HISTORY
The Jeremiah Horrocks Observatory was built by Preston council
thanks to the persuasive efforts of George James Gibbs, the curator of the delapidated
Deepdale Observatory and President of the Preston Scientific Society. It was opened
in timely style on June 29th 1927 the day of a total solar eclipse. The new observatory
lay in the path of totality and some 30,000 people thronged on Moor Park to witness the
event.
The Main instrument in the observatory is an 8 inch Thomas Cooke
Refractor. This telescope was originally aquired by Gibbs for the Deepdale Observatory in
1912. It was purchased by Preston Counccil for £200 from the widow of a wealthy mill
owner in Clitheroe. It is thought that the telescope was built by Thomas Cooke in 1867.
George J Gibbs died of a stroke on February 22nd 1947 and the
council finally appointed Emeritus Professor Vinicio Barocas as Director in July 1949
until his retirement in August 1979. During his office Professor Barocas founded the
Wilfred Hall Observatory at Alston near Preston which is now the main teaching centre for
Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Central Lancashire.
Not forgetting the man the Observatory is named after, Jeremiah
Horrocks. He was born in 1619 in Toxteth, Liverpool. Attended Cambridge University as a
SIZAR (poor Scholar) from the age of 13 till 17 when he left without taking a degree. He
went to live in Carr House, Much Hoole near Preston where it is thought he taught children
and was a lay preacher or bible reader in St. Michael's. Here he practised astronomy in
his spare time and working on Keplers predictions for the plant Venus calculated a transit
of Venus across the Sun for the 24th of November 1639. This he observed and got William
Crabtree of Salford to confirm it and thus entered the history books before his mysterious
death at the age of 22 on January 3rd 1641.