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Sears Cook Walker

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Sears Cook Walker

Birth
Wilmington, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
30 Jan 1853 (aged 47)
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
Burial
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Plot
LN Garden, Sec. 45, Lot 50, Space 8
Memorial ID
View Source
Sears Cook Walker was the son of Benjamin Walker and Susannah Cook Walker.

"SEARS COOK WALKER (1805-1853), American astronomer, was born at Wilmington, Massachusetts, on the 28th of March 1805. Graduating at Harvard in 1825, he was a teacher till 1835, was an actuary in 1835-1845, and then became assistant at the Washington observatory. In 1847 he took charge of the longitude department of the United States Coast Survey, where he was among the first to make use of the electric telegraph for the purpose of determining the difference of longitude between two stations, and he introduced the method of registering transit observations electrically by means of a chronograph. He also investigated the orbit of the newly discovered planet Neptune. He died near Cincinnati on the 30th of January 1853. His brother Timothy (1802-1856)1856) was a leader of the Ohio bar."

Vol 28, p211 Encylopedia Britannica 1911

Sears Cook Walker was the son of Benjamin Walker and Susannah Cook Walker.

"SEARS COOK WALKER (1805-1853), American astronomer, was born at Wilmington, Massachusetts, on the 28th of March 1805. Graduating at Harvard in 1825, he was a teacher till 1835, was an actuary in 1835-1845, and then became assistant at the Washington observatory. In 1847 he took charge of the longitude department of the United States Coast Survey, where he was among the first to make use of the electric telegraph for the purpose of determining the difference of longitude between two stations, and he introduced the method of registering transit observations electrically by means of a chronograph. He also investigated the orbit of the newly discovered planet Neptune. He died near Cincinnati on the 30th of January 1853. His brother Timothy (1802-1856)1856) was a leader of the Ohio bar."

Vol 28, p211 Encylopedia Britannica 1911



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