1818-1846
BIRTHPARENTSHOME SURROUNDINGS AND EARLY LIFE
Maria Mitchell was born on the island
of Nantucket, Mass., Au, 1818. She was the
third child of William and Lydia [Coleman] Mitchell.
Her ancestors, on both sides, were
Quakers for many generations; and it was in consequence
of the intolerance of the early Puritans that these
ancestors had been obliged to flee from the State of
Massachusetts, and to settle upon this island, which,
at that time, belonged to the State of New York.
For many years the Quakers, or Friends,
as they called themselves, formed much the larger
part of the inhabitants of Nantucket, and thus were
enabled to crystallize, as it were, their own ideas
of what family and social life should be; and although
in course of time many “world’s people”
swooped down and helped to swell the number of islanders,
they still continued to hold their own methods, and
to bring up their children in accordance with their
own conceptions of “Divine light.”
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell were married
during the war of 1812; the former lacking one week
of being twenty-one years old, and the latter being
a few months over twenty.
The people of Nantucket by their situation
endured many hardships during this period; their ships
were upon the sea a prey to privateers, and communication
with the mainland was exposed to the same danger, so
that it was difficult to obtain such necessaries of
life as the island could not furnish. There were
still to be seen, a few years ago, the marks left
on the moors, where fields of corn and potatoes had
been planted in that trying time.
So the young couple began their housekeeping
in a very simple way. Mr. Mitchell used to describe
it as being very delightful; it was noticed that Mrs.
Mitchell never expressed herself on the subject,it
was she, probably, who had the planning to do, to
make a little money go a great way, and to have everything
smooth and serene when her husband came home.
Mrs. Mitchell was a woman of strong
character, very dignified, honest almost to an extreme,
and perfectly self-controlled where control was necessary.
She possessed very strong affections, but her self-control
was such that she was undemonstrative.
She kept a close watch over her children,
was clearheaded, knew their every fault and every
merit, and was an indefatigable worker. It was
she who looked out for the education of the children
and saw what their capacities were.
Mr. Mitchell was a man of great suavity
and gentleness; if left to himself he would never
have denied a single request made to him by one of
his children. His first impulse was to gratify
every desire of their hearts, and if it had not been
for the clear head of the mother, who took care that
the household should be managed wisely and economically,
the results might have been disastrous. The father
had wisdom enough to perceive this, and when a child
came to him, and in a very pathetic and winning way
proffered some request for an unusual indulgence, he
generally replied, “Yes, if mother thinks best.”
Mr. Mitchell was very fond of bright
colors; as they were excluded from the dress of Friends,
he indulged himself wherever it was possible.
If he were buying books, and there was a variety of
binding, he always chose the copies with red covers.
Even the wooden framework of the reflecting telescope
which he used was painted a brilliant red. He
liked a gay carpet on the floor, and the walls of
the family sitting-room in the house on Vestal street
were covered with paper resplendent with bunches of
pink roses. Suspended by a cord from the ceiling
in the centre of this room was a glass ball, filled
with water, used by Mr. Mitchell in his experiments
on polarization of light, flashing its dancing rainbows
about the room.
At the back of this house was a little
garden, full of gay flowers: so that if the garb
of the young Mitchells was rather sombre, the setting
was bright and cheerful, and the life in the home was
healthy and wide-awake. When the hilarity became
excessive the mother would put in her little check,
from time to time, and the father would try to look
as he ought to, but he evidently enjoyed the whole.
As Mr. Mitchell was kind and indulgent
to his children, so he was the sympathetic friend
and counsellor of many in trouble who came to him for
help or advice. As he took his daily walk to the
little farm about a mile out of town, where, for an
hour or two he enjoyed being a farmer, the people
would come to their doors to speak to him as he passed,
and the little children would run up to him to be
patted on the head.
He treated animals in the same way.
He generally kept a horse. His children complained
that although the horse was good when it was bought,
yet as Mr. Mitchell never allowed it to be struck with
a whip, nor urged to go at other than a very gentle
trot, the horse became thoroughly demoralized, and
was no more fit to drive than an old cow!
There was everything in the home which
could amuse and instruct children. The eldest
daughter was very handy at all sorts of entertaining
occupations; she had a delicate sense of the artistic,
and was quite skilful with her pencil.
