George Willis Ritchey


George Willis Ritchey was an American optician and telescope maker and astronomer born at Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
Ritchey was educated as a furniture maker. He coinvented the Ritchey–Chrétien reflecting telescope along with Henri Chrétien. The R-C prescription remains the predominant optical design for telescopes and has since been used for the majority of major ground-based and space-based telescopes.
He worked closely with George Ellery Hale, first at Yerkes Observatory and later at Mt. Wilson Observatory. He played a major role in designing the mountings and making the mirrors of the Mt. Wilson and telescopes. Hale and Ritchey had a falling-out in 1919, and Ritchey eventually went to Paris where he promoted the construction of very large telescopes. He returned to America in 1930 and obtained a contract to build a Ritchey-Chrétien telescope for the U.S. Naval Observatory. This last telescope produced by Ritchey remains in operation at the United States Naval [Observatory Flagstaff Station|U.S. Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station] in Flagstaff, Arizona.
In 1924, he received the Prix Jules Janssen, the highest award of the Société astronomique [de France], the French astronomical society. Craters on Mars and the Moon were named in his honor.
A very readable biography of Ritchey and Hale is in Don Osterbrock's book "Pauper and Prince - Ritchey, Hale and the Big American Telescopes" where the idiosyncratic personalities of both Ritchey and Hale are exposed.

Obituaries

Category:1864 births
Category:1945 deaths
Category:American astronomers
Category:Telescope manufacturers
Category:Astronomical instrument makers