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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Nevil Maskelyne, by Howse, was:Re: Books about Bowditch
From: Patrick Goold
Date: 2010 Mar 15, 12:57 -0400
From: Patrick Goold
Date: 2010 Mar 15, 12:57 -0400
George Huxtable,
Thanks for the references! I can't find the Maskelyne book for less than $200! How vexing! But anyway I just ordered several other books by Howse that I found while searching for the other. Interesting author. The book on Cook's timepieces is of particular interest to me. I would like to know the practical details of navigation for Cook. Not just the theory and how to get similar results with modern instruments but how Cook actually did it.
A similar interest in the actualities of the coastal survey prompted my reading the Danson book, which I highly recommend. He has a new one out on the surveying of the Mason-Dixon line which I look forward to reading.
Patrick
--
Dr. Patrick Goold
Department of Philosophy
Virginia Wesleyan College
Norfolk, VA 23502
757 455 3357
On Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 12:06 PM, George Huxtable <george@hux.me.uk> wrote:
There seems to be a split discussion here between marine historical fiction and serious biography.
I can recommend Derek Howse's biography, "Nevel Maskelyne, the seaman's astronomer", and anyone seeing it for sale at a reasonable
price should snap it up. But at its current price, it's for a richer man than me. Mine came when it was much cheaper, but that took
much searching and waiting.
I don't know why it has got so expensive, except for the laws of supply and demand, but the cheapest copy I can see at present is
over $200. Not that it's an antique rarity; far from it, published 1989. Nor that it's particularly weighty, at 280 pages. Nor does
it have any fancy colour illustrations. At that price, I would read it in a library.
I suppose that there must have been initially only a small print-run, because it went quickly out of print. Why CUP haven't cashed
in with a reprint, I can't imagine.
To my regret, there no numbers, or maths, in it. Not an equation in the whole book, though Howse, a curator at Greenwich, was more
than capable of tackling the maths, if he had chosen. My preference is for rather heavier stuff.
As an outline of the achievements of an extraordinay man, it can't be bettered. Anyone who has read Dava Sobel's shallow aspersions
in "Longitude" will find a good antidote in Howse.
I haven't read the Danson book on "Weighing the World", that Patrick Goold mentions, but at a guess that refers to Maskelyne's
expedition to Mount Schiehallion, in Scotland, a geometrically-regular volcanic cone. Its effect on the local direction of gravity
was assessed by deflection from the vertical of near-zenith stars, observed from either side of the mountain.
contact George Huxtable, at george@hux.me.uk
or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222)
or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Patrick Goold" <goold@vwc.edu>
To: <NavList@fer3.com>
Sent: Monday, March 15, 2010 2:30 PM
Subject: [NavList] Re: Books about Bowditch
| Frank,
| Thanks for the warning about the errors in the Lapham book! And for the
| Bowditch biography references. It is more likely I will follow up first
| the Derek Howse that Brad Morris makes reference to. Nevil Maskelyne has
| been someone I have wanted to find out more about every since I encountered
| him in *Mason and Dixon *(one of my all-time favorite novels). The only
| other place I have read much about him is in Edwin Danson's* Weighing the
| world: The Quest to Measure the Earth*. Do you have other Maskelyne
| recommendations?
|
| Patrick
|
|
| On Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 8:35 AM, Frank Reed
| <FrankReed@historicalatlas.com>wrote:
|
| > Patrick Goold, you mentioned, "Carry on Mr. Bowditch". I enjoyed that book,
| > too. It's a fun fictionalized biography. But beware: the accounts of the
| > navigational advances made by Bowditch are not even close. There's a
| > "eureka" moment in the book where he seems to have discovered the concept of
| > lunars. It has him dancing about, waking the captain, and so on. But it
| > wasn't that way at all. Such observations and the math used to process them
| > had been well-known for 20 years by the time he invented (or re-invented)
| > his interesting little mathematical trick. Bowditch didn't *write* the "New
| > American Practical Navigator". He significantly revised Moore's "Practical
| > Navigator". And he did a fine job, too. Of course, for a young audience, the
| > fiction of a "eureka" moment is far more dramatic than "then he re-wrote an
| > equation in a form that, while slightly longer, was generally easier to
| > work". Equally problematic for a young audience was his career after his
| > ocean voyages. He ran an insurance company for most of his life, doing math
| > and science on the side for his own pleasure. Not exactly romantic! :-)
| >
| > There are a couple of other Bowditch biographies like "To Steer by the
| > Stars" by Paul Rink. There's another, but the title escapes me. The only one
| > that I would recommend is "Yankee Stargazer" by Berry, published in 1943.
| > Despite the odd title, it's the best Bowditch biography I've read. From what
| > I've been able to check from original sources, it's accurate, too.
| >
| > -FER
| >
| >
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|
|
| --
| Dr. Patrick Goold
| Department of Philosophy
| Virginia Wesleyan College
| Norfolk, VA 23502
| 757 455 3357
|
--
Dr. Patrick Goold
Department of Philosophy
Virginia Wesleyan College
Norfolk, VA 23502
757 455 3357