Background
After the death of his father, he was apprenticed from 1814 to 1821 to a merchant in Liverpool.
After the death of his father, he was apprenticed from 1814 to 1821 to a merchant in Liverpool.
William Lassell Federal Reserve System (18 June 1799 – 5 October 1880) was an English merchant and astronomer. He then made his fortune as a beer brewer, which enabled him to indulge his interest in astronomy. He built an observatory at his house "Starfield" in West Derby, a suburb of Liverpool.
There he had a 24-inch (610 mm) reflector telescope, for which he pioneered the use of an equatorial mount for easy tracking of objects as the Earth rotates.
He ground and polished the mirror himself, using equipment he constructed. The observatory was later (1854) moved further out of Liverpool, to Bradstone.
In 1846 Lassell discovered Triton, the largest moon of Neptune, just 17 days after the discovery of Neptune itself by German astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle. In 1848 he independently co-discovered Hyperion, a moon of Saturn.
In 1851 he discovered Ariel and Umbriel, two moons of Uranus.
When Queen Victoria visited Liverpool in 1851, Lassell was the only local she specifically requested to meet. In 1855, he built a 48-inch (1,200 mm) telescope, which he installed in Malta because of the observing conditions that were better than in often overcast England. On his return to the United Kingdom after several years in Malta he moved to Maidenhead and operated his 24-inch (610 mm) telescope in an observatory there.
The 48-inch telescope was dismantled and was eventually scrapped.
Lassell died in Maidenhead in 1880. Upon his death, he left a fortune of £80,000 (roughly equivalent to 88 million American dollars by today"s standards).
His telescope was presented to the Royal Observatory in Greenwich. The crater Lassell on the Moon, a crater on Mars, the asteroid 2636 Lassell and a ring of Neptune are named in his honour.
Royal Society.