George Willis Ritchey Explained

George Willis Ritchey
Birth Date:31 December 1864
Birth Place:Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Death Date:4 November 1945
Nationality:American
Fields:Optician
astronomy
Awards:Prix Jules Janssen

George Willis Ritchey (December 31, 1864  - November 4, 1945) was an American optician and telescope maker and astronomer born at Tuppers Plains, Ohio.[1] [2]

Ritchey was educated as a furniture maker. He coinvented the Ritchey–Chrétien (R–C) 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 60inches and 100inches 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 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.[1]

A very readable biography of Ritchey and Hale is in Don Osterbrock's book "Pauper and Prince - Ritchey, Hale and the Big American Telescopes" (The university of Arizona Press, 1993) where the idiosyncratic personalities of both Ritchey and Hale are exposed.

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Obituaries

Notes and References

  1. Obituary George Willis Ritchey . 1947. MNRAS. 107. 36.
  2. Web site: George Ritchey. The Linda Hall Library.