John Pond

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John Pond (1767—1836)

Sixth Astronomer Royal (1811—35)

Born: 1767 London, England
Died: 1836
Buried: St Margaret's Churchyard, Lee (near Greenwich), London, England (in Halley's tomb)
Astronomer Royal: 1767 -1836

By the age of 15 John Pond had already made observations with sufficient confidence to suggest Greenwich data contained a number of errors. He went on to read Chemistry at Trinity College Cambridge, though left before graduating due to ill health. He travelled in the Mediterranean and the Middle East, making astronomical observations when and where he could, before returning home in 1798 to establish his own private observatory in Westbury near Bristol. Through observations made at this observatory by 1806 he was able to demonstrate that the quadrant at Greenwich had become deformed with age and was no longer producing accurate data.

In 1811 he became Astronomer Royal.  He modernised the Observatory, updating and replacing old and damaged equipment, and changing working arrangements by increased staffing and introducing new programmes of work. In 1833 he installed the time ball at Greenwich which to this day falls daily at 1pm and was used by mariners to check their chronometers.  During his period as Astronomer Royal, Pond produced a new, more accurate catalogue of over 1000 stars (1833).  In 1835, one year before he died, Pond retired due to illness.



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Chronology John Flamsteed Edmond Halley James Bradley Nathaniel Bliss Nevil Maskelyne John Pond Biddell Airy William Christie Frank Dyson Harold Spencer Jones Richard Woolley Martin Ryle Francis Graham Smith Arnold Wolfendale Martin Rees

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