The present kindergarten system in
its practice is almost identical with the home as
it appeared in the first half of this century, among
enlightened people. There is hardly any kind of
handiwork done in the kindergarten that was not done
in the Mitchell family, and in other families of their
acquaintance. The girls learned to sew and cook,
just as they learned to read,as a matter
of habit rather than of instruction. They learned
how to make their own clothes, by making their dolls’
clothes,and the dolls themselves were frequently
home-made, the eldest sister painting the faces much
more prettily than those obtained at the shops; and
there was a great delight in gratifying the fancy,
by dressing the dolls, not in Quaker garb, but in
all of the most brilliant colors and stylish shapes
worn by the ultra-fashionable.
There were always plenty of books,
and besides those in the house there was the Atheneum
Library, which, although not a free library, was very
inexpensive to the shareholders.
There was another very striking difference
between that epoch and the present. The children
of that day were taught to value a book and to take
excellent care of it; as an instance it may be mentioned
that one copy of Colburn’s “Algebra”
was used by eight children in the Mitchell family,
one after the other. The eldest daughter’s
name was written on the inside of the cover; seven
more names followed in the order of their ages, as
the book descended.
With regard to their reading, the
mother examined every book that came into the house.
Of course there were not so many books published then
as now, and the same books were read over and over.
Miss Edgeworth’s stories became part of their
very lives, and Young’s “Night Thoughts,”
and the poems of Cowper and Bloomfield were conspicuous
objects on the bookshelves of most houses in those
days. Mr. Mitchell was very apt, while observing
the heavens in the evening, to quote from one or the
other of these poets, or from the Bible. “An
undevout astronomer is mad” was one of his favorite
quotations.
Among the poems which Maria learned
in her childhood, and which was repeatedly upon her
lips all through her life, was, “The spacious
firmament on high.” In her latter years
if she had a sudden fright which threatened to take
away her senses she would test her mental condition
by repeating that poem; it is needless to say that
she always remembered it, and her nerves instantly
relapsed into their natural condition.
The lives of Maria Mitchell and her
numerous brothers and sisters were passed in simplicity
and with an entire absence of anything exciting or
abnormal.
The education of their children is
enjoined upon the parents by the “Discipline,”
and in those days at least the parents did not give
up all the responsibility in that line to the teachers.
In Maria Mitchell’s childhood the children of
a family sat around the table in the evenings and
studied their lessons for the next day,the
parents or the older children assisting the younger
if the lessons were too difficult. The children
attended school five days in the week,six
hours in the day,and their only vacation
was four weeks in the summer, generally in August.
The idea that children over-studied
and injured their health was never promulgated in
that family, nor indeed in that community; it seems
to be a notion of the present half-century.
Maria’s first teacher was a
lady for whom she always felt the warmest affection,
and in her diary, written in her later years, occurs
this allusion to her:
“I count in my life, outside
of family relatives, three aids given me on my journey;
they are prominent to me: the woman who first
made the study-book charming; the man who sent me
the first hundred dollars I ever saw, to buy books
with; and another noble woman, through whose efforts
I became the owner of a telescope; and of these, the
first was the greatest.”
As a little girl, Maria was not a
brilliant scholar; she was shy and slow; but later,
under her father’s tuition, she developed very
rapidly.
After the close of the war of 1812,
when business was resumed and the town restored to
its normal prosperity, Mr. Mitchell taught school,at
first as master of a public school, and afterwards
in a private school of his own. Maria attended
both of these schools.
Mr. Mitchell’s pupils speak
of him as a most inspiring teacher, and he always
spoke of his experiences in that capacity as very happy.
When her father gave up teaching,
Maria was put under the instruction of Mr. Cyrus Peirce,
afterwards principal of the first normal school started
in the United States.
Mr. Peirce took a great interest in
Maria, especially in developing her taste for mathematical
study, for which she early showed a remarkable talent.
The books which she studied at the
age of seventeen, as we know by the date of the notes,
were Bridge’s “Conic Sections,” Hutton’s
“Mathematics,” and Bowditch’s “Navigator.”
At that time Prof. Benjamin Peirce had not published
his “Explanations of the Navigator and Almanac,”
so that Maria was obliged to consult many scientific
books and reports before she could herself construct
the astronomical tables.
Mr. Mitchell, on relinquishing school-teaching,
was appointed cashier of the Pacific Bank; but although
he gave up teaching, he by no means gave up studying
his favorite science, astronomy, and Maria was his
willing helper at all times.
Mr. Mitchell from his early youth
was an enthusiastic student of astronomy, at a time,
too, when very little attention was given to that
study in this country. His evenings, when pleasant,
were spent in observing the heavens, and to the children,
accustomed to seeing such observations going on, the
important study in the world seemed to be astronomy.
