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Hamilton Lanphere Smith

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Name
  
Hamilton Smith

Role
  
Scientist


Died
  
1903

Education
  
Yale University

Hamilton Lanphere Smith wwwhwsedualumniimageshlsmithjpg

Hamilton Lanphere Smith (November 5, 1819 – 1903) was an American scientist, photographer, and astronomer.

Hamilton Lanphere Smith Sir Hamilton Lanphere Smith

He was born in New London, Connecticut and graduated from Yale in 1839, where he constructed the largest telescope in the country at the time in 1838.

Hamilton Lanphere Smith Hamilton Lanphere Smith at Historic Camera History Librarium

In 1848 Smith wrote "The World", one of the first science textbooks written in America. Smith is best known for patenting the tintype photographic process, which popularized photography in America. He patented the great American tintype on February 19, 1856.

Between 1853 and 1868 he was Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy at Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, and later taught at Hobart College in New York. He also created a system for describing microscopic algae that is still in use today.

References

Hamilton Lanphere Smith Wikipedia