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  1. May 24, 2018 · George Ellery Hale: Birthdate: June 29, 1868: Birthplace: Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States: Death: February 21, 1938 (69) Pasadena, United States Immediate Family: Son of William Ellery Hale and Mary Scranton Browne Brother of Martha Davis Harts. Managed by: Private User Last Updated: May 24, 2018

    • Chicago, Illinois
    • June 29, 1868
    • Illinois
    • February 21, 1938
  2. Apr 8, 2017 · Explore genealogy for George Hale born 1868 Chicago, Illinois, USA died 1938 Pasadena, Los Angeles Co, California, USA including ancestors + descendants + 1 photos + more in the free family tree community.

    • Male
    • June 29, 1868
    • Evelina Sherer (Conklin) Hale
    • February 21, 1938
    • Early Interest in Astronomy
    • His First Observatory
    • Two More Observatories
    • A Leader in The Science Community
    • Further Reading
    • Additional Sources

    Hale attended the Oakland Public School and later the Allen Academy, taking also a shop course at the Chicago Manual Training School. But what mattered most to Hale were the studies he worked on at home. Astronomy headed the list. He first built a small telescope, then a spectroscope. Attached to the telescope, now a 4-inch Clark refractor purchase...

    Determined to leave his mark on the young science of astrophysics, Hale entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT) in 1886, where he studied chemistry,physics, and mathematics. For astronomy, he turned to Edward C. Pickering, director of the Harvard College Observatory, who took him on as a volunteer assistant. During summer vacations h...

    In 1892 Hale joined the faculty of the new University of Chicago as associate professor of astrophysics and director of the observatory. An accomplished organizer and money-raiser, Hale persuaded streetcar millionaire C. T. Yerkes to provide the university with the largest refractor telescope in the world. Hailed in 1897 for its revolutionary desig...

    A scientist bursting with educational, architectural, and civic ideas, Hale was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1902 and promptly set about to reform it. He created (and served as first chairman) the National Research Council, the operating arm of the academy, in 1916; aided in establishing a fellowship program in 1919; and raised th...

    Novelist Theodore Dreiser wrote Hale into his novel about Charles Yerkes, The Titan (1914). A first-hand account of Hale's work in California appears in Ten Years' Work of a Mountain Observatory (1915). The only full-length biography of Hale is Helen Wright, Explorer of the Universe (1966). Walter A. Adams, who succeeded Hale as director of the Mou...

    Osterbrock, Donald E., Pauper & prince:Ritchey, Hale & big American telescopes,Tucson:University of Arizona Press, 1993. Wright, Helen, Explorer of the universe:a biography of George Ellery Hale,Woodbury, N.Y.:American Institute of Physics, 1994. □

  3. Hale was born into a wealthy Chicago family and from an early age was enraptured by science. He built his first observatory at age 20 at the Hale home and acquired a professional long-focus refractor and spectroscopic apparatus that were competitive with the equipment of most colleges.

  4. George Ellery Hale was born in Chicago on June 29, 1868. A single child heir to his family's considerable fortune, Hale developed an interest in astronomy at a young age. He benefited from the continuing moral and financial support of his father, who during his childhood and teenage years purchased him telescopes and spectrometers of increasing ...

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  6. George Ellery Hale was born in Chicago on June 29, 1868, the eldest of three children, into a family of wealthy circumstances. His father, William Ellery Hale, was an inventor and manufacturer of elevators for the multi-story buildings being built in Chicago and elsewhere.

  7. George Ellery Hale was the person most responsible for the building of Palomar Observatory. A graduate of MIT and a founder of Caltech, in 1928 he secured a grant of $6 million from the Rockefeller Foundation for the fabrication of a 200-inch reflecting telescope. [ 1 ]

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