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  1. William Henry Pickering (February 15, 1858 – January 16, 1938) was an American astronomer. Pickering constructed and established several observatories or astronomical observation stations, notably including Percival Lowell's Flagstaff Observatory.

  2. Jul 19, 1998 · William Henry Pickering (born Feb. 15, 1858, Boston—died Jan. 17, 1938, Mandeville, Jam.) was a U.S. astronomer who discovered Phoebe, the ninth satellite of Saturn. In 1891 Pickering joined his brother Edward in establishing the Boyden station of the Harvard Observatory at Arequipa, Peru.

  3. May 23, 2018 · Pickering was a pioneer in dry-plate celestial photography, and the Harvard photographic sky survey was undertaken at his suggestion. He took some of the earliest photographs of Mars (1888), and the lunar photographs he obtained in Jamaica (1900) were long the finest and most complete.

  4. William Henry Pickering. (1858—1938) Quick Reference. (1858–1938) Americanastronomer, younger brother of E. C. Pickering. He assisted P. Lowell in establishing the Flagstaff Observatory, but later disagreed with Lowell's exotic theories about life on Mars.

  5. Apr 26, 2007 · William Pickering was behind some of the finest moments in the early exploration of the Solar System, from the first US satellite to orbit Earth to missions to the Moon, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and beyond.

  6. Dec 24, 2016 · William Pickering influenced the selection of mountaintop sites for astronomical observatories in the Western Hemisphere, pioneered the application of photography to astronomy, and was a noted popularizer of the discipline.

  7. Feb 15, 2023 · William Henry Pickering, an American astronomer, was born Feb. 15, 1858, in Boston. Pickering was the younger brother of Edward Pickering, director of the Harvard College Observatory for 42 years, beginning in 1877. William attended MIT and began teaching physics at Harvard in 1887.