<SPAN name="c6" id="c6"></SPAN>
<h3>Maria Mitchell.</h3><SPAN href="images/c6mitchell.jpg"><br/>
<ANTIMG src="images/c6mitchell_t.jpg" alt="MARIA MITCHELL." /></SPAN>
<p>In the quiet, picturesque island of Nantucket, in a simple
home, lived William and Lydia Mitchell with their family of ten
children. William had been a school-teacher, beginning when he
was eighteen years of age, and receiving two dollars a week in
winter, while in summer he kept soul and body together by
working on a small farm, and fishing.</p>
<p>In this impecunious condition he had fallen in love with and
married Lydia Coleman, a true-hearted Quaker girl, a descendant
of Benjamin Franklin, one singularly fitted to help him make
his way in life. She was quick, intelligent, and attractive in
her usual dress of white, and was the clerk of the Friends'
meeting where he attended. She was enthusiastic in reading,
becoming librarian successively of two circulating libraries,
till she had read every book upon the shelves, and then in the
evenings repeating what she had read to her associates, her
young lover among them.</p>
<p>When they were married, they had nothing but warm hearts and
willing hands to work together. After a time William joined his
father in converting a ship-load of whale oil into soap, and
then a little money was made; but at the end of seven years he
went back to school-teaching because he loved the work. At
first he had charge of a fine grammar school established at
Nantucket, and later, of a school of his own.</p>
<p>Into this school came his third child, Maria, shy and
retiring, with all her mother's love of reading. Faithful at
home, with, as she says, "an endless washing of dishes," not to
be wondered at where there were ten little folks, she was not
less faithful at school. The teacher could not help seeing that
his little daughter had a mind which would well repay all the
time he could spend upon it.</p>
<p>While he was a good school-teacher, he was an equally good
student of nature, born with a love of the heavens above him.
When eight years old, his father called him to the door to look
at the planet Saturn, and from that time the boy calculated his
age from the position of the planet, year by year. Always
striving to improve himself, when he became a man, he built a
small observatory upon his own land, that he might study the
stars. He was thus enabled to earn one hundred dollars a year
in the work of the United States Coast Survey. Teaching at two
dollars a week, and fishing, could not always cramp a man of
such aspiring mind.</p>
<p>Brought up beside the sea, he was as broad as the sea in his
thought and true nobility of character. He could see no reason
why his daughters should not be just as well educated as his
sons. He therefore taught Maria the same as his boys, giving
her especial drill in navigation. Perhaps it is not strange
that after such teaching, his daughter could have no taste for
making worsted work or Kensington stitches. She often says to
this day, "A woman might be learning seven languages while she
is learning fancy work," and there is little doubt that the
seven languages would make her seven times more valuable as a
wife and mother. If teaching navigation to girls would give us
a thousand Maria Mitchells in this country, by all means let it
be taught.</p>
<p>Maria left the public school at sixteen, and for a year
attended a private school; then, loving mathematics, and being
deeply interested in her father's studies, she became at
seventeen his helper in the work of the Coast Survey. This
astronomical labor brought Professors Agassiz, Bache, and other
noted men to the quiet Mitchell home, and thus the girl heard
the stimulating conversation of superior minds.</p>
<p>But the family needed more money. Though Mr. Mitchell wrote
articles for <i>Silliman's Journal</i>, and delivered an able
course of lectures before a Boston society of which Daniel
Webster was president, scientific study did not put many
dollars in a man's pocket. An elder sister was earning three
hundred dollars yearly by teaching, and Maria felt that she too
must help more largely to share the family burdens. She was
offered the position of librarian at the Nantucket library,
with a salary of sixty dollars the first year, and seventy-five
the second. While a dollar and twenty cents a week seemed very
little, there would be much time for study, for the small
island did not afford a continuous stream of readers. She
accepted the position, and for twenty years, till youth had
been lost in middle life, Maria Mitchell worked for one hundred
dollars a year, studying on, that she might do her noble work
in the world.</p>
<p>Did not she who loved nature, long for the open air and the
blue sky, and for some days of leisure which so many girls
thoughtlessly waste? Yes, doubtless. However, the laws of life
are as rigid as mathematics. A person cannot idle away the
hours and come to prominence. No great singer, no great artist,
no great scientist, comes to honor without continuous labor.
