


colonists generous plots of


land.


Burritt’s group chartered a


ship and, after a 28-day voy-


age, landed at Galveston —


well, sort of. A storm caused


the ship to wreck on a sandbar,


which delayed the actual land-


ing by several days. The jour-


ney to Houston took just a few


more days, but once they


arrived, the party had to live


in tents because nobody was


expecting them. Within a


week, yellow fever broke out


and wiped out nearly the entire


group, including Burritt, who


died in Houston just a few


weeks later.


Testimonials


I have owned a copy of the


original 1833 edition of The


Geography of the Heavens for


many years, as well as a set


of Burritt’s 1835 constellation


maps, which I had framed


in the 1980s. When I began


collecting 19th-century first-


edition astronomy books, this


set was one of the top 10 items


I set out to acquire. But I wasn’t


the only one who thought


highly of Burritt’s work.


The famous double-star


discoverer Sherburne Wesley


Burnham became interested in


the stars after purchasing a
copy of Burritt’s Geography
at an auction in 1862 in New
Orleans, where Burnham was
a shorthand reporter in Maj.
Gen. Benjamin Butler’s Union
Army headquarters. After
studying the constellations
shown in the Atlas, Burnham
began to identify them in the
sky. He held positions at sev-
eral observatories and finished
his career as an astronomer at
Ye r k e s O b s e r v a t o r y.
Praise also came from out-
side the field of astronomy.
In a letter dated January 1,
1915, to Maurice Winter Moe,
American horror author H.P.
Lovecraft cited his admiration
for Burritt’s work, a copy of

which he inherited from his
grandmother: “Her copy of
Burritt’s Geography of the
Heavens is today the most
prized volume in my library.”
For the simplicity of the
text, the beauty of the illustra-
tions, and the sheer number
of sales, The Geography of the
Heavens is rightly hailed as a
terrific teaching tool. Likewise,
Elijah Hinsdale Burritt
deserves his place as one of
the great popularizers in the
history of astronomy.

Michael E. Bakich is a
contributing editor of Astronomy
whose library once contained
475 first-edition 19th-century
astronomy books.

The final map (Map VII)
in the Atlas displays the
stars and constellations
around the South
Celestial Pole. Several
defunct constellations
are visible, including
Robur Caroli and
Solarium.
Free download pdf