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Wednesday, 16 March 2016

Caroline Herschel

   INTRODUCTION OF CAROLINE LUCRETIA HERSCHEL


Caroline Lucretius Herschel


Caroline Lucretius Herschel (16 March 1750 – 9 January 1848) was a German astronomer, whose most significant contributions to astronomy were the discoveries of several comets, including the periodic comet 35P/Herschel-Ringlet, which bears her name.[1] She was also the sister of astronomer William Herschel, with whom she worked throughout her career.

She was the first woman to be paid for her contribution to science, to be awarded a Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1828), and to be named an Honorary Member of the Royal Astronomical Society (1835, with Mary Somerville). She was also named an honorary member of the Royal Irish Academy (1838). The King of Prussia presented her with a Gold Medal for Science, on the occasion of her 96th birthday (1846). [2]

1. She was the first woman to be paid for her contribution to science
MS Herschel was given an annual salary of £50 by King George III in 1796 for her role as assistant to her brother, astronomer Sir William Herschel.
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After her brother married, she began more independent astronomical work for which she become the first woman to be awarded with the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1838.
A woman did not receive this award again till Vera Rubin won in 1996.
2. There is a comet named after her
In recognition of her discovering it in 1788, the periodic 35P/Herschel-Ringlet comet was named in her honors. It has an orbital period of 155 years. 
In addition, a crater in the "Sea of showers" on the moon is known as C Herschel after her.
Early life[edit]
Caroline Lucretia Herschel was born in the town of Hanover on 16 March 1750. She was the eighth child and fourth daughter of Isaac Herschel, aJewish oboist, and his Christian wife, Anna Ilse Moritzen. Isaac became a bandmaster in the Guards, was away with his regiment for substantial periods, and suffered ill-health after the Battle of Dettingen in 1743.[2]
At the age of ten, Caroline was struck with typhus, which stunted her growth, so that she never grew past four feet three inches.[1] Her family assumed that she would never marry and her mother felt it was best for her to train to be a house servant. Her father wished her to receive an education, but her mother opposed this. Her father sometimes took advantage of her mother's absence to teach her directly or include her in her brother's lessons. Caroline was allowed to learn millinery and dress-making and worked hard at various types of fancy-work, with a view to someday supporting herself.[2]
Following her father's death, her brother William proposed that she join him in Bath, England, "to make the trial if by his instruction I might not become a useful singer for his winter concerts and oratorios".[2] Caroline eventually left Hanover on 16 August 1772, and accompanied her brother William back to England. There she took on the responsibilities of running his household, and learning to sing. William had established himself as an organist and music teacher at 19 New King Street, Bath, Somerset (now the Herschel Museum of Astronomy). He was also the choirmaster of the Octagon Chapel. William was busy with his musical career and became fairly busy organising public concerts. Caroline did not blend in with the local society and made few friends,[3] but took several singing lessons a day from William. She became the principal singer at his oratorio concerts, and acquired such a reputation as a vocalist that she was offered an engagement for theBirmingham festival. She declined to sing for any conductor but William.[2]



Personal life[edit]
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/03/Sir_William_Herschel_and_Caroline_Herschel._Wellcome_V0002731.jpg/220px-Sir_William_Herschel_and_Caroline_Herschel._Wellcome_V0002731.jpg
William and Caroline Herschel polishing a telescope lens, 1896 Lithograph.
When William became increasingly interested in astronomy, transforming himself from a musician to an astronomer, Caroline again supported his efforts. She said somewhat bitterly, in her Memoir, "I did nothing for my brother but what a well-trained puppy dog would have done, that is to say, I did what he commanded me." It is clear, however, from the independent work she did during William's lifetime, from her work after William's death, and from the interest in astronomy displayed in her letters throughout her life, that Caroline became as interested in astronomy as William.[2] She became a significant astronomer in her own right as a result of her collaboration with him.[1]
Throughout her writings, she repeatedly makes it clear that she desires to earn an independent wage and be able to support herself. When the state began paying her for her assistance to her brother, she became the first woman—at a time when even men rarely received wages for scientific enterprises—to receive a salary for services to science.[4]
When William married a rich widow, Mary Pitt (née Baldwin), in 1788, the union caused tension in the brother-sister relationship. Caroline has been referred to as a bitter, jealous woman who worshipped her brother and resented those who invaded their domestic lives.[5] In his book The Age of Wonder, Richard Holmes is more sympathetic to Caroline's position, noting that the change was in many respects negative for Caroline. With the arrival of William's wife, Caroline lost her managerial and social responsibilities in the household and accompanying status. According to her memoir, she also moved from the house to external lodgings, returning daily to work with her brother. She no longer held the keys to the observatory and workroom, where she had done much of her own work.[2] Because she destroyed her journals from 1788 to 1798, her feelings about the period are not entirely known. Barthélemy Faujas de Saint-Fondindicated she and her brother continued working well during this period. When her brother and his family were away from home, she often returned there to take care of it for them. In later life, she and Lady Herschel exchanged affectionate letters and she became deeply attached to her nephew, astronomer John Herschel.[2]
William's marriage likely led to Caroline's becoming more independent of her brother and more a figure in her own right.[6]Caroline made many discoveries independently of William, and continued to work solo on many of the astronomical projects which contributed to her rise to fame.
After her brother died in 1822, she was grief-stricken and moved back to Hanover, Germany.[7] Caroline Herschel died at Hanover on 9 January 1848. She is buried at 35 Marienstrasse in Hanover at the cemetery of the Gartengemeinde.

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