Samuel A. Mitchell
Samuel Alfred Mitchell was born in Kingston, Ontario on April 29,
1874. This son of John Cook and Sarah Chown Mitchell was the sixth of
ten children to grow up in the Mitchell home. At age twelve, undoubtedly
to get away from his many siblings, he went off to Kingston Collegiate
Institute. From there, he went on to Queen's University where he received
his Masters of Arts in mathematics in 1894. While at Queen's University,
he was introduced to Reverend James
Williamson, known as Uncle Billy, who at eighty years of age found
it pleasant to delegate the care of the astronomical instruments to
Mitchell which is how he acquired knowledge of the techniques of an
astronomical observatory.
Upon encouragement from his math professor, Nathan
F. Dupuis, he left in 1895 for The
Johns Hopkins University to study math under Simon
Newcomb, only to find Newcomb retired. Thomas Craig was the new head
of mathematics and Mitchell also began study under Charles Lane Poor,
the head of astronomy. Poor was an excellent teacher and Mitchell was
inclined to follow astronomy from that point on. Mitchell was awarded an
astronomy assistantship for his second year at JHU and continued until
he received his PhD in 1898 with his thesis published in the Astrophysical Journal,
which included a discussion of the amount of astigmatism of concave
grating. While at Hopkins, his astronomy duties consisted of caring for
the transit instrument and the clocks in the little observatory behind
the physics laboratory, and the 9.5 inch refractor in the dome of the
laboratory roof.
Following receipt of his doctoral degree, Mitchell set out for the
brand new Yerkes
Observatory in Wisconsin where he began work as a research student
in 1898. Though he enjoyed his work at Yerkes, he was enticed to move
away and became an instructor in astronomy at Columbia University in June
1899. That December he married Milly Gray Dumble, the
daughter of Professor E. T. Dumble who was then the State Geologist of
Texas. Over the fourteen years he was at Columbia, Mitchell taught
undergraduate courses in descriptive astronomy both at Columbia and
later for girls from Barnard
College, a year long course in geodesy for third year students,
which continued into a first semester fourth year course, and a six
week summer camp for civil engineers.
In 1900, he took what would be for him the first of ten eclipse
expeditions. The May 28, 1900 eclipse took him to Griffin, Georgia
with the United States
Naval Observatory. Mitchell became a world-renowned authority on
solar
eclipses through his numerous expeditions, including trips to:
Sawah Loento, Sumatra in the Dutch West Indies (May 18, 1901), Daroca,
Spain (August 30, 1905), Baker, Oregon (June 8, 1918), San Diego,
California (September 10, 1923), Van Vleck Observatory,
Middleton, Connecticut (January 24, 1925), Fagernas, Norway (June 29,
1927), Niuafoou or "Tin-Can" Island, Tonga, in the South Pacific Ocean
(October 22, 1930) and Magog, Quebec, Canada (August 31, 1932), and
Canton (Kanton) Island, Kiribati (June 8, 1937), this time as the
scientific leader of a National
Geographic Society Expedition. An article entitled "Nature's Most
Dramatic Spectacle" by Mitchell appeared in the September 1938 edition
of National Geographic Magazine. These ten expeditions allowed him to
write Eclipses
of the Sun, summarizing his work on solar flash spectra, first
published in 1923 and produced through five editions (5th edition,
1951). On the 1918 Oregon eclipse, Mitchell was assisted by Llewelyn
G. Hoxton (chair of the University of Virginia Physics Department
1916-1948), and accompanied by the artist Howard
Russell Butler, whose paintings of totality graced the old Hayden Planetarium for many years.
Mitchell went back to Yerkes for the summers of 1909, 1910 and 1911
and then returned for a fifteen month sabbatical in 1912 and 1913. Frank
Schlesinger first demonstrated the technique of determing stellar
parallaxes photographically at Yerkes in 1905, and Mitchell (along
with Frederick
Slocum) carried out research applying the technique, publishing
their results in 1913. At that point, he was offered the directorship
at the Leander J. McCormick Observatory at the University of
Virginia. Mitchell spent much of his time and energy as director
coming up with funds for running the observatory and paying staff and
graduate students. Mitchell started the use of photographic plates
with the visual 26¼-inch refractor shortly after his arrival at
the University of Virginia. He became well known for his work on
stellar parallaxes and photometry. Dr. Mitchell was liked by faculty
and students alike, known for helping to bring prestige to the
University. "Corks
and Curls", the yearbook at the University of Virginia, honored
Dr. Mitchell by dedicating its 1938 volume to
him, saying "Dr. Mitchell typifies the intellectual ideal of the
University." He also served as vestryman at St. Paul's Episcopal Church
for several years.
Mitchell was elected Director Emeritus in 1945 with a wealth of
academic and scientific honors attributed to him. The following
year, the McCormick family recognized him for his service to the
Observatory. He was presented a silver plate by two of Leander
J. McCormick's grandsons. (Mitchell is shown at the ceremony: l-r
Robert H. McCormick, Mrs. Warren Buckley Jr., Harold L. Alden,
Mitchell and Leander McCormick-Goodhart). He was a member of the
following societies: National
Academy of Sciences (elected in 1933, elected to council in 1940,
awarded James
Craig Watson Medal in 1948), American Association for the Advancement of
Science (Vice-President in 1921), American Astronomical Society (V-P
1925-27), Royal Astronomical
Society (fellow and associate), International Astronomical Union
(president of Commission on Solar Eclipses and Commission on Stellar
Parallaxes and Proper Motions), American
Association of University Professors (chairman of Committee A, on Academic
Freedom and Tenure), American
Philosophical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences.
Dr. Samuel Mitchell died in Bloomington, Indiana on February 22, 1960
(Science
Magazine Obitiuary). His son, Allan C. G. Mitchell (1902-1963)
(M.A. Physics, UVa, 1924), was chair of the Indiana University
Physics Department from 1938-1963 and pioneered the creation of
the IU Cyclotron Facility in 1941 (one of the first in the world),
which was dismantled in 1968 to make room for the current
facility.
Samuel Mitchell's granddaughter, Alice Mitchell
Rivlin, a Senior Fellow in Economic Studies at the Brookings
Institution, served as the Vice Chair of the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve
(1996-1999), was the Director of the White House Office
of Management and Budget (1994-1996), and was the founding
director of the Congressional
Budget Office (1975).
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