A Brief History of the Cambridge Astronomical Association.
The Association was founded in 1959 by a group of 50 Cambridge residents with a common
interest in astronomy. During the 1960's, regular meetings were held with the occasional
invited speaker and an observatory was built at Wandlebury. The Observatory was a large
wooden hut in which a 6-inch refractor could be rolled out at one end. (Using some reused
rails from a baker's oven) This gave fine views of the planets. The CAA happily pottered
along for a number of years until the late 70's and early 80's when numbers started to
decline. (Was this due to the influence of the dreaded 'box'?)
A familiar Catch-22 situation arose: insufficient members to invite a speaker along and so
with no speakers even fewer members came along. It seemed that the Association was
terminally ill - by April 1986 there were less than twenty members. A committee was formed
in April 1986 to stop the rot - everyone who attended that AGM was made a committee member -
all 8 of them. By that summer, a bi-monthly newsletter, later to be called Capella, made its
appearance. A monthly speaker meeting was arranged for the winter. By the end of 1989,
membership had grown to 50 and continued to increase. It was then that we started our
telescope building activities. First came the Hysom half-meter reflector. This was built
in just three months using several construction evenings, which became known as Vetscopes.
(Vetscopes because the sessions were held in the workshop of the Vet School).
As well as launching Vetscopes, the first junior section was started - Cambridge Young Astronomers.
This has become a very successful part of the Association. (Further information in the CYA section.)
Annual Star parties became a regular feature and regular observing sessions.
1994 saw the completion of our second observatory (the ever encroaching trees at Wandlebury made that
observatory impractical.) This was built to the south of Cambridge, well away from the streetlights.
The speaker meetings were held at the Institute of Astronomy (IoA) and in October 1997 we joined forces
with the Institute to help them run public observing sessions every clear Wednesday from October to March.
Membership had now risen to 600 plus.
Through the generosity of the IoA, we have been given access to use some of the telescopes at the Institute
for those members who wish to take their own images of objects in the night sky. Recently, summer 2004, we
took over another observatory just outside Ely. This has the advantage of very dark night skies. The
observatory south of Cambridge is no longer available to use.
So the CAA has had its ups and downs. It has gone from near collapse in the mid 80's to becoming the
largest town society in Britain - over 800 members. Fortunately, they don't all turn up at once.
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