Herschel Museum of Astronomy

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Template:Short descriptionTemplate:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox museum The Herschel Museum of Astronomy at 19 New King Street, Bath, England, is a museum that was inaugurated in 1981. It is located in a town house that was formerly the home of William Herschel and his sister Caroline.

Location

File:HerschelTelescope.jpg
Replica of a telescope similar to that with which William Herschel discovered Uranus.

The museum is situated in the former home of the Herschels at 19 New King Street (south side) in Bath, England. The building is a particularly well-preserved small town house of the period.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> The modest town-house covers five floors, and includes two reception rooms on the ground and first floor.<ref name="HMA_history" /> The town house is part of a terrace that was built around 1764-1770. The building is constructed from Bath stone ashlar, with some coursed rubble at the rear, and slate Mansard roofs with pantiling on the internal slopes. The entrance is on the left-hand side of the building, which has three storeys, as well as an attic and basement, each of which have two sash windows.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> The building represents a middle-grade Georgian town house, typical of the homes of artisans and tradesmen of the city of Bath (but contrasting with Bath's grand visitor houses)<ref name="HMA_history" />

The Herschels moved into 19 New King Street in 1777,<ref name="imagesofengland" /> at which point the builders would have still been present, and the road would have been unmetalled.<ref name="HMA_history" /> William discovered Uranus whilst residing in the house in March 1781 using a 7 foot telescope designed and built in the attached workshop.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> William left Bath in 1782,<ref name="imagesofengland" /> but Caroline, along with their brother Alexander, remained at the house until 1784.<ref name="imagesofengland" />

The building has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II* listed building.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> The building was restored in 1981, and again in 2000,<ref name="bathmuseums" /> using period detailed wallpaper based on fragments discovered in other Bath houses, and carpets based on 18th-century designs.<ref name="HMA_history" />

Museum

File:William Herschel Museum - rear of building.jpg
The rear of the building

In 1977 the William Herschel Society was set up to gather support for the rescue of the building.<ref name="herschelsociety" /> It was purchased in 1981 with the aid of Doctors Leslie and Elizabeth Hilliard,<ref name="HMA_history" /> saving it from demolition.<ref name="HMA_remembers" /> The main-belt asteroid 6395 Hilliard was later named in their honor.<ref name="springer" /> The house was subsequently transferred as a donation to the Herschel House Trust.<ref name="herschelsociety" /> The museum was opened on 13 March 1981, exactly 200 years after Herschel discovered Uranus.<ref name="AandG_21Nov06" /> The museum is governed by the Herschel House Trust,<ref name="bathmuseums" /> a registered charity.<ref name="HMA_history" /> The Bath Preservation Trust became the sole trustee of the Herschel House Trust in July 2015.<ref name=newsletter>Bath Preservation Trust newsletter no. 82 (winter 2015)</ref> The patrons of the museum have been Patrick Moore<ref name="bathmuseums" /> (until 2012) and Brian May (from December 2013).<ref name="BathChronicle10Dec13" />

The museum offers audio tours. A virtual tour of the museum is available for mobility-impaired visitors, and a book containing tactile images is available for blind or partially sighted visitors. A disabled parking space is located outside of the building. Replica objects in the museum, including a replica of Herschel's polishing machine, are designed to be handled.<ref name="HMA_access" /> The museum uses QR codes to provide translations of the display exhibit labels in 10 different languages,<ref name="HMA_news" /> and illustrated trails are available from the shop.<ref name="HMA_history" /> The museum has a school programme and workshop.<ref name="HMA_education" />

Layout and contents

File:William Herschel Museum - dining room.jpg
The dining room

The basement contains a kitchen, parlour and workshop.<ref name="HMA_history" /> At ground floor, the building has an entrance hall with a staircase, a small closet room that is used as a dining room, and a large south-facing room at the back of the house. Similar south-facing rooms are present at each level of the building. The dining room contains Herschel's dining table.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> On the first floor, the Music Room occupies the closet room, and the south-facing room is the Drawing Room.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> The upper floors provided bedrooms and servant quarters;<ref name="HMA_history" /> they have subsequently been converted into flats.<ref name="imagesofengland" />

Kitchen

File:William Herschel Museum - kitchen.jpg
The kitchen

The kitchen incorporates a Victorian cast iron range and a stone flag floor.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> It contains a replica Georgian house based on the museum's building, which is fully furnished inside.<ref name="HMA_history" />

Workshop

William built a single-storey workshop at the rear of the basement, extending into the garden; he used the workshop to conduct experiments and to construct his lenses, and it still contains Herschel's treadle lathe.<ref name="imagesofengland" /> The workshop, adjacent to the kitchen, was where William and Alexander made their telescopes. It contains a replica furnace, and a replica of William's machine for polishing lenses, the original of which is in the Science Museum, London;<ref name="HMA_workshop" /> the replica polishing machine has been designed to be handled,<ref name="HMA_access" /> and a touchscreen computer demonstrates the tools and machinery in the workshop.<ref name="HMA_visitorfacilities" />

File:William Herschel Museum - replica mirror polisher.jpg
Replica of William's mirror-polisher in his workshop

