The founding of the Dudley Observatory at Albany, N.Y., in 1852 was a
milestone in humanity's age-old quest to understand the heavens. As the best
equipped astronomical observatory in the U.S. led by the first American to
hold a Ph.D. in astronomy, Benjamin Apthorp Gould Jr., the observatory
helped pioneer world-class astronomy in America. It also proclaimed Albany's
status as a major national center of culture, knowledge and affluence. This
book explores the story of the Dudley Observatory as a 150 year long
episode in civic astronomy. The story ranges from a bitter civic controversy
to a venture into space, from the banks of the Hudson River to the highlands
of Argentina. It is a unique glimpse at a path not taken, a way of doing
science once promising, now vanished. As discoveries by the Dudley
Observatory's astronomers, especially its second director Lewis Boss, made
significant contributions to the modern vision of our Milky Way galaxy as a
rotating spiral of more than a million stars, the advance of astronomy left
that little observatory behind.