(Redirected from Carnegie Institution):''This article is about a scientific institution. For the center of higher learning which is now a part of
Carnegie Mellon University, refer to
Carnegie Institute of Technology. For the Carnegie Institute which operates the
Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, see that article.
The 'Carnegie Institution of Washington' (CIW) is a
foundation established by
Andrew Carnegie in
1902 to support scientific research. Its first president was
Daniel Coit Gilman, founder of
Johns Hopkins Medical School. Today the CIW supports science in six main areas:
plant molecular biology at the Department of Plant Biology (Stanford, CA),
developmental biology at the Department of Embryology (Baltimore, MD), global ecology at the Department of Global Ecology (Stanford, CA),
Earth science at the Geophysical Laboratory (Washington, DC);
planetary sciences at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism (Washington, DC), and
astronomy (at the ''Observatories of the Carnegie Institution of Washington'' (OCIW; Pasadena, CA and Las Campanas, Chile)).
"It is proposed to found in the city of Washington, an institution which...shall in the broadest and most liberal manner encourage investigation, research, and discovery [and] show the application of knowledge to the improvement of mankind..."
—Andrew Carnegie, January 28, 1902
One of the first grant recipients was
George Hale in
1904. Hale needed backing for the construction of a telescope built around a large mirror blank that he had received as a gift from his father. The OCIW funded the completion of the 60-inch Hale Telescope on
Mount Wilson, in the
San Gabriel Mountains above
Pasadena, California. Immediately work began on designing the even larger Hooker Telescope (100-inch), completed in
1917. Two solar telescopes were also constructed with Carnegie support and together they form the
Mount Wilson Observatory, still chiefly supported by the Carnegie Institution after 100 years. The OCIW went on to help Hale design and build the 200-inch telescope of the
Palomar Observatory (construction was mostly paid for by a Rockefeller grant). The OCIW's chief observatory is now the
Las Campanas Observatory in
Chile, where two identical
6.5 meter Magellan telescopes operate. OCIW is the lead institution in the consortium building the
Giant Magellan Telescope, which will be made up seven mirrors each 8.4 meters in diameter for a total telescope diameter of 25.4 metres (83 feet). The telescope is expected to have over four times the light-gathering ability of existing instruments.
In
1920 the
Eugenics Record Office in
Cold Spring Harbor, New York was merged with the Station for Experimental Evolution to become the CIW's ''Department of Genetics''. The CIW funded that laboratory until
1939. It closed in
1944 and its records were retained in a university library. The CIW continues its support for genetic research, and among its notable grantees in that field are
Nobel laureates Barbara McClintock,
Alfred Hershey and
Andrew Fire.
The Institution supported
archaeology in the
Yucatán Peninsula in the
1910s through the
1930s, including extensive excavations (under Carnegie associate and
Mayanist scholar
Sylvanus G. Morley) of
Chichen Itza ,
Copán, and other sites of the
pre-Columbian Maya civilization.
Presidents of the CIW
★
Daniel Coit Gilman (1902-1904)
★
Robert S. Woodward (1904-1920)
★
John C. Merriam (1921-1938)
★
Vannevar Bush (1939-1955)
★
Caryl P. Haskins (1956–1971)
★
Philip Abelson (1971–1978)
★
James D. Ebert (1978–1987)
★
Edward E. David, Jr. (Acting President, 1987–1988)
★
Maxine F. Singer (1989-2002)
★
Michael E. Gellert (Acting President, Jan.- April 2003)
★
Richard A. Meserve (April 2003-present)
External links
★
Official website