Presenter: Leslie McCabe
Faculty Advisor: Karen Johnson
Phone: x6965 E-mail: x2Lmcca@stlawu.edu
Oral presentation
In 1875, three women were hired to work at the Harvard College Observatory.
Prior to this, Maria Mitchell was the only American woman in astronomy,
who like the few known European women astronomers, began working in the
field as an assistant to a male relative. Between 1875 and 1927, 72 women
were hired to work at the Harvard Observatory, where they concentrated
in particular on stellar classification for the Draper catalogue—including
the development of a classification system. What were the circumstances
that allowed for this increase in the number of women employed to do this
work? Edward Pickering, the 4th director of the Observatory, began hiring
women because he could pay them less and they were willing to do meticulous
work with greater precision than men could. Also, the nature of the classification
work attracted more women workers to Harvard than to other observatories.
From my own study of spectral classification, and by drawing on the work
of historians of science Pamela Mack and Margaret Rossiter, and historian
Sheila Rothman, I contend that the nature of the work done by these women,
primarily computations and data recording, corresponded with society’s
concept of the nature of work suited for women. As Maria Mitchell once
said: "The eye that directs a needle in the delicate meshes of embroidery
will equally well bisect a star with the spiderweb of a micrometer…Routine
observations… dull as they are, are less dull than the endless repetition
of the same pattern in crochetwork."