Maria Mitchell: Life, Letters, and Journals eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Maria Mitchell.

Maria Mitchell: Life, Letters, and Journals eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Maria Mitchell.
discovery.  I shall therefore apply to Mr. Bond for the letter which you wrote, and if it contains nothing improper to be seen by others we will forward it to the Danish minister at Washington with a certified extract from your journal.  I will have a certified copy of all these papers prepared and sent to Mr. Schumacher; and if any departure from the letter of the regulations is admissible, this would seem to be a case for it.  I trust Miss Mitchell’s retiring disposition will not lead her to oppose the taking of these steps.

“I am, dear sir, with great respect, faithfully yours,

[Signed] “EDWARD EVERETT.”

* * * * *

POSTSCRIPT TO MR. EVERETT’S LETTER TO PROFESSOR SCHUMACHER OF THE 15TH JANUARY, 1848.

“P.S.—­The foregoing was written to go by the steamer of the 15th, but was a few hours too late.  I have since received some information in reference to the comet of October which leads me to hope that you may feel it in your power to award the medal to Miss Maria Mitchell.  Miss Mitchell saw the comet at half-past ten o’clock on the evening of October 1st.  Her father, a skilful astronomer, made an entry in his journal to that effect.  On the third day of October he wrote a letter to Mr. Bond, the director of our observatory, announcing the discovery.  This letter was despatched the following day, being the first post-day after the discovery of the comet.  This letter I transmit to you, together with letters from Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Bond to myself.  Nantucket, as you are probably aware, is a small, secluded island, lying off the extreme point of the coast of Massachusetts.  Mr. Mitchell is a member of the executive council of Massachusetts and a most respectable person.

“As the claimant is a young lady of great diffidence, the place a retired island, remote from all the high-roads of communication; as the conditions have not been well understood in this country; and especially as there was a substantial compliance with them—­I hope His Majesty may think Miss Maria Mitchell entitled to the medal.

“Cambridge, 24th January, 1848.

* * * * *

EXTRACT FROM A LETTER FROM MR. EVERETT TO CAPTAIN W.H.  SMYTH, R.N., LATE PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, DATED CAMBRIDGE, 8TH FEBRUARY, 1848.

“I have lately been making interest with Mr. Schumacher to cause the king of Denmark’s medal to be given to Miss Mitchell for the discovery of the comet to which her name has been given, if I mistake not, in the journal of your society as well as in the ‘Nachrichten.’  She unquestionably discovered it at half-past ten on the evening of the 1st of October; it was not, I think, seen in Europe till the 3d.  Her father, on the 3d, wrote a letter to Mr. Bond, the director of our observatory, informing him of this discovery; and this letter was sent by the first mail that left the little out-of-the-way

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Maria Mitchell: Life, Letters, and Journals from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.