100 Years of Public Evening Lectures

Lavinia Steward made her historic contribution of $60,000 to the University of Arizona “…TO BUY TELESCOPE OF HUGE SIZE,” on October 18, 1916. However, the United States entry into World War I delayed the construction of the Steward Telescope and its 36-inch mirror. That original Steward Telescope was finally used for the first time on July 17, 1922. It would take another 9 months before the Steward Observatory and Telescope would be formally and officially dedicated on April 23, 1923.
The Telescope, however, was ready to be used before the official dedication date and Prof. Andrew Ellicott Douglass, the first Director of Steward Observatory, did not leave the telescope idle. He invited members of the campus and Tucson communities to view the wonders of the night sky through this new, large (for the time) telescope. The date was September 28, 1922, and the Steward Observatory Public Evenings were born.
We are thrilled to able to celebrate 100 years of presenting lectures on astronomy and telescope viewing to the public by offering a special Public Evening Lecture on the 100th Anniversary of the very first Steward Public Evening.
Lecture Information - Fall 2022 - Mark Your Calendars!
Monday, September 19
100 Years of Steward Observatory
Dr. Thomas Fleming and Dr. Buell Jannuzi, Steward Observatory
Wednesday, September 28 - Celebrating 100 Years!
The Webb Telescope: Starting Steward Observatory's Next 100 Years
Dr. Marcia Rieke, Regents Professor, Dr. Elizabeth Roemer Endowed Chair, Steward Observatory
Monday, October 3
Imaging Black Holes with the Event Horizon Telescope
Dr. Daniel Marone, Steward Observatory
Monday October 17
Floating Above Antarctica: The GUSTO Mission
Dr. Christopher Walker, Steward Observatory
Location: Steward Observatory N210
Doors open at 7:00 pm and Lectures begin at 7:30 pm MST
Nearest parking 2nd Street or Cherry Ave Garage
Telescope viewing follows at 8:30 PM - Weather Permitting
In-Person or Watch via NEW ZOOM link https://arizona.zoom.us/j/4470189357