Harlow Shapley Born: 2-Nov-1885 Birthplace: Nashville, MO Died: 20-Oct-1972 Location of death: Boulder, CO Cause of death: Heart Failure Remains: Buried, Sharon Cemetery, Sharon, NH
Gender: Male Religion: Agnostic Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Astronomer Party Affiliation: Democratic Nationality: United States Executive summary: Organizer of Heaven Harlow Shapley studied under Henry Norris Russell at Princeton, where he wrote a groundbreaking doctoral dissertation on eclipsing binary stars. He later developed the galactic distance scale, showing that the galaxy is much larger than had been generally believed, and found the approximate center of the galaxy some 20 kiloparsecs away. Succeeding Edward Charles Pickering as Director of the Harvard College Observatory, he showed that the Milky Way is younger than had previously been believed, and working with astronomer Adelaide Ames he showed that nearby galaxies are not uniformly distributed. He also held, incorrectly, that the Milky Way comprised most of the universe, and that luminous nebulae were mere clouds of glowing gas; on this point he was eventually corrected by Edwin Hubble. Shapley also conducted decades of amateur study of ants.
During World War II Shapley kept in contact with foreign astronomers, even Axis astronomers from Germany and Romania. Working with fellow Harvard astronomer Bart Jan Bok and with skeptical oversight by US intelligence, Shapley self-published a mimeographed Monthly Astronomical Newsletter to share stellar discoveries regardless of national allegiances during a time when science was otherwise turned to the war effort. At the close of World War II, Shapley was co-founder of the United Nations' Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and he later lobbied for establishment of the National Science Foundation. All of his children worked in science, and his son, Willis Shapley, conducted research for President John F. Kennedy that established the feasibility of space exploration, and formed the foundation of Kennedy's 1961 speech announcing America's goal "before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to Earth".
Father: Willis Shapley (farmer-teacher) Mother: Sarah Stowell Shapley Sister: Lillian Shapley Golladay Brother: Horace Shapley (b. 2-Nov-1885 twin) Brother: John Shapley Wife: Martha Betz Shapley (astronomer, b. 1890, d. 1981) Daughter: Mildred Shapley Matthews (author-astronomer) Son: Alan Shapley (geophysicist, b. 1919, d. 2006) Son: Lloyd S. Shapley (mathematician, Nobel Economics Laureate, b. 2-Jun-1923, d. 12-Mar-2016) Son: Willis Shapley (NASA official, b. 1917, d. 2005) Son: Carl Shapley (founded New World Educational Foundation)
High School: Carthage Academy, Chanute, MO (1906) University: BA Astronomy, University of Missouri (1910) University: MA Astronomy, University of Missouri (1911) University: PhD Astronomy, Princeton University (1914) Scholar: Mt. Wilson Observatory (1914-21) Professor: Harvard College Observatory, Harvard University (1921-52)
Benjamin Franklin Medal 1945 (by the Franklin Institute) Bruce Medal 1939 Rumford Prize 1933 Royal Astronomical Society Gold Medal 1934 Henry Draper Medal 1926 American Astronomical Society President (1943-46) American Association for the Advancement of Science President (1947) Sigma Xi Scientific Research Society
Appears on the cover of:
Time, 29-Jul-1935, DETAILS: "Harvard's Harlow Shapley: Organizer of Heaven"
Author of books:
The Scale of the Universe (1921) Starlight (1926) The Stars (1927) A Source Book in Astronomy (1929) The Universe of Stars (1929) Flights from Chaos (1930) Star Clusters (1930) A Treasury of Science (1943) Galaxies (1943) Readings in the Physical Sciences (1948) Climatic Change: Evidence, Causes, and Effects (1953) Science Ponders Religion (1960) Of Stars and Men: The Human Response to An Expanding Universe (1960) Through Rugged Ways to the Stars (1969)
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