Background
He was born in Grave, Netherlands and spend his youth in Maastricht.
He was born in Grave, Netherlands and spend his youth in Maastricht.
In 1894 he finished a course of ecclesiastical philosophy, then studied astronomy at the University of Leyden.
His doctoral dissertation was on the Horrebow method for determining latitude. By the time he received his doctorate in 1901, he had begun teaching physics and math at the Saint Willebrord College of Katwijk. He was ordained to priesthood in Maastricht, 1903.
From 1906–1910 he served as an assistant at the Vatican Observatory.
Thereafter he joined Saint Ignatius College in Amsterdam, where he taught math and science for the next twenty years. After 1924, he joined the Association of Dutch Amateur Astronomers.
In 1930 he became director of the Vatican Observatory. He was responsible for the modernization of the observatory, as well as its relocation to Castel Gandolfo in 1933.
He died in Rome, Italy.
The crater Stein on the far side of the Moon is named after him.
In 1922 he became a member of the International Astronomical Union Commissions for Variable Stars.