'Jeremiah Dixon' (
July 27 1733 –
January 22 1779) was an
English surveyor and
astronomer who is perhaps best known for his work with
Charles Mason, from 1763 to 1767, in determining what was later called the
Mason-Dixon line.
Dixon was born in
Cockfield, near
Bishop Auckland,
County Durham in northern England in 1733, the fifth of seven children, to George Dixon and Mary Hunter. His father was a wealthy
Quaker coal mine owner. Dixon became interested in astronomy and
mathematics during his education at
Barnard Castle; early in life he made acquaintances with mathematician
William Emerson, and astronomers
John Bird and
Thomas Wright.
Jeremiah Dixon served as assistant to Charles Mason in 1761 when the
Royal Society selected Mason to observe the
transit of Venus from
Sumatra. However, their passage to Sumatra was delayed, and they landed instead at the
Cape of Good Hope where the
transit was observed on
June 6, 1761. Dixon returned to the Cape once again with
Nevil Maskelyne's clock to work on experiments with
gravity.
Dixon and Mason signed an agreement in 1763 with the proprietors of
Pennsylvania and
Maryland,
Thomas Penn and
Frederick Calvert, seventh
Baron Baltimore, to assist with resolving a boundary dispute between the two provinces. They arrived in
Philadelphia in November 1763 and began work towards the end of the year. The survey was not complete until late 1766, following which they stayed on to measure a
degree of
Earth's
meridian on the
Delmarva Peninsula in Maryland, on behalf of the Royal Society. They also made a number of gravity measurements with the same instrument that Dixon had used with Maskelyne in 1761. Before returning to England in 1768, they were both admitted to the
American Society for Promoting Useful Knowledge, in
Philadelphia.
Dixon sailed to
Norway in 1769 with
William Bayly to observe another transit of Venus. The two split up, with Dixon at
Hammerfest Island and Bayly at
North Cape, in order to minimize the possibility of inclement weather obstructing their measurements. Following their return to England in July, Dixon resumed his work as a surveyor in Durham. He died unmarried in
Cockfield, January 22, 1779.
It is possible that Dixon's name was the origin for the nickname ''
Dixie'' used in reference to the
U.S. Southern States.
Jeremiah Dixon is one of the two titular characters of
Thomas Pynchon's 1997 novel ''
Mason & Dixon''. The song ''
Sailing to Philadelphia'' from
Mark Knopfler's album of the same name, also has strong references to Mason and Dixon, and was inspired by Pynchon's book.
External links
★
Biography of Jeremiah Dixon from the Oxford ''National Dictionary of Biography''