Society devotees are heard of only for a day or a year, while
those who develop minds and ennoble hearts have lasting
remembrance.</p>
<p>Miss Mitchell says, "I was born of only ordinary capacity,
but of extraordinary persistency," and herein is the secret of
a great life. She did not dabble in French or music or painting
and give it up; she went steadily on to success. Did she
neglect home duties? Never. She knit stockings a yard long for
her aged father till his death, usually studying while she
knit. To those who learn to be industrious early in life,
idleness is never enjoyable.</p>
<p>There was another secret of Miss Mitchell's success. She
read good books early in life. She says: "We always had books,
and were bookish people. There was a public library in
Nantucket before I was born. It was not a free library, but we
always paid the subscription of one dollar per annum, and
always read and studied from it. I remember among its volumes
Hannah More's books and Rollin's <i>Ancient History</i>. I
remember too that Charles Folger, the present Secretary of the
Treasury, and I had both read this latter work through before
we were ten years old, though neither of us spoke of it to the
other until a later period."</p>
<p>All this study had made Miss Mitchell a superior woman. It
was not strange, therefore, that fame should come to her. One
autumn night, October, 1847, she was gazing through the
telescope, as usual, when, lo! she was startled to perceive an
unknown comet. She at once told her father, who thus wrote to
Professor William C. Bond, director of the Observatory at
Cambridge: --</p>
<blockquote>
<p>MY DEAR FRIEND,--I write now merely to say that Maria
discovered a telescopic comet at half-past ten on the evening
of the first instant, at that hour nearly above Polaris five
degrees. Last evening it had advanced westerly; this evening
still further, and nearing the pole. It does not bear
illumination. Maria has obtained its right ascension and
declination, and will not suffer me to announce it. Pray tell
me whether it is one of Georgi's, and whether it has been
seen by anybody. Maria supposes it may be an old story. If
quite convenient, just drop a line to her; it will oblige me
much. I expect to leave home in a day or two, and shall be in
Boston next week, and I would like to have her hear from you
before I can meet you. I hope it will not give thee much
trouble amidst thy close engagements. Our regards are to all
of you most truly.</p>
<p>WILLIAM MITCHELL.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The answer showed that Miss Mitchell had indeed made a new
discovery. Frederick VI., King of Denmark, had, sixteen years
before, offered a gold medal of the value of twenty ducats to
whoever should discover a telescopic comet. That no mistake
might be made as to the real discoverer, the condition was made
that word be sent at once to the Astronomer Royal of England.
This the Mitchells had not done, on account of their isolated
position. Hon. Edward Everett, then President of Harvard
College, wrote to the American Minister at the Danish Court,
who in turn presented the evidence to the King. "It would
gratify me," said Mr. Mitchell, "that this generous monarch
should know that there is a love of science even in this, to
him, remote corner of the earth."</p>
<p>The medal was at last awarded, and the woman astronomer of
Nantucket found herself in the scientific journals and in the
press as the discoverer of "Miss Mitchell's Comet." Another had
been added to the list of Mary Somervilles and Caroline
Herschels. Perhaps there was additional zest now in the
mathematical work in the Coast Survey. She also assisted in
compiling the <i>American Nautical Almanac</i>, and wrote for
the scientific periodicals. Did she break down from her unusual
brain work? Oh, no! Probably astronomical work was not nearly
so hard as her mother's,--the care of a house and ten
children!</p>
<p>For ten years more Miss Mitchell worked in the library, and
in studying the heavens. But she had longed to see the
observatories of Europe, and the great minds outside their
quiet island. Therefore, in 1857, she visited England, and was
at once welcomed to the most learned circles. Brains always
find open doors. Had she been rich or beautiful simply, Sir
John Herschel, and Lady Herschell as well, would not have
reached out both hands, and said, "You are always welcome at
this house," and given her some of his own calculations? and
some of his Aunt Caroline's writing. Had she been rich or
handsome simply, Alexander Von Humboldt would not have taken
her to his home, and, seating himself beside her on the sofa,
talked, as she says, "on all manner of subjects, and on all
varieties of people. He spoke of Kansas, India, China,
observatories; of Bache, Maury, Gould, Ticknor, Buchanan,
Jefferson, Hamilton, Brunow, Peters, Encke, Airy, Leverrier,
Mrs. Somerville, and a host of others."</p>
<p>What, if he had said these things to some women who go
abroad! It is safe for women who travel to read widely, for
ignorance is quickly detected. Miss Mitchell said of Humboldt:
"He is handsome--his hair is thin and white, his eyes very
blue. He is a little deaf, and so is Mrs. Somerville. He asked
me what instruments I had, and what I was doing; and when I
told him that I was interested in the variable stars, he said I
must go to Bonn and see Agelander."</p>
<p>There was no end of courtesies to the scholarly woman.
