Description: |
A crane is being used to lift sections of the telescope through the dome opening for installation in the James Irving Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium. A person stands on a ladder next to the opening, guiding the equipment inside. Manufactured by J. W. Fecker, Inc. of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the 38-inch Cassegrainian reflector telescope was shipped by truck. Construction of the Indiana limestone building took approximately 18 months and fill dirt from the Ross Hall construction site (building opened September 12, 1954) was moved to this location, a high plot of land at the entrance to Holcomb Gardens. Dedicated on Friday, November 5, 1954, the structure was designed and planned by Arthur F. Lindberg, Butler University Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds; J. I. Holcomb, Vice President of the Board of Directors and Chair of the Buildings and Grounds Committee; Dr. Harry E. Crull, Professor of Mathematics and Head of the Department of Mathematics; Robert Frost Daggett, consulting architect; and the firm of Ammerman, Davis and Stout, consulting engineers. On the dedication day, morning classes were shortened, and afternoon classes were cancelled so people could attend the dedication convocation, which was a part of the Homecoming festivities and the start of the celebrations for the Universitys centennial year. A. G. Wolter sandblasted the window with artistic interpretations of astronomical items. Reports vary, but the estimated cost of the building and the telescope was between $325,000 and $350,000, and J. I. and Musetta Holcomb provided the funding for the project. Installed in October 1954, this was not the Universitys first telescope. In 1896, a six-inch refractor telescope was donated to the University by Joseph I. Irwin, along with a small observatory on the Universitys Irvington campus. When the University moved to its current Fairview campus in 1928, the telescope was put into storage until 1934, when Irwins son, William Irwin, had the telescope rebuilt and installed on the roof of Jordan Hall. However, intermittent use due to a lack of astronomy faculty to teach courses saw the roof platform where the telescope was mounted and the telescope itself fall into disrepair, so the telescope was returned to storage. Reconditioned by J. W. Fecker, Inc., the smaller telescope became the guide telescope for the observatorys 38-inch telescope. Dr. Crull became the first Director of the Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium and according to the November 1957, edition of Butler Reports, an estimated 90,000 people visited the structure during its first three years (p. 7). |
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Origin: | 1954-10 |
Created By: |
Houghtalen, H. H. |
Source: |
http://palni.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/BldgsGrnds/id/2780 |
Collection: |
Butler University Buildings and Grounds Collection |
Rights: | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/ |
Copyright: |
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted |
Geography: |
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, 39.841314, -86.171395 39.841314 -86.171395 |
Subjects: |
Construction projects Construction equipment Cranes, derricks, etc. Trucks Ladders Telescopes Cassegrainian telescopes Observatory domes Observatories Planetariums Butler University--Buildings College buildings Butler University--History Indianapolis (Ind.)--History People James Irving Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium Holcomb Observatory Fairview campus |
Further information on this record can be found at its source.