One by one, as they became old enough, they were drafted
into the service of counting seconds by the chronometer,
during the observations.
Some of them took an interest in the
thing itself, and others considered it rather stupid
work, but they all drank in so much of this atmosphere,
that if any one had asked a little child in this family,
“Who was the greatest man that ever lived?”
the answer would have come promptly, “Herschel.”
Maria very early learned the use of
the sextant. The chronometers of all the whale
ships were brought to Mr. Mitchell, on their return
from a voyage, to be “rated,” as it was
called. For this purpose he used the sextant,
and the observations were made in the little back yard
of the Vestal-street home.
There was also a clumsy reflecting
telescope made on the Herschelian plan, but of very
great simplicity, which was put up on fine nights in
the same back yard, when the neighbors used to flock
in to look at the moon. Afterwards Mr. Mitchell
bought a small Dolland telescope, which thereafter,
as long as she lived, his daughter used for “sweeping”
purposes.
After their removal to the bank building
there were added to these an “altitude and azimuth
circle,” loaned to Mr. Mitchell by West Point
Academy, and two transit instruments. A little
observatory for the use of the first was placed on
the roof of the bank building, and two small buildings
were erected in the yard for the transits.
There was also a much larger and finer telescope loaned
by the Coast Survey, for which service Mr. Mitchell
made observations.
At the time when Maria Mitchell showed
a decided taste for the study of astronomy there was
no school in the world where she could be taught higher
mathematics and astronomy. Harvard College, at
that time, had no telescope better than the one which
her father was using, and no observatory except the
little octagonal projection to the old mansion in
Cambridge occupied by the late Dr. A.P. Peabody.
However, every one will admit that
no school nor institution is better for a child than
the home, with an enthusiastic parent for a teacher.
At the time of the annular eclipse
of the sun in 1831 the totality was central at Nantucket.
The window was taken out of the parlor on Vestal street,
the telescope, the little Dolland, mounted in front
of it, and with Maria by his side counting the seconds
the father observed the eclipse. Maria was then
twelve years old.
At sixteen Miss Mitchell left Mr.
Peirce’s school as a pupil, but was retained
as assistant teacher; she soon relinquished that position
and opened a private school on Traders’ Lane.
This school too she gave up for the position of librarian
of the Nantucket Atheneum, which office she held for
nearly twenty years.
This library was open only in the
afternoon, and on Saturday evening. The visitors
were comparatively few in the afternoon, so that Miss
Mitchell had ample leisure for study,an
opportunity of which she made the most. Her visitors
in the afternoon were elderly men of leisure, who
enjoyed talking with so bright a girl on their favorite
hobbies. When they talked Miss Mitchell closed
her book and took up her knitting, for she was never
idle. With some of these visitors the friendship
was kept up for years.
It was in this library that she found
La Place’s “Mécanique Celeste,”
translated by her father’s friend, Dr. Bowditch;
she also read the “Theoria Motus,”
of Gauss, in its original Latin form. In her capacity
as librarian Miss Mitchell to a large extent controlled
the reading of the young people in the town.
Many of them on arriving at mature years have expressed
their gratitude for the direction in which their reading
was turned by her advice.
Miss Mitchell always had a special
friendship for young girls and boys. Many of
these intimacies grew out of the acquaintance made
at the library,the young girls made her
their confidante and went to her for sympathy and
advice. The boys, as they grew up, and went away
to sea, perhaps, always remembered her, and made a
point, when they returned in their vacations, of coming
to tell their experiences to such a sympathetic listener.
“April 18, 1855. A young
sailor boy came to see me to-day. It pleases me
to have these lads seek me on their return from their
first voyage, and tell me how much they have learned
about navigation. They always say, with pride,
‘I can take a lunar, Miss Mitchell, and work
it up!’
“This boy I had known only as
a boy, but he has suddenly become a man and seems
to be full of intelligence. He will go once more
as a sailor, he says, and then try for the position
of second mate. He looked as if he had been a
good boy and would make a good man.
“He said that he had been ill
so much that he had been kept out of temptation; but
that the forecastle of a ship was no place for improvement
of mind or morals. He said the captain with whom
he came home asked him if he knew me, because he had
heard of me. I was glad to find that the captain
was a man of intelligence and had been kind to the
boy.”
Miss Mitchell was an inveterate reader.
