Skip to main content
  • Utility Menu
  • Search
Harvard Logo
HARVARD.EDU

Collections Menu
  • Waywiser
  • People
  • Bibliography
  • Exhibitions
  • Thesaurus
  • My Object Lists
  • About
  • Sign in
Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Objects
  • print: "Measuring the Sunshine"

print: "Measuring the Sunshine"

print: "Measuring the Sunshine"

Date: 1880
Inventory Number: 2001-1-0005a
Classification: Print
Subject:
meteorology, print material,
Publisher: Illustrated London News (1842-present)
Artist: W. Bassett Murray
Cultural Region:
England,
Place of Origin:
London,
Dimensions:
print: 27 x 40 cm (10 5/8 x 15 3/4 in.)
in transparent folder: 31 x 46 cm (12 3/16 x 18 1/8 in.)
Description:
Illustration of a rooftop with apparatus for solar measurements at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich. In the foreground is a deck with a table, upon which is fastened wooden board. Fastened to that board, in turn, is a glass globe sitting in a bowl. Facing that table is a man with a trim beard wearing a jacket and tie and what appears to be a nightcap. He is holding a piece of paper. Next to the man is a set of stairs and a railing that reads "UP ONLY."

In the background are treetops, two cupolas, each topped with a weather vane, an observatory dome, and an unidentified building that appears to be made out of many planks, each curving slightly at the top.
In Collection(s)
  • Exhibit 2015_Case for Curiosity
Signedtop of page: THE ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS, Nov. 6, 1880.--464

bottom-left corner of image: W. Bassett Murray
Inscribedbottom of page: THE ROYAL OBSERVATORY, GREENWICH: MEASURING THE SUNSHINE—SEE PAGE 459.
FunctionA look inside the Encyclopedia Britannica, Volume 26 (1911), p. 106 (available here) identifies the glass globe inside the bowl is a type of Campbell-Stokes sunshine recorder, in which the globe would focus the sunlight onto a card in the bowl. The sunlight would scorch the card. With the passage of the sun through the sky, the focused light would scorch a line in the card. The areas that were scorched represented the times of day when the sun was shining with sufficient brightness for the card to be burned.
Related WorksFor information on the Campbell-Stokes sunshine recorder, see Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 26s (1911): 106, available here.

Choose Collection

Create new collection

facebook iconTwitter Logo

_______________________________
Join Our Mailing List I Contact
_______________________________
The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments
Science Center, Room 371 • 1 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138 •chsi@fas.harvard.edu
p. 617-495-2779 •
f. 617-496-5794
_______________________________
The CHSI is one of the

HMSC Logo

Exhibition Hours

The Putnam Gallery
(Science Center 136):
Monday through Friday, 11a.m. to 4p.m.


The Special Exhibitions Gallery
(Science Center 251):
Monday through Friday, 9a.m. to 5p.m.


The Foyer Gallery
Closed for Installation.

All galleries are closed on University Holidays.

Admission is free of charge.
Children must be escorted by an adult.

Admin Login
OpenScholar
Copyright © 2017 The President and Fellows of Harvard College | Privacy | Accessibility | Report Copyright Infringement

Choose Collection

Create new collection