Grubb Parsons | |
Formerly | Grubb Telescope Company |
Industry | Optical engineering |
Founded | 1833Dublin, Ireland | in
Founder | Thomas Grubb |
Defunct | 1985 |
Headquarters | Dublin (1833-1918) St Albans (1918-25) Newcastle (1925-85) |
Key people | Howard Grubb Charles Parsons |
Products | Telescopes Periscopes Lenses |
Number of employees | 150[1] (1955) |
Parent | C.A. Parsons & Company[1] (1925-85) |
Grubb Parsons (legally 'Sir Howard Grubb, Parsons and Co. Ltd.') was a historic manufacturer of telescopes, active in the 19th and 20th centuries. They built numerous large research telescopes, including several that were (at the time of construction) the largest in the world of their type.
It was founded in 1833 by Thomas Grubb as the Grubb Telescope Company, located in Dublin. Control of the company passed to his son Howard Grubb in the 1860s. They produced dozens of telescopes, including some of the largest of the 19th century, such as the 48-inch (1.2 m) Great Melbourne Telescope (a reflecting telescope) in 1868, a 27-inch (0.69 m) refractor for the Vienna Observatory in 1878, and the Greenwich 28 inch refractor in 1893. Leading up to and during the First World War (1914-18) the company produced periscopes for submarines and moved to St Albans in 1918.
In 1925 the company was purchased by Charles Algernon Parsons, renamed Grubb Parsons, and moved to Newcastle upon Tyne. In the 20th century they produced large research telescopes including the Isaac Newton Telescope (1965), Anglo-Australian Telescope (1965) and UK Infrared Telescope (1979). Their final project was the William Herschel Telescope in 1985, after which the company shut down.
Grubb Telescope Company
The company was founded in Dublin by the Irish engineer Thomas Grubb in 1833, as the Grubb Telescope Company.[2] The company's first order was the mount for the 13.3-inch (340 mm) telescope at Markree Observatory, which became the largest refracting telescope in the world.[2] This was followed by a 15-inch (380 mm) reflecting telescope for Armagh Observatory, which used the Cassegrain layout and was provided with a equatorial mount which could track targets automatically using a clock drive; both were innovative features that had not been used on large telescopes before and were widely adopted thereafter.[2][3]
Orders from outside Ireland soon followed, including the 6.7-inch (170 mm) Sheepshanks equatorial refractor for the Royal Observatory, Greenwich (London, 1838) and a 6.0-inch (150 mm) refractor for the United States Military Academy (West Point, 1840), both using lenses that had been produced in Paris.[4] The Grubb company operated a public observatory with a 9-inch (230 mm) refractor[4] at its workshop in Dublin, as a visitor attraction.[5] In the 1850s and 60s, the company also produced compound microscopes.[6]
With Thomas Grubb approaching retirement, in 1865 he was joined in managing the company by his son Howard Grubb.[7] Thomas Grubb retired in 1868 and died in 1878.[7] Howard Grubb solidified the company's reputation for high-quality optical instruments, and was knighted in 1887.
The Grubbs contributed to the early development of astronomical spectroscopy: in 1867 they produced a spectroscope with six prisms.[8]
In 1868 the company completed the 48-inch (1.2 m) Great Melbourne Telescope, one of the last large instruments to use a speculum primary mirror. It was the second largest telescope in the world at that time, and the largest that was fully steerable. In 1871 they produced a 18-inch (0.46 m) reflector, also using speculum, for the private observatory of William Huggins at Tulse Hill.[9] A 24-inch (0.61 m) reflector was produced for Royal Observatory, Edinburgh (1872, at Calton Hill Observatory).[4] The company constructed a 27-inch (0.69 m) refractor for the Vienna Observatory in 1878, which was then the largest refractor in the world and regarded as being of high optical quality.[7]
The Melbourne and Vienna telescopes substantially enhanced the reputation of the company, leading to numerous orders for new telescopes. Some of the largest constructed in this period included a 24-inch (0.61 m) for the private observatory of William Edward Wilson (1881, Daramona House, Ireland); a 19-inch (0.48 m) heliostat for the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (1890, Washington DC, USA); and the 28-inch (0.71 m) refractor at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich (1893, still the largest refractor in the UK).[4] In 1887 Grubb's firm built seven identical astrographs for the international Carte du Ciel project; the 13 inch refracting telescopes were designed to produce uniform photographic plates.[10] In 1896 they produced a 30-inch (0.76 m) reflector for the Royal Observatory, Greenwich.[11] The company produced an 18/24-inch double refractor for the Royal Observatory, Cape of Good Hope (South Africa, 1897)[12] and a copy for the Radcliffe Observatory (Oxford, 1901).[13]