The Caroline Lucretia Gallery, named after Caroline Herschel, was added to the museum in 2011. The gallery was designed by Hetreed Ross Architects,<ref name="BBCNews1Dec14" /> and is of a modern design,<ref name="HMA_gallery" /> with floor-to-ceiling glazing, overhanging eaves and a flat<ref name="culture24_31Jan11" /> stainless steel stressed skin roof,<ref name="hetreedross" /> with the solid walls constructed of Bath Stone Ashlar to match the rest of the building.<ref name="markmacdonnell" /> Inside, two walls are the former outer walls of the kitchen and workshop, and the other two consist of display panels. The limestone slab floor is insulated and heated. It cost £80,000, which was raised via a 2-year funding campaign, after planning permission was approved in 2008.<ref name="culture24_31Jan11" /> It received a prize for building and design from the Bath and North East Somerset Building Control Department.<ref name="HMA_gallery" />

The gallery expanded the available space at the museum,<ref name="HMA_gallery" /> and is used for temporary exhibitions.<ref name="BBCNews1Dec14" /> In August–December 2013 the exhibition was on the art and science of light in the 18th century, entitled "Making light of it",<ref name="bathpreservation_exhibition" /> and in April–December 2014 it was on Caroline Herschel, entitled "Being Caroline - A Second Self".<ref name="HMA_exhibitions" /> In August–December 2015 the temporary exhibit was "Waterloo and The March of Science".<ref name="bath_20Aug15" />

Auditorium

The "Star Vault Astronomy auditorium",<ref name="HMA_visitorfacilities" /> opened in 2003,<ref name="HMA_remembers" /> shows a short film about the Herschels, their life living at 19 New King Street, and modern space exploration, narrated by Patrick Moore.<ref name="HMA_visitorfacilities" /><ref name="HMA_starvault" />

Garden

File:William Herschel Museum - Herschel statue in garden.jpg
The sculpture of William and Caroline in the garden

The garden has been restored in the style of a formal Georgian town garden, with cypress trees and a quince arbour, as well as native medicinal and culinary plants that would have been grown in 1794.<ref name="gardenvisit" />

A Template:Convert diameter powder-coated steel seed head by Ruth Moilliet represents Uranus's position in the 2005 Spaced Out model of the Solar System, which spanned the UK with the Sun at Jodrell Bank Observatory.<ref name="bathPACseedhead" /><ref name="BBCNews10Mar05" /><ref name="HMA_garden" />

A Template:Convert sculpture of William and Caroline, named Star Gazers by Vivien Moudell, sits against the garden wall close to the entrance to the workshop. Made of Bath stone and slate, it was unveiled in 1988 by Patrick Moore and Rod Davies. It shows William dressed in a wig, jacket and ruffled shirt, behind Caroline, in a bonnet and holding a quill pen, looking at a piece of paper showing a drawing of the solar system with Uranus at the centre. An octagonal slate panel was set above their heads, engraved with planetary orbits.<ref name="HMA_remembers" /><ref name="HMA_garden" /><ref name="bathPACstargazers" />

The garden also contains a sundial at the location where William may have placed his telescope.<ref name="HMA_garden" />

Music Room

The Music Room was used by William to teach pupils how to play music. It contains a single action pedal harp, commissioned by Mademoiselle Henriette Peyrot-Magenest in 1795,<ref name="culture24_20Aug12" /> made by George Cousineau and son Jacques-Georges Cousineau,<ref name="HMA_musicroom" /> and purchased by the museum in 2012. The harp is carved and decorated in Rococo style with scrolling leaves, flowers and garlands, and a soundboard decorated with classical arabesques.<ref name="culture24_20Aug12" />

The music room also contains a modern sculpture of an orrery, created in 2009 and based on the 18th-century brass drum orrery held at the museum.<ref name="bathPACorrery" />

Collections

File:William Herschel Museum - Caroline Herschel's dress.jpg
Caroline's dress on display at the museum

The museum holds a small dress worn by Caroline when she was around 50. It is made from white muslin with a blue spot and dates from the last years of the 18th century.<ref name="HMA_herschels" /> The museum also has a Thomas Butterfield sundial, dating from c.1690, made of silver in the shape of a bird, with names of European cities and their latitudes on the back; a Copernican Armillary sphere by George Delamarche, made of brass, wood and paper, and with Herschel's name and Uranus on one outer ring;<ref name="HMA_news" /> a Cometarium showing the motion of a comet on its path around the Sun, on loan from the Science Museum;<ref name="cometarium" /> and paintings of Elizabeth Baldwin by Robert Muller (pre-1798)<ref name="yourpaintings_baldwin" /> and John Herschel (1892).<ref name="yourpaintings_herschel" />

A scale model of the 40-foot telescope, as well as an early photo of it that is framed in wood from the telescope, is on display at the museum.<ref name="HMA_telescopes" /> Additionally, several rare books, including Caroline's visitor book, can be viewed on a computer.<ref name="HMA_visitorfacilities" />

In 2015 it was announced that the museum will house Patrick Moore's collection of objects related to William Herschel.<ref name="Telegraph_10Oct15" />

References

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