On this day … 11 June 1864

The Preston Guardian carried a long obituary and tribute to Moses Holden, the astronomer, who had died aged 87. Holden was born in Bolton in 1777, moving to Preston with his parents when he was five. He began work as a handloom weaver, then worked in a foundry where he was disabled by an accident, after which he worked as a landscape gardener. All the time he was developing his knowledge of astronomy, a subject that had fascinated him from an early age.

Moses Holden
Moses Holden

He was among that band of self-taught artisans in Preston who, despite their lack of formal schooling and the long hours they worked, nevertheless mastered their chosen subjects.

Holden built up an extensive library of books on astronomy, which he was assisted to buy by the townโ€™s mill owners, including Samuel Horrocks, who became his patrons. In return, Holden taught basic astronomy to the daughters of Samuel Horrocks.

His knowledge and love of his subject he soon began to share with the public, beginning to lecture in the early years of the nineteenth century. These lectures became even more popular when he designed his โ€˜grand orreryโ€™, a mechanical model of the social system, for use in those lectures, which enabled him to demonstrate the orbits of the planets.

The orrery was given its first public outing at one of his lectures at Prestonโ€™s Theatre Royal in 1815. This was so successful that Holden established himself on the national lecture circuit, taking his orrery on tour round the country for the next eleven years.

By then, he had turned his hand to publishing, producing an astronomical atlas in 1818, the final copies of the last of several editions were offered for sale shortly after his death. He also published an annual almanac for a number of years.

When the Institution for the Diffusion of Knowledge opened in Cannon Street Moses Holden became one of the lecturers there. One of the best, according to John Tyndall, the pioneer of climate science, who attended many of the lectures at the institution while he was working in Preston.

Holden settled back in Preston in 1828, with his wife Isabella, sons William Archimedes Holden and John Horatio Holden, and daughter, Anna Leonora Holden. Preston made him a freeman of the borough in 1834.

When Anna Leonora died at the family home in Jordan Street in 1881, Holdenโ€™s grand orrery was among her effects that were sold.

Holden excelled in the manufacture of optical instruments, including microscopes and a telescope that he made for the vicar of Preston, the Rev William Carus Wilson. The Rev Wilson was very pleased to discover it was better, and cheaper, than one he had recently purchased from one of the leading makers of telescopes in London.


Source
Anita McConnellโ€™s article (https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/13494) in the Dictionary of National Biography, which can be accessed for free on line by anyone with a Lancashire Library card. One of the key sources for that article is Steve Halliwellโ€™s biography Moses Holden 1777-1864, now in its second edition. Sadly, the book is not on line and there are no copies in local libraries. What is on line is Steveโ€™s encyclopaedic website that contains histories of hundreds of Preston pubs: http://pubsinpreston.blogspot.com/

And Steve will be sharing his encyclopaedic and entertaining knowledge of those pubs on a guided walk round the town on 28 June from 7pm-8.30pm, one of the several events of the Preston Historical Society’s diamond jubilee. For more information and to book: http://www.prestonhistoricalsociety.org.uk/future-events.html


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