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John
Tebbutt was a pioneer in the field of astronomy and lived his whole
life in the Hawkesbury district. John Tebbutt was born on the 25th May
1834 Windsor NSW, the son of John Tebbutt and Virginia nee Saunders.
From about 1839 he was educated in Windsor by Edward Quaife, who instilled
in Tebbutt a love of astronomy. He was later taught by Reverend Matthew
Adam, the Presbyterian minister and Reverend Henry Stiles the Anglican
minister in Windsor.
Tebbutt bought
his first instrument, a marine sextant in 1853. Several years later
John Tebbutt married Jane Pendergast on the 8th September 1857 at St.
Matthew's Church of England, Windsor. They had 6 daughters and 1 son.
In 1861 Tebbutt
discovered the Great Comet 1861 (Comet Tebbutt II 1861) The following
year, Mr W. Scott the government astronomer resigned and the position
as NSW Government Astronomer was offered to Tebbutt. He however declined
the position to concentrate on his own work. He joined the Philosophical
(Royal) Society of NSW.
In 1863 he
had constructed the first of several observatories on the family property
at the "Peninsula" at Windsor. This area is known as the Peninsula or
sometimes Peninsular as it is at the confluence of South Creek &
the Hawkesbury River. ("Peninsula House" was constructed by his father
in 1845 and is still standing.)
John Tebbutt
was highly regarded overseas and his observations assisted in advancing
astronomy in Australia and also internationally. He won a silver medal
at the 1867 Paris Universal exhibition for a scientific report he had
published. John Tebbutt was elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical
Society in London in 1873 for his contribution to astronomy. In 1879
he built a substantial brick observatory and library building at the
Peninsular, the Equatorial room was built in 1894. This same year he
observed the Transit of Venus.
To assist
with his observations, in 1886 he purchased a Grubb 8 inch equatorial
refractor. He was elected the first president of the NSW Branch of the
British Astronomical Association in 1895.
For his service
to astronomy in Australia he was awarded the prestigious Hannah Jackson
nee Gwilt gift and bronze medal from the Royal Astronomical Society,
London in 1905 and published "Astronomical Memoirs" in 1908. During
his life he published 371 articles including booklets, reports and journals.
Tebbutt also regularly kept rainfall and flood level statistics during
his lifetime. John Tebbutt died on the 29th November 1916, aged 82 years.
His funeral was one of the largest ever held in Windsor. He is buried
in a vault which he personally designed at St. Matthew's Church of England
Cemetery Windsor. In honour of Tebbutt's achievements, the International
Astronomical Union renamed a lunar crater on the moon in 1973.
On the 26th
March 1984 Tebbutt appeared on the new $100 note. (Sir Douglas Mawson
the Antarctic explorer was on the other side). This note was replaced
in on the 15th January 1996.
Hawkesbury
Council reprinted "Astronomical Memoirs" with some additional material
in 1986. John Tebbutt a direct descendant of John Tebbutt the astronomer
still lives on the property today. During the 1990s his observatory
was renovated and opened as a tourist attraction, by appointment to
the public.
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