Tale of two women

Tale of two women

Annie Jump Cannon at her desk • Smithsonian Institution Archives (Public Domain)

Originally published 1 May 1989

In 1934, the not­ed astronomer Annie Jump Can­non returned to her alma mater, Welles­ley Col­lege, to speak to her 50th class reunion. She told this story:

Dur­ing our senior year, one of the dis­tin­guished guests was Matthew Arnold, who gave his lec­ture on Emer­son, char­ac­ter­ized as the friend and lover of those who live in the spir­it. When Mr. Arnold was being dri­ven up through the Col­lege grounds, he exclaimed, ‘Extra­or­di­nary, extra­or­di­nary. All for young ladies.’ Then, putting his mon­o­cle on for a close sur­vey, he asked, ‘But what are their chances?’ ”

Arnold’s ques­tion was par­tic­u­lar­ly applic­a­ble to young Welles­ley ladies who wished to pur­sue careers in astron­o­my, as did Miss Can­non. Even now, more than a cen­tu­ry lat­er, the answer to his ques­tion (for aspir­ing astronomers) has to be “bet­ter, but still not equal to a man’s.”

Dur­ing this past week the Hen­ry Drap­er Medal of the Nation­al Acad­e­my of Sci­ences for dis­tin­guished work in astro­nom­i­cal physics was award­ed joint­ly to Ric­car­do Gio­vanel­li and Martha Haynes. Haynes is the sec­ond woman to win the Hen­ry Drap­er Medal. The first was Annie Jump Can­non, in 1933.

Martha Haynes is a spe­cial­ist in radio astron­o­my, galaxy evo­lu­tion, and the large-scale struc­ture of the uni­verse. With Gio­vanel­li, she dis­cov­ered the largest known struc­ture in the uni­verse, a string of galax­ies more than 700 mil­lion light-years long and lying some 200 mil­lion light-years from the sun.

Like Annie Jump Can­non, Haynes is a grad­u­ate of Welles­ley Col­lege, class of 1973, and there­in hangs a tale.

In a tele­phone inter­view, Martha Haynes described how she came to astron­o­my. She was an “out­doorsy” child with an inter­est in nature. In the 7th grade she had a lucra­tive job as a babysit­ter. Her finan­cial­ly strapped broth­er, who was in col­lege, want­ed a tele­scope and talked Martha into buy­ing one for her­self. It came addressed to him. “I was insult­ed,” said Haynes.

Observatory in the attic

The broth­er end­ed up in busi­ness; the sis­ter decid­ed on a career in astron­o­my. At New­ton High School she was often the only female in physics class­es, and took a lot of teas­ing about “being in the wrong place.” She chose Welles­ley because it was a wom­an’s college.

At Welles­ley, Haynes found a role mod­el in Annie Jump Can­non. In dress-up skits at the col­lege, she always played Can­non. And she learned an impor­tant les­son from her dis­tin­guished pre­de­ces­sor — “the deter­mi­na­tion not to be deterred.”

Unde­ter­able Annie Can­non made remark­able con­tri­bu­tions to astron­o­my at a time when women were gen­er­al­ly thought inca­pable of seri­ous sci­en­tif­ic work. Her love affair with the stars began with a makeshift obser­va­to­ry in the attic of her fam­i­ly’s home in Delaware. After study at Welles­ley and Rad­cliffe, in 1897 she joined the staff of the Har­vard Col­lege Obser­va­to­ry as a pro­tege of direc­tor Edward Pickering.

But not, of course, as an astronomer with aca­d­e­m­ic rank. Can­non was one of “Pick­er­ing’s harem,” a group of women who received 25 to 35 cents an hour to ana­lyze and cat­a­logue the volu­mi­nous stel­lar data accu­mu­lat­ed by male astronomers at telescopes.

Can­non’s imme­di­ate pre­de­ces­sor, Anto­nia Mau­ry, had proven unsat­is­fac­to­ry to Pick­er­ing because her “pas­sion for under­stand­ing” was thought to impede her effi­cien­cy for drudge work. Annie Can­non was less offen­sive to Pick­er­ing, but no less tal­ent­ed. Both women made impor­tant con­tri­bu­tions to the under­stand­ing of stel­lar spec­tra (the col­ors in starlight).

Important contributions

In the ear­ly decades of the 20th cen­tu­ry, Annie Can­non per­son­al­ly clas­si­fied the spec­tra of more than 300,000 stars. Every astron­o­my stu­dent today learns by rote the OBAFGKM clas­si­fi­ca­tion scheme of stel­lar spec­tra that Can­non invent­ed (“Oh, be a fine girl, kiss me,” is the mnemon­ic used by gen­er­a­tions of most­ly male stu­dents to remem­ber the sequence of let­ters). Her work is a pil­lar upon which rests our knowl­edge of stars.

Can­non was made an hon­orary mem­ber of the Roy­al Astro­nom­i­cal Soci­ety in 1914, the first woman admit­ted to that body, and received hon­orary degrees from insti­tu­tions here and abroad. But it was not until 1938, when Annie Can­non was 74, that Har­vard Uni­ver­si­ty grant­ed her aca­d­e­m­ic sta­tus by nam­ing her pro­fes­sor of astronomy.

By con­trast, Martha Haynes is Asso­ciate Pro­fes­sor of Astron­o­my at Cor­nell at an age when such dis­tinc­tions can be thought to mat­ter. For her research she has access to the Nation­al Radio Obser­va­to­ry’s tele­scope at Areci­bo, Puer­to Rico, the largest in the world.

And if Matthew Arnold could see the sci­ence facil­i­ties at Welles­ley Col­lege today, he would undoubt­ed­ly be aston­ished. The “young ladies” of Welles­ley have become “women,” and their chances of doing top-notch sci­ence are much improved.

Still, Haynes was the only woman of about 30 per­sons in her grad­u­ate class in astron­o­my at Indi­ana Uni­ver­si­ty, and she is very much aware of the prob­lems work­ing in a male-dom­i­nat­ed field “when you’re not one of the guys.”

Things have changed,” says Martha Haynes, think­ing back to the time of Annie Jump Can­non. Then adds: “But they are not perfect.”

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