Color: Black and White; Size: 8w x 10h; Type of Image: Landscape; Medium: Photographic print
Type:
Photographic print
Landscape
Place:
Whitney, Mount (Calif.)
Date:
1909
Category:
Historic Images of the Smithsonian
Notes:
The top half of the picture (construction of the building with the donkeys) had a copy print made and is neg # 78-6565. There is note above the bottom picture that it was for "Annals Astrophysical Observatory, Volume III. Plate V." In 1909, using a grant from the Thomas George Hodgkins Fund, the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory erected a shelter atop Mount Whitney, California, for astrophysical researchers. Smithsonian Secretary Samuel Pierpont Langley (1834-1906) had been at the site in 1881 and deemed it the best location in the country for meteorological and atmospheric observations. SAO Director (1906-1918) Charles Greeley Abbot, later 5th Secretary of the Smithsonian from 1928-1944, began observations at the site in 1909 and secured the construction of the stone building. Abbot worked with W. W. Campbell, director of the Lick Observatory, in completing the field station. Lick Observatory is part of the University of California Observatories of the University of California on Mt. Hamilton, CA.
Summary:
This negative number contains two photographs on it. The top is construction of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's shelter on Mount Whitney, California. Donkeys carrying people and supplies are in front of the house. The bottom of the photograph is the completed observing shelter as seen from a distance which shows it on top of a steep, sloping, and ragged rock mountain.
Contained within:
Smithsonian Institution Archives, Record Unit 7005, Box 187, Folder: 3