Harvard Plate Stacks
The Harvard Plate Stacks, previously known as the Harvard College Observatory's Glass Plate Collection or the Astronomical Photographic Glass Plate Collection is the largest collection of photographic glass plate negatives of the night sky in the world. The collection was created across a century by the Harvard College Observatory. Many of the people who worked in and studied the collection were a group of famous female astronomers called the Harvard Computers. It is a scientific and historical collection at The Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Scope and Size
The Harvard Plate Stacks collection consists of over 550,000 glass plate negatives of the night sky. The glass alone is estimated to weight over 165 tons and stored across three floors of a purpose-built building on Observatory Hill in Cambridge, MA. The majority of the collection consists of the astronomical glass plates, with most of these being gelatin dry-plate negatives.Astronomically, the collection consists of both direct image and spectral plates with a third of the collection made up of the later. The collection is also mostly known for its widefield imagery and consists of 20% of the known plates ever taken. The glass plates negatives date from the 1870s to the late 1990s. Any given region of the night sky appears on between 500 and 1,000 plates across a century of time. Both in number of observations and time, the collection will not be surpassed by digitally collected data until projects like the LSST at the Vera Rubin Observatory complete hundreds of observations and until a century of digital CCD imaging in the 2080s.
Photographically, the collection spans the history of the analogue photographic medium. While the majority of the collection is photographic negatives, there is a large collection of photographic prints across the same century of time.
Archivally, the collection consists of materials like the 2,500 individual notebooks of researchers who were hired to study the plates. These notebooks include those made by some of the most famous astronomers at the Harvard College Observatory including, Williamina Fleming, Antonia Maury, Henrietta Swan Leavitt, Annie Jump Cannon, and Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin. The plate stacks also holds 1,200 logbooks that recorded the metadata of each plate when it was created including the observator who made the image.
Earliest parts of the collection
The collection starts at the dawn of photography with some of the earliest images created of objects in space. These include an early collection of daguerreotypes, including a collection made by photographer John Adams Whipple collaborating with father-son astronomers William Cranch Bond and George Bond. The oldest dated image in the collection is a multiple exposure daguerreotype of the moon made by Samuel Dwight Humphrey on 1 September 1849. This is the second oldest extant image of the moon known to survive, only surpassed by the John William Draper's photograph of the moon now at the New York University Libraries Special Collections.Photographic firsts contained in the collection include the first photograph of an eclipse created by Whipple on 28 July 1851 and the first photograph showing the "diamond ring" effect of a total solar eclipse by Whipple in Shelbyville, Kentucky on 7 August 1869. It also includes the first photograph made of a comet made by William Usherwood of the Comet Donati on 27 September 1858, and subsequent exposures made by George Bond on 28 September 1858.
While scientifically, photographically, and artistically significant, these earliest photographs were not created consistently. Instead These earliest examples of photography that include daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, wet plate collodion, and salt prints are photographic processes that require more light through longer exposure times than these media would allow to capture all but the brightest objects in the night sky. It was not until the invention of the dry plate negatives as a commercially available medium that the exposure length was no longer limited.