After the submarine periscope was invented in 1902, Howard Grubb patented several improvements to their design.[14][7] The Grubb factory began manufacturing the new instruments, which became their primary business by 1914.[14] During the First World War, most British submarines were equipped with a periscope built by Grubb; following the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin, the periscope workshop was moved to St Albans in 1918 for better security.[14][15] When the military contracts ended and peace returned in 1919, the company struggled to return to profitability. Howard Grubb, then in his 70s, attempted to revive the sale of large telescopes but the company began to lose money.[5] Several telescopes had been delayed or not completed due to the war, such as a 24-inch (0.61 m) reflector for the National Astronomical Observatory of Chile (Santiago), which had been ordered in 1909, partially constructed in 1913, but was not operational until 1925.[4]
Grubb Parsons
In 1925, with Howard Grubb aged 81 and the company on the verge of bankruptcy, it was sold to Charles Parsons.[7] Parsons was an Anglo-Irish engineer with family connections to telescope making – Parson's father William Parsons had constructed the Leviathan of Parsonstown (the largest telescope in the world from 1845-1917). The families had been friends for two generations.[16] Charles Parsons renamed the company Grubb Parsons and moved the factory to Newcastle-upon-Tyne, where his other engineering companies were already located.[7]
The first large telescope completed under the new management (though not the first ordered[15]) was a 36-inch (0.91 m) reflector for the Royal Observatory Edinburgh, which saw first light in 1930. A year later the Royal Greenwich Observatory ordered a copy of this instrument, which was constructed as the Yapp telescope. In 1931 the company provided both a 40-inch (1.0 m) reflector and a 24/20-inch double refractor for the new site of the Stockholm Observatory (Sweden).[17]
Charles Parsons died in 1931, but Grubb Parsons remained a subsidiary of his engineering business, C. A. Parsons and Company.[1] In 1938, the company acquired the telescope manufacturing arm of Cooke, Troughton & Simms.[18][19]
The company found the standardisation of designs to be profitable, so continued the approach with a series of six near-identical 74-inch (1.9 m) telescopes for the David Dunlap Observatory (Ontario, Canada, 1935), Radcliffe Observatory (South Africa, construction completed 1938 but first light delayed until after the Second World War[12]), Mount Stromlo Observatory (Canberra, Australia, 1955), Haute-Provence Observatory (France, 1956, with a metric 1.93-metre (76 in) mirror), Okayama Observatory (Japan, 1960) and Helwan Observatory (Egypt, 1963).[17] They continued to produce numerous smaller telescopes in this period, including a 36-inch (0.91 m) for Cambridge Observatory (UK, 1955), a 40-inch (1.0 m) for the South African Astronomical Observatory (1963), and a 48-inch (1.2 m) for Dominion Astrophysical Observatory (Victoria, Canada, 1961).[17]
The next major project was the 98-inch (2.49 m) Isaac Newton Telescope for Royal Greenwich Observatory, which had moved to Herstmonceux Castle, completed in 1965. The location was later deemed unsuitable, so from 1979-84 this telescope was moved to Roque de los Muchachos Observatory in the Canary Islands, during which Grubb Parsons upgraded it with a 100-inch (2.54 m) mirror.[17]
The company began to concentrate on optical systems, not mechanical designs, producing thousands of small mirrors, lenses and prisms for spectrometers as well as small telescopes.[16] They ground and polished the primary mirror for the 3.9-metre (150 in) Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) (at Siding Spring Observatory, Australia), which was completed in 1965, though its design and mounting were completed by other companies.[16][12] Grubb Parsons also produced the 49-inch (1.2 m) UK Schmidt Telescope in 1973, located adjacent to the AAT.[17][12] They produced the optical components of the 3.8-metre (150 in) UK Infrared Telescope (1979, then the largest infrared telescope in the world), but not the mechanical parts.[2] Smaller telescopes produced by Grubb Parsons in this period included the 1.0-metre (39 in) Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope (Roque de los Muchachos Observatory, 1979) and the optics for the 60-inch (1.5 m) Danish National Telescope (La Silla Observatory, Chile, 1976).[17]