She devoured books on all subjects. If she saw
that boys were eagerly reading a certain book she
immediately read it; if it were harmless she encouraged
them to read it; if otherwise, she had a convenient
way of losing the book. In November, when
the trustees made their annual examination, the book
appeared upon the shelf, but the next day after it
was again lost. At this time Nantucket was a
thriving, busy town. The whale-fishery was a
very profitable business, and the town was one of the
wealthiest in the State. There was a good deal
of social and literary life. In a Friend’s
family neither music nor dancing was allowed.
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell were by no means
narrow sectarians, but they believed it to be best
to conform to the rules of Friends as laid down in
the “Discipline.” George Fox himself,
the founder of the society, had blown a blast against
music, and especially instrumental music in churches.
It will be remembered that the Methodists have but
recently yielded to the popular demand in this respect,
and have especially favored congregational singing.
It is most likely that George Fox
had no ear for music himself, and thus entailed upon
his followers an obligation from which they are but
now freeing themselves.
There was plenty of singing in the
Mitchell family, and the parents liked it, especially
the father, who, when he sat down in the evening with
the children, would say, “Now sing something.”
But there could be no instruction in singing; the
children sang the songs that they picked up from their
playmates.
However, one of the daughters bought
a piano, and Maria’s purse opened to help that
cause along. It would not have been proper for
Mr. Mitchell to help pay for it, but he took a great
interest in it, nevertheless. So indeed did the
mother, but she took care not to express herself outwardly.
The piano was kept in a neighboring
building not too far off to be heard from the house.
Maria had no ear for music herself, but she was always
to be depended upon to take the lead in an emergency,
so the sisters put their heads together and decided
that the piano must be brought into the house.
When they had made all the preparations the father
and mother were invited to take tea with their married
daughter, who lived in another part of the town and
had been let into the secret.
The piano was duly removed and placed
in an upper room called the “hall,” where
Mr. Mitchell kept the chronometers, where the family
sewing was done, and where the larger part of the books
were kept,a beautiful room, overlooking
“the square,” and a great gathering-place
for all their young friends. When the piano was
put in place, the sisters awaited the coming of the
parents. Maria stationed herself at the foot
of the stairs, ready to meet them as they entered the
front door; another, half-way between, was to give
the signal to a third, who was seated at the piano.
The footsteps were heard at the door, the signal was
given; a lively tune was started, and Maria confronted
the parents as they entered.
“What’s that?” was the exclamation.
“Well,” said Maria, soothingly, “we’ve
had the piano brought over.”
“Why, of all things!” exclaimed the mother.
The father laid down his hat, walked
immediately upstairs, entered the hall, and said,
“Come, daughter, play something lively!”
So that was all.
But that was not all for Mr. Mitchell;
he had broken the rules accepted by the Friends, and
it was necessary for some notice to be taken of it,
so a dear old Friend and neighbor came to deal with
him. Now, to be “under dealings,”
as it is called, was a very serious matter,to
be spoken of only under the breath, in a half whisper.
“I hear that thee has a piano in thy house,”
said the old Friend.
“Yes, my daughters have,” was the reply.
“But it is in thy house,” pursued the
Friend.
“Yes; but my home is my children’s
home as well as mine,” said Mr. Mitchell, “and
I propose that they shall not be obliged to go away
from home for their pleasures. I don’t
play on the piano.”
It so happened that Mr. Mitchell held
the property of the “monthly meeting”
in his hands at the time, and it was a very improper
thing for the accredited agent of the society to be
“under dealings,” as Mr. Mitchell gently
suggested.
This the Friend had not thought of,
and so he said, “Well, William, perhaps we’d
better say no more about it.”
When the father came home after this
interview he could not keep it to himself. If
it had been the mother who was interviewed she would
have kept it a profound secret,because
she would not have liked to have her children get
any fun out of the proceedings of the old Friend.
But Mr. Mitchell told the story in his quiet way,
the daughters enjoyed it, and declared that the piano
was placed upon a firm foothold by this proceeding.
The news spread abroad, and several other young Quaker
girls eagerly seized the occasion to gratify their
musical longings in the same direction.
Few women with scientific tastes had
the advantages which surrounded Miss Mitchell in her
own home. Her father was acquainted with the most
prominent scientific men in the country, and in his
hospitable home at Nantucket she met many persons
of distinction in literature and science.
She cared but little for general society,
and had always to be coaxed to go into company.
Later in life, however, she was much more socially
inclined, and took pleasure in making and receiving
visits. She could neither dance nor sing, but
in all amusements which require quickness and a ready
wit she was very happy. She was very fond of children,
and knew how to amuse them and to take care of them.
