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Interview With Author - Susan P. Baker

Filed under: Interview With Authors — Susan Hilliard at 2:13 pm on Saturday, February 4, 2006

Susan P. Baker - AuthorName: Susan P. Baker
Website: www.susanpbaker.com
Contact: snana456@austin.rr.com

Questions:

Q: Where are you originally from?
A: I was born in Houston, TX, moved to Galveston, TX when I was 4. Lived several other places after I was grown but moved back to Galveston in 1974 and lived there until I moved to the TX hill country in the winter of 2003.

Q: Can you tell us your latest book news?
A: My newest mystery novel will be released by Five Star Mysteries, a division of Thomson Gale in October 2006. It’s entitled, The Sweet Scent of Murder, A Mavis Davis Mystery. It’s the sequel to My First Murder which was published by St. Martin’s Press in 1989. My current release is Death of a Prince.
(Read on …)

Maria Mitchell (1818-1889), astronomer

Filed under: Places Women Made History — Susan Hilliard at 8:41 pm on Thursday, February 2, 2006

Information courtesy of National Park Service - Women Who Made History Section

Maria Mitchell - Astronomer - Property of the National Park ServiceMaria Mitchell, astronomer, professor and the first woman elected to both the Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society, was born on Nantucket in 1818. The childhood home of Maria Mitchell defines Mitchell’s origins and the development of her independence in the unique atmosphere of a 19th-century whaling town, where for most of the year, the men were at sea. Her early interest in science and the stars came from her father who, besides being a bank officer, rated chronometers for use by the Nantucket whaling fleet in celestial navigation. When Mitchell was 12, she assisted her father in recording the time of an eclipse, and at the age of 17, she created her own school for girls, training them in science and mathematics. In 1838, she became the librarian at the Nantucket Athenaeum, where she gained exposure to great literary and scientific personages. She spent her evenings in an observatory her father had built on the roof of the Pacific Bank, his employer’s firm. When, on October 1, 1847, Mitchell telescopically sighted a comet using her father’s two-inch telescope in the rooftop observatory, she became the first person to record a comet sighting in America. Her quiet life on Nantucket immediately changed. She received international fame, she was elected to prestigious academic organizations and she became the first woman to see the Vatican observatory. Maria Mitchell - Astronomer - Property of the National Park ServiceIn 1860, she and her father moved to Lynn, New York, where Matthew Vassar asked her to become a professor at his new college for women. Today, the Nantucket Maria Mitchell Association preserves the Maria Mitchell house as a museum that contains many of Mitchell family heirlooms. A domed observatory and a library and research center for young scientists was added to the house after her death.

The Maria Mitchell House, a National Historic Landmark, is located at One Vestal St. on Nantucket Island, MA. The property is open to the public 10am-4pm Tue-Sat, June 15-Sept. 1. For more information, call 508-228-2896, or click here.