
Ambrose Swasey
Born December 19 1846 – Died June 15 1937 Telescope
Patent No. 959,179
Inducted 2006
Ambrose Swasey, inventor of precise astronomical instruments, designed some
of the most powerful and accurate telescopes of
his day.
Invention Impact
Two great telescopes the partners designed and built were a
thirty-six-inch refractor, the largest of its time, for the
University of California’s Lick Observatory, and the twenty-five percent
more powerful Yerkes refractor. Swasey also
perfected a tool to divide meridian circles, the dividing engine, that
was accurate to within one inch of arc in a three-mile
radius circle. His mastery of precision yielded highly regarded gun
sights, range finders, field telescopes, and binoculars
as well.
A founding member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers,
Swasey encouraged scientific progress. He contributed
generously to the United Engineering Society and endowed a professorship
at Case School of Applied Sciences (Case Western
Reserve University). With Warner, he donated observatories to Case and
to Denison University.
Inventor Bio
Swasey was born in Exeter, New Hampshire. Apprenticed to a machine
works at age eighteen, he showed a natural aptitude for
mechanics. With Worcester R. Warner, he founded the Warner & Swasey
Company in 1880. Although machine tools were the
company’s main focus, their astronomical instruments brought them world
renown.
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