Professor Adams, of Cambridge, who, with his charming wife,
years afterward helped to make our own visit to the University
a delight, showed her the spot on which he made his
computations for Neptune, which he discovered at the same time
as Leverrier. Sir George Airy, the Astronomer Royal of England,
wrote to Leverrier in Paris to announce her coming. When they
met, she said, "His English was worse than my French."</p>
<p>Later she visited Florence, where she met, several times,
Mrs. Somerville, who, she says, "talks with all the readiness
and clearness of a man," and is still "very gentle and womanly,
without the least pretence or the least coldness." She gave
Miss Mitchell two of her books, and desired a photographed star
sent to Florence. "She had never heard of its being done, and
saw at once the importance of such a step." She said with her
Scotch accent, "Miss Mitchell, ye have done yeself great
credit."</p>
<p>In Rome she saw much of the Hawthornes, of Miss Bremer, who
was visiting there, and of the artists. From here she went to
Venice, Vienna, and Berlin, where she met Encke, the
astronomer, who took her to see the wedding presents of the
Princess Royal.</p>
<p>Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, in an admirable sketch of Miss
Mitchell, tells how the practical woman, with her love of
republican institutions, was impressed. "The presents were in
two rooms," says Miss Mitchell, "ticketed and numbered, and a
catalogue of them sold. All the manufacturing companies availed
themselves of the opportunity to advertise their commodities, I
suppose, as she had presents of all kinds. What she will do
with sixty albums I can't see, but I can understand the use of
two clothes-lines, because she can lend one to her mother, who
must have a large Monday's wash!"</p>
<p>After a year, Miss Mitchell returned to her simple Nantucket
home, as devoted to her parents and her scientific work as
ever. Two years afterward, in 1860, her good mother died, and a
year later, desiring to be near Boston, the family removed to
Lynn. Here Miss Mitchell purchased a small house for sixteen
hundred and fifty dollars. From her yearly salary of one
hundred dollars, and what she could earn in her government
work, she had saved enough to buy a home for her father! The
rule is that the fathers wear themselves out for daughters; the
rule was reversed in this case.</p>
<p>Miss Mitchell now earned five hundred dollars yearly for her
government computations, while her father received a pension of
three hundred more for his efficient services. Five years thus
passed quietly and comfortably.</p>
<p>Meanwhile another life was carrying out its cherished plan,
and Miss Mitchell, unknowingly, was to have an important part
in it. Soon after the Revolutionary War there came to this
country an English wool-grower and his family, and settled on a
little farm near the Hudson River. The mother, a hard-working
and intelligent woman, was eager in her help toward earning a
living, and would drive the farm-wagon to market, with butter
and eggs, and fowls, while her seven-year-old boy sat beside
her. To increase the income some English ale was brewed. The
lad grew up with an aversion to making beer, and when fourteen,
his father insisting that he should enter the business, his
mother helped him to run away. Tying all his worldly
possessions, a shirt and pair of stockings, in a cotton
handkerchief, the mother and her boy walked eight miles below
Poughkeepsie, when, giving him all the money she had,
seventy-five cents, she kissed him, and with tears in her eyes
saw him cross the ferry and land safely on the other side. He
trudged on till a place was found in a country store, and here,
for five years, he worked honestly and industriously, coming
home to his now reconciled father with one hundred and fifty
dollars in his pocket.</p>
<p>Changes had taken place. The father's brewery had burned,
the oldest son had been killed in attempting to save something
from the wreck, all were poorer than ever, and there seemed
nothing before the boy of nineteen but to help support the
parents, his two unmarried sisters, and two younger brothers.