Anna Palmer Draper, Edward Pickering and the Harvard Computers
Following the American Civil War, advances in photography and astronomy allowed for multiple pioneers to make advances in the burgeoning art and science of astrophotography. The British couple, Margaret Lindsay Huggins and William Huggins, would be credited with being the first to experiment using dry plate photography to capture astronomical objects in 1876. At the same time, the American couple, Anna Palmer Draper and Henry Draper, had been experimenting with photography, spectroscopy, and astronomy in their personal observatory in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. The Drapers would be the first to successfully photograph a spectrum of a star, Vega, in 1872 and be the first to capture the Orion Nebula on September 30, 1880, all with collodion photography. In Massachusetts, the brothers William H. and Edward C. Pickering, would experiment with lenses and start systematically photographing the night sky by 1877. These three pairs of collaborators would exchange correspondences and share discoveries and advancements.On November 20, 1882, Henry Draper dies of "pleurisy" after returning home to New York from a hunting trip in Colorado. In a letter from Edward Pickering to Anna Palmer Draper dated 13 January 1883, he writes,
This would be the beginning of Anna Draper being the single largest benefactor to the Harvard College Observatory for the next three decades. Her funds and future endowment would back the creation, preservation, and housing of nearly 6000,000 glass plates and the core of the Harvard Plate Stacks collection, which would amount to a century of photographing the night sky. Her gift would not only include funds but also her and her husband's personal telescope. She would establish the Henry Draper Memorial, which would include both the creation of a physical photographic plate collection, as well as the study and publication of what is known as the Henry Draper Catalogue. Over 44 women would partake in the study, writing, and creation of the catalogue from 1886 until the final publication of Henry Draper Extension Charts in 1941. This would be part of the group of women known as the Harvard Computers or, more recently, referred to as the Women Astronomical Computers at Harvard. Nearly 200 women would work at the Harvard Plate Stacks during the century of the use of glass plate negatives, 1875–1975. Their individual and collective legacies shaped the way we understand the Universe.
The outsized impact that one woman would have on an institution and field is summarized nearly a century later by pioneering female astrophysicist, Dr. Dorrit Hoffleit, “there is hardly any branch of astronomy that has not benefited from the results of the Henry Draper Memorial. Without Mrs. Draper’s vision and generosity, one wonders how preeminent Harvard would have become.” Anna Draper would also provide funds for the observatory to build three different buildings to house the Harvard Plate Stacks including its current home built in 1931. She would also separately establish the Henry Draper Medal, be a founder of the Mount Wilson Observatory, and even establishing the Draper Collection of Cuneiform at the New York Public Library.
This individual support would be compounded by other donations, including the estate of Uriah A. Boyden to establish a Southern Hemisphere Observatory, first called Boyden Station, and later Boyden Observatory. Originally stablished in Arequipa, Peru in 1889, the Observatory would be moved to Maselspoort near Bloemfontein, South Africa where it still exists and operates under the Physics Department of the University of the Free State since 1976.
Over 60% of the Plate Stacks collection would be made at these two locations. Uniquely among other astronomical glass plate collections, the Harvard Plate Stacks has an equal length history and even use of the same instruments to create plates of the northern and southern celestial hemispheres. This would lead to the creation of the "Harvard Map of the Sky" in 1917, the first photographic image of the entire visible universe. Printed on glass plate negatives from original plates deemed to be the best of each quadrant of the night sky, 55 glass plate negative which would alter be expanded to 74 plates would be copied using an interpositive process to create multiple copies of glass plate negatives for sale and distribution to other observatories, university, and libraries. The first sets were offered around 1905 along with the "First Supplement to Catalogue of Variable Stars." According to Williamina Fleming's own published account, by October 1890, Harvard had photographed both the northern and southern hemispheres from Cambridge, MA and an earlier predecessor of the Boyden Observatory established on Mount Harvard near Chosica, Persu. This means that both the Harvard Plate Stacks contains the first photographic atlas of the visible universe, and even predates the much more known international collaboration and multidecade publication, Carte du Ciel. The scale and volume of creating photographic plates would go largely unchanged with only minor pauses or lower production during the two world wars.
Other major donations for women would help shape the collection and advance the fields of Astronomy and astrophysics. Catherine Wolfe Bruce would find the creation of a 24-in doublet telescope honoring her husband. This telescope would fist be installed in Massachusetts to capture the northern most stars before it was moved to a purpose-built building at Boyden in Arequipa as its centerpiece. The Bruce telescope was the largest Astrograph at the time and would be used to create 30,000 glass plates. These plates known as the A series, are the largest measuring 14x17 inches and are some of the farthest seeing plates in the collection.
The Boyden Observatory was moved South Africa, enabled by a grant of $200,000 from the Rockefeller Foundation. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller funded the creation of a 60-in telescope.