Lee, Oliver Justin, 1881-1964

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Lee, Oliver Justin, 1881-1964

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Lee, Oliver Justin, 1881-1964

Lee, Oliver.

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Lee, Oliver.

Lee, Oliver Justin

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Lee, Oliver Justin

Lee, Oliver J. 1881-1964

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Lee, Oliver J. 1881-1964 (Oliver Justin),

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Biographical History

Oliver Justin Lee was born December 16, 1881 in Montevideo, Minnesota. In 1901 he graduated from Augsburg Seminary. He received an AB degree from University of Minnesota in 1907, and a MA (1911) and PhD (1913) from the University of Chicago. From 1910 to 1926 he was an instructor, assistant astronomer and lecturer at Yerkes Observatory, Williams Bay, Wisconsin.

Lee came to Northwestern University in 1928 as an assistant astronomer at the Dearborn Observatory. He became Chair of the Department of Astronomy in 1929, and served as Director of the Dearborn Observatory from 1931 until his retirement in 1947.

Lee published many articles describing his discoveries of stellar parallaxes and solar eclipses. One of his outstanding achievements was the classification and charting of 44,000 stars of the faint-red type in the skies of the northern hemisphere. He also studied the planetoid Eros in an effort to measure the mass of the moon and the distance from the sun to the earth. In 1947 he became Professor Emeritus at Northwestern and moved to Santa Cruz, California. There he led an active life substitute teaching and writing until his death on January 13, 1964.

When a reporter once asked Lee, “Of what use are all those years of research to earthlings?” he replied “that question is like asking a child, “Of what worth is a tree?” He has also said that “Astronomers are the timekeepers of the world, indispensable in navigation and fundamental in the survey of large areas. Astronomy is a science of perennial interest to humans from childhood to old age.” His philosophic curiosity and sense of responsibility helped him in his search for the elements to unify nature and society.

Many articles of Lee's were published in Astrophysical Journal, Astronomical Journal and many other scientific journals. He was a member of the Committee on Solar Physics, and a fellow of both the American Association for Advancement of Science and Royal Astronomical Society in London.

After his retirement Lee wrote a popular book on astronomy, Measuring our Universe (1949), which enjoyed wide acclaim.

From the guide to the Oliver J. Lee (1881-1964) Papers, 1930-1964, (Northwestern University Archives)

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https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86860106

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