Whether he had the old dislike for the ale business or not, he
saw therein a means of support, and adopted it. The world had
not then thought so much about the misery which intoxicants
cause, and had not learned that we are better off without
stimulants than with them.</p>
<p>Every day the young man worked in his brewery, and in the
evening till midnight tended a small oyster house, which he had
opened. Two years later, an Englishman who had seen Matthew
Vassar's untiring industry and honesty, offered to furnish all
the capital which he needed. The long, hard road of poverty had
opened at last into a field of plenty. Henceforward, while
there was to be work and economy, there was to be continued
prosperity, and finally, great wealth.</p>
<p>Realizing his lack of early education, he began to improve
himself by reading science, art, history, poetry, and the
Bible. He travelled in Europe, and being a close observer, was
a constant learner.</p>
<p>One day, standing by the great London hospital, built by
Thomas Guy, a relative, and endowed by him with over a million
dollars, Mr. Vassar read these words on the pedestal of the
bronze statue:--</p>
<p class="dedication">SOLE FOUNDER OF THE HOSPITAL.<br/>
IN HIS LIFETIME.</p>
<p>The last three words left a deep impression on his mind. He
had no children. He desired to leave his money where it would
be of permanent value to the world. He debated many plans in
his own mind. It is said that his niece, a hard-working
teacher, Lydia Booth, finally influenced him to his grand
decision.</p>
<p>There was no real college for women in the land. He talked
the matter over with his friends, but they were full of
discouragements. "Women will never desire college training,"
said some. "They will be ruined in health, if they attempt it,"
said others. "Science is not needed by women; classical
education is not needed; they must have something appropriate
to their sphere," was constantly reiterated. Some wise heads
thought they knew just what that education should be, and just
what were the limits of woman's sphere; but Matthew Vassar had
his own thoughts.</p>
<p>Calling together, Feb. 26, 1861, some twenty or thirty of
the men in the State most conversant with educational matters,
the white-haired man, now nearly seventy, laid his hand upon a
round tin box, labelled "Vassar College Papers," containing
four hundred thousand dollars in bonds and securities, and
said: "It has long been my desire, after suitably providing for
those of my kindred who have claims upon me, to make such a
disposition of my means as should best honor God and benefit my
fellow-men. At different periods I have regarded various plans
with favor; but these have all been dismissed one after
another, until the subject of erecting and endowing a college
for the education of young women was presented for my
consideration. The novelty, grandeur, and benignity of the idea
arrested my attention.</p>
<p>"It occurred to me that woman, having received from the
Creator the same intellectual constitution as man, has the same
right as man to intellectual culture and development.</p>
<p>"I considered that the mothers of a country mould its
citizens, determine its institutions, and shape its
destiny.</p>
<p>"It has also seemed to me that if woman was properly
educated, some new avenues of useful and honorable employment,
in entire harmony with the gentleness and modesty of her sex,
might be opened to her.</p>
<p>"It further appeared, there is not in our country, there is
not in the world, so far as known, a single fully endowed
institution for the education of women.... I have come to the
conclusion that the establishment and endowment of a COLLEGE
FOR THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG WOMEN is a work which will satisfy
my highest aspirations, and will be, under God, a rich blessing
to this city and State, to our country and the world.</p>
<p>"It is my hope to be the instrument in the hands of
Providence, of founding and perpetuating an institution
<i>which shall accomplish for young women what our colleges are
accomplishing for young men</i>."</p>
<p>For four years Matthew Vassar watched the great buildings
take form and shape in the midst of two hundred acres of lake
and river and green sward, near Poughkeepsie; the main
building, five hundred feet long, two hundred broad, and five
stories high; the museum of natural history, with school of art
and library; the great observatory, three stories high,
furnished with the then third largest telescope in the
country.</p>
<p>In 1865 Vassar College was opened, and three hundred and
fifty students came pouring in from all parts of the land.