As she had half a dozen younger brothers and sisters,
she had ample opportunity to make herself useful.
She was a capital story-teller, and
always had a story on hand to divert a wayward child,
or to soothe the little sister who was lying awake,
and afraid of the dark. She wrote a great many
little stories, printed them with a pen, and bound
them in pretty covers. Most of them were destroyed
long ago.
Maria took her part in all the household
work. She knew how to do everything that has
to be done in a large family where but one servant
is kept, and she did everything thoroughly. If
she swept a room it became clean. She might not
rearrange the different articles of furniture in the
most artistic manner, but everything would be clean,
and there would be nothing left crooked. If a
chair was to be placed, it would be parallel to something;
she was exceedingly sensitive to a line out of the
perpendicular, and could detect the slightest deviation
from that rule. She had also a sensitive eye
in the matter of color, and felt any lack of harmony
in the colors worn by those about her.
Maria was always ready to “bear
the brunt,” and could at any time be coaxed
by the younger children to do the things which they
found difficult or disagreeable.
The two youngest children in the family
were delicate, and the special care of the youngest
sister devolved upon Maria, who knew how to be a good
nurse as well as a good playfellow. She was especially
careful of a timid child; she herself was timid, and,
throughout her life, could never witness a thunder-storm
with any calmness.
On one of those occasions so common
in an American household, when the one servant suddenly
takes her leave, or is summarily dismissed, Miss Mitchell
describes her part of the family duties:
“Oc, 1854. This morning
I arose at six, having been half asleep only for some
hours, fearing that I might not be up in time to get
breakfast, a task which I had volunteered to do the
preceding evening. It was but half light, and
I made a hasty toilet. I made a fire very quickly,
prepared the coffee, baked the graham bread, toasted
white bread, trimmed the solar lamp, and made another
fire in the dining-room before seven o’clock.
“I always thought that servant-girls
had an easy time of it, and I still think so.
I really found an hour too long for all this, and when
I rang the bell at seven for breakfast I had been
waiting fifteen minutes for the clock to strike.
“I went to the Atheneum at 9.30,
and having decided that I would take the Newark and
Cambridge places of the comet, and work them up, I
did so, getting to the three equations before I went
home to dinner at 12.30. I omitted the corrections
of parallax and aberrations, not intending to get
more than a rough approximation. I find to my
sorrow that they do not agree with those from my own
observations. I shall look over them again next
week.
“At noon I ran around and did
up several errands, dined, and was back again at my
post by 1.30. Then I looked over my morning’s
work,I can find no mistake. I have
worn myself thin trying to find out about this comet,
and I know very little now in the matter.
“I saw, in looking over Cooper,
elements of a comet of 1825 which resemble what I
get out for this, from my own observations, but I cannot
rely upon my own.
“I saw also, to-day, in the
‘Monthly Notices,’ a plan for measuring
the light of stars by degrees of illumination,an
idea which had occurred to me long ago, but which
I have not practised.
“October 23. Yesterday
I was again reminded of the remark which Mrs. Stowe
makes about the variety of occupations which an American
woman pursues.
“She says it is this, added
to the cares and anxieties, which keeps them so much
behind the daughters of England in personal beauty.
“And to-day I was amused at
reading that one of her party objected to the introduction
of waxed floors into American housekeeping, because
she could seem to see herself down on her knees doing
the waxing.
“But of yesterday. I was
up before six, made the fire in the kitchen, and made
coffee. Then I set the table in the dining-room,
and made the fire there. Toasted bread and trimmed
lamps. Rang the breakfast bell at seven.
After breakfast, made my bed, and ‘put up’
the room. Then I came down to the Atheneum and
looked over my comet computations till noon.
Before dinner I did some tatting, and made seven button-holes
for K. I dressed and then dined. Came back again
to the Atheneum at 1.30, and looked over another set
of computations, which took me until four o’clock.
I was pretty tired by that time, and rested by reading
‘Cosmos.’ Lizzie E. came in, and I
gossiped for half an hour. I went home to tea,
and that over, I made a loaf of bread. Then I
went up to my room and read through (partly writing)
two exercises in German, which took me thirty-five
minutes.
“It was stormy, and I had no
observing to do, so I sat down to my tatting.
Lizzie E. came in and I took a new lesson in tatting,
so as to make the pearl-edged. I made about half
a yard during the evening. At a little after
nine I went home with Lizzie, and carried a letter
to the post-office. I had kept steadily at work
for sixteen hours when I went to bed.”