The company traded until 1985, with its last project being the 4.2-metre (170 in) William Herschel Telescope.[2][20]
Historiography
The surviving archives of the company are held at the Tyne and Wear Archives, part of the Discovery Museum in Newcastle.[21]
Ian Glass, a historian of astronomy, wrote a history of the company under the management of Thomas and Howard Grubb, based mostly on their letters.[22] Glass also produced catalogues of the telescopes known to have been produced by Grubb[4] and by Grubb Parsons.[17]
A partial history of the company under Parsons was written by its last managing director, George Sisson.[23]
See also
- List of largest optical telescopes in the 19th century
- List of largest optical telescopes in the 20th century
- T. Cooke & Sons - contemporary British telescope company, founded in 1837
References
- 1 2 3 Sisson, George M. (21 June 1955). "Sir Howard Grubb, Parsons and Company". Proceedings of the Royal Society. Series A - Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 230 (1181): 147–157. doi:10.1098/rspa.1955.0118.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Grubbs of Dublin / Grubb Parsons 1830-1985". Backyard Voyager. p. 1. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
- ↑ "Thomas Romney Robinson and the New Instruments". Armagh Observatory. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Glass, Ian. "Telescopes and other instruments by Thomas and Howard Grubb". South African Astronomical Observatory. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- 1 2 Glass, Ian. "Victorian Telescope Makers: The Lives and Letters of Thomas and Howard Grubb". Ian Glass Astronomer Home Page. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
- ↑ "Compound Microscope, by Thomas Grubb, Dublin, c. 1860". History of Science Museum. University of Oxford. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Grubbs of Dublin / Grubb Parsons 1830-1985". Backyard Voyager. p. 2. Archived from the original on 4 September 2011.
- ↑ Clackson, Saffron. "spectroscope, astronomical, by Grubb and Son, Irish, 1867 (c)". Whipple Museum. University of Cambridge. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
- ↑ Nall, Joshua. "18-inch telescope primary mirror, speculum, from William Huggins' Tulse Hill Observatory, by Howard Grubb, Irish, 1871". Whipple Museum. University of Cambridge. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
- ↑ Jones, Derek (October 2000). "The scientific value of the Carte du Ciel". Astronomy & Geophysics. 41 (5): 16–20. Bibcode:2000A&G....41e..16J. doi:10.1046/j.1468-4004.2000.41516.x.
- ↑ "Dome A - The Thompson 30-inch reflecting telescope". Herstmonceux Observatory Science Centre. Retrieved 16 February 2023.
- 1 2 3 4 "Demise of Grubb Parsons". Monthly Notes of the Astronomical Society of Southern Africa. 43: 26. 1984. Bibcode:1984MNSSA..43Q..26.
- ↑ "The Radcliffe Telescope". UCL Observatory. 29 October 2018. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
- 1 2 3 Martin, L. C. (October 1944). "Prof. A. E. Conrady". Nature. 154 (3911): 491. doi:10.1038/154491b0. ISSN 1476-4687.
- 1 2 Henry C. King (2003) [1955]. The History of the Telescope (Dover ed.). Courier Corporation (published 1979). p. 387. ISBN 9780486432656.
- 1 2 3 "Massive optics at Grubb Parsons". Journal of the British Astronomical Association. 109 (6): 339. December 1999. Bibcode:1999JBAA..109..339S.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Glass, Ian. "Telescopes made by Grubb Parsons (Partial list)". South African Astronomical Observatory. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ↑ "Acquisition of telescope-making business". J. R. Astron. Soc. Can. 32: 363. 1938. Bibcode:1938JRASC..32..362H.
- ↑ "Clarification that only telescope-making business was acquired". J. R. Astron. Soc. Can. 32: 399. 1938. Bibcode:1938JRASC..32R.396H.
- ↑ Ridpath, Ian (August 1990). "The William Herschel telescope" (PDF). Sky & Telescope. 80: 136. Bibcode:1990S&T....80..136R. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
- ↑ Armstrong, Simon; Bayman, Hannah (11 January 2014). "When Geordies reached for the stars". BBC News.
- ↑ Glass, I. S. (1997). Victorian telescope makers : the lives and letters of Thomas and Howard Grubb. Bristol, UK: Institute of Physics Publishing. Bibcode:1997vtml.book.....G. ISBN 9780750304542.
- ↑ Sisson, G.M. (1992). "Mirror Images". Vistas in Astronomy. 35 (4): 345. Bibcode:1992VA.....35..345S. doi:10.1016/0083-6656(92)90001-m.