Background
Maud Lavon Worcester was born in 1891 in Center Harbor, New Hampshire.
Maud Lavon Worcester was born in 1891 in Center Harbor, New Hampshire.
She attended Girls" Latin School in Boston. She briefly attended Radcliffe College, but left to teach school. She earned a bachelor"s degree from University of California, Los Angeles in 1925, followed by a Doctor of Philosophy from University of California at Berkeley in 1930.
In 1911, her family moved to Pasadena, California. She was working as a journalist in Bisbee, Arizona when she took an interest in astronomy. She returned to California and taught school while taking correspondence courses and summer classes to qualify for admission to the University of California.
Her doctoral work involved calculating the orbits of asteroids.
Maud Worcester Makemson joined the Vassar College faculty as an assistant astronomy professor in 1932. She became a full professor in 1944.
In 1936, she succeeded Caroline Furness as director of the Vassar Observatory. She received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1941 to study Maya astronomy, and was a Fulbright Scholar in Japan and India in 1953-1954.
Makemson"s interest in non-Western astronomical knowledge resulted in several monographs, The Morning Star Rises: An Account of Polynesian Astronomy (1941), The Astronomical Tables of the Maya (1943), The Maya Correlation Problem (1946), and The Book of the Jaguar Priest (1951, a translation of a sixteenth-century text).
Makemson retired from Vassar in 1957, then taught astronomy at University of California, Los Los Angeles She co-authored a textbook, Introduction to Astrodynamics (1960) with Robert M. L. Baker, Junior. In the 1960s, she joined the Applied Research Laboratories of General Dynamics, to consult with National Aeronautics and Space Administration on lunar exploration. She worked on the problem of selenography, developing a way for astronauts standing on the moon to locate themselves precisely.
Among her undergraduate students at Vassar was astronomer Vera Rubin, to whom she gave a celestial globe.