Girls, after all, did desire an education equal to that of
young men. Matthew Vassar was right. His joy seemed complete.
He visited the college daily, and always received the heartiest
welcome. Each year his birthday was celebrated as "Founder's
Day." On one of these occasions he said: "This is almost more
happiness than I can bear. This one day more than repays me for
all I have done." An able and noble man, John Howard Raymond,
was chosen president.</p>
<p>Mr. Vassar lived but three years after his beloved
institution was opened. June 23, 1868, the day before
commencement, he had called the members of the Board around him
to listen to his customary address. Suddenly, when he had
nearly finished, his voice ceased, the paper dropped from his
hand, and--he was dead! His last gifts amounted to over five
hundred thousand dollars, making in all $989,122.00 for the
college. The poor lad wrought as he had hoped, a blessing "to
the country and the world." His nephews, Matthew Vassar, Jr.,
and John Guy Vassar, have given over one hundred and forty
thousand dollars.</p>
<p>After the observatory was completed, there was but one wish
as to who should occupy it; of course, the person desired was
Maria Mitchell. She hesitated to accept the position. Her
father was seventy and needed her care, but he said, "Go, and I
will go with you." So she left her Lynn home for the arduous
position of a teacher. For four years Mr. Mitchell lived to
enjoy the enthusiastic work of his gifted daughter. He said,
"Among the teachers and pupils I have made acquaintances that a
prince might covet."</p>
<p>Miss Mitchell makes the observatory her home. Here are her
books, her pictures, her great astronomical clock, and a bust
of Mrs. Somerville, the gift of Frances Power Cobbe. Here for
twenty years she has helped to make Vassar College known and
honored both at home and abroad. Hundreds have been drawn
thither by her name and fame. A friend of mine who went,
intending to stay two years, remained five, for her admiration
of and enjoyment in Miss Mitchell. She says: "She is one of the
few genuine persons I have ever known. There is not one
particle of deceit about her. For girls who accomplish
something, she has great respect; for idlers, none. She has no
sentimentality, but much wit and common sense. No one can be
long under her teaching without learning dignity of manner and
self-reliance."</p>
<p>She dresses simply, in black or gray, somewhat after the
fashion of her Quaker ancestors. Once when urging economy upon
the girls, she said, "All the clothing I have on cost but
seventeen dollars, and four suits would last each of you a
year." There was a quiet smile, but no audible expression of a
purpose to adopt Miss Mitchell's style of dress.</p>
<p>The pupils greatly honor and love the undemonstrative woman,
who, they well know, would make any sacrifices for their
well-being. Each week the informal gatherings at her rooms,
where various useful topics are discussed, are eagerly looked
forward to. Chief of all, Miss Mitchell's own bright and
sensible talk is enjoyed. Her "dome parties," held yearly in
June, under the great dome of the observatory, with pupils
coming back from all over the country, original poems read and
songs sung, are among the joys of college life.</p>
<p>All these years the astronomer's fame has steadily
increased. In 1868, in the great meteoric shower, she and her
pupils recorded the paths of four thousand meteors, and gave
valuable data of their height above the earth. In the summer of
1869 she joined the astronomers who went to Burlington, Iowa,
to observe the total eclipse of the sun, Aug. 7. Her
observations on the transit of Venus were also valuable. She
has written much on the <i>Satellites of Saturn</i>, and has
prepared a work on the <i>Satellites of Jupiter</i>.</p>
<p>In 1873 she again visited Europe, spending some time with
the family of the Russian astronomer, Professor Struve, at the
Imperial Observatory at Pultowa.</p>
<p>She is an honor to her sex, a striking example of what a
quiet country girl can accomplish without money or fortuitous
circumstances.</p>
<p class="spacer">* * * * *</p>
<p>She resigned her position at Vassar in 1888. Miss Mitchell
died on the morning of June 28, 1889, at Lynn, Mass., at the
age of seventy-one, and was buried at Nantucket on Sunday
afternoon, June 30.</p>
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