
Ferdinand Hassler
'Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler' (
1770–
1843) was born in
Aarau,
Switzerland. He was employed on the trigonometrical survey of
Switzerland before he emigrated to the
United States in
1805. He was acting professor of mathematics at
West Point from
1807 to
1810. He was employed by the
federal government of the United States by
1811 in an effort to begin a Coast Survey. An
Act of Congress on
February 10,
1807 had appropriated $50,000 to pay for the beginning of the work. Afterward, he became the first superintendent of the
United States Coast Survey in
1816. Two years later, the the
United States Congress passed the control of the Coast Survey to the army, principally, where it lingered until
1832.
Hassler became the head of the Bureau of Weights and Measures in the
Treasury Department where he carried out the early work of establishing the standards of weights and measures in the
United States, with the involvement of fellow Swiss immigrant
Albert Gallatin, who in
1827 brought from
Europe a troy pound of brass which was made the standard of mass in
1828. Besides several textbooks of science, Hassler produced a publication in
1828 titled ''System of the Universe'' in two volumes.
Hassler undertook a complete investigation of the national standards in
1830. Perhaps the most meaningful national standard to be adopted in
1830 was the gallon at 231 cubic inches. In the United States, however, each State retained the rights to employ its own set of standards of weights and measures. Since
1830, a great deal of national legislation has been enacted, with much of it addressing the acceptance or the rejection of the metric system. The United States Bureau of Standards was created by an
Act of Congress on
March 3,
1901.
As mentioned above, the Coast Survey languished for 14 years from
1818 to
1832. In
1823,
1824, and
1825, the
Navy Department tried to establish a hydrographic office. Also, the Survey was a source of discussions in Congress, which finally passed a law on
July 10,
1832 that resulted in the removal of the Survey away from the army and the navy. Hassler was appointed the superintendent of the Survey on
August 9,
1832, and he served in that post until
November 20,
1843. The steamship owned by the Coast Survey was named the ''
Hassler''.
Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler's granddaugter, Mary Caroline Hassler Newcomb, married the much noted astronomer and mathematician
Simon Newcomb. Simon and Mary Caroline Hassler Newcomb were themselves the grandparents of the also much noted professor of mathematics,
Hassler Whitney.
See also
★
Johann Georg Tralles
★
Polyconic projection
External links
★
Hassler's biography at
USMA Department of Mathematical Sciences
★
Hassler's Dilemma from ''Discover Lewis and Clarc''
★
Ferdinand Hassler at surveyhistory.org
★
History of NOAA Ocean Exploration: Early years