With his medical practice a success, Link sought escape from
the busy city life of Indianapolis. He purchased more than fifty acres in
northern Morgan County, building a country home on land that had formerly been
an apple orchard. “When I got here, like Brigham Young I said, ‘This is the
place!’” Link recalled. He named his property Tanager Hill after the scarlet
tanagers and summer tanagers that flocked to the area.
Although he continued to hone his surgical skills, Link
believed that pursuing other activities “rested me intellectually and thus
aided progress in my life’s work.” As a young boy, Link had become fascinated
by a book on astronomy he found in his father’s library. “I used to watch large
birds that could fly across a valley without moving their wings,” he recalled,
“and I became fascinated by ascending currents of atmosphere and astronomical
facts.”
Years later, Link renewed his interest in the subject
through a class taught by K. P. Williams, a professor of mathematics, through
an Indiana University extension program in Indianapolis and membership in the
fledgling Indiana Astronomical Society, founded in 1933. Planning a honeymoon
to the West with his new wife, Helen (his first wife had died in 1930), Link
also took with him on the trip a letter of introduction from Williams to three
former IU students—Earl C. Slipher, Vesto M. Slipher, and Carol O. Lampland—all
of whom worked as astronomers at the Lowell Observatory, a privately owned
astronomical research institution in Flagstaff, Arizona. Link later joked that
he received so much information from the astronomers that he suffered “intellectual
indigestion.” During the trip Link also met with Russell W. Porter, an amateur
astronomer who had helped design the Mount Palomar Observatory near San Diego,
California. Porter sketched out for the Indiana physician plans so Link could
build his own observatory close to his Morgan County home.
Establishing the Goethe and Helen Link Foundation for
Scientific Research, Link began construction on his observatory in 1937. The
facility received support from a variety of members of the IAS and was supervised by Victor E. Maier, a noted
Indianapolis amateur astronomer who had previously advised other enthusiasts on
how to build telescopes. The facility immediately attracted the attention of
members of the IU astronomy department, who visited the site along with groups
from Indianapolis. One fellow physician told Link after seeing the partially
completed observatory: “Goethe, you are going to have to operate in all
doubtful cases to pay for this.”
Work at the observatory centered on building a facility to
securely house a telescope equipped with a thirty-six-inch mirror that had been
a test pouring for the two-hundred-inch mirror provided by the Corning Glass
Works for the Hale Telescope at Mount Palomar. It took ten months and the
building of a special machine by Carl D. Turner, an Indianapolis engineer, to
grind and polish the ribbed Pyrex mirror, which cost $385. To support the
four-hundred-pound mirror and its cross-axis German equatorial mounting, which
weighed 5,000 pounds, crews using wheelbarrows and shovels constructed a
concrete pier resting on bedrock. “Readings were made on the concrete every
hour while it was hardening,” Maier remembered, noting that measurements
indicated the pier had been set within one millimeter of its correct position
despite its great weight (two hundred tons) and height (thirty feet above
ground level).
After the pier had been completed, workers used wood from a
nearby forest to construct the building’s frame made of oak posts and beams,
with an interior of oak hardwood floors and knotty-pine walls. The lower floor
included a large auditorium that could seat 150 people, a darkroom, library,
sleeping quarters, and a kitchen. To keep the large dome housing the telescope
the same temperature as the outside air, the building had no central heating
system; those who worked there had to rely instead on portable electric
heaters. The dome itself measured thirty-four feet in diameter and included an
eight-foot-wide shutter opening through which the telescope could peer into the
heavens. The entire dome could be moved to different positions by using only a
half-horsepower electric motor that could be operated by the push of a button.
In a second, smaller dome, located on the flat roof over the auditorium, Link
placed his own personal telescope, a five-inch Zeiss refractor.
With the observatory ready to begin operations in early
January 1939, Link made the facility available to scientists at local colleges
and universities. IU President Herman B Wells quickly took advantage of the
offer for the university’s astronomy department. In October 1938 the university
announced it would establish a postdoctoral fellowship (first awarded to Doctor
James Cuffey, a graduate of Harvard University) to conduct research at the
observatory on a year-round basis. Cuffey took the first celestial photograph
from the observatory in August 1939.
In addition to the research work, the observatory also
hosted field trips from IU astronomy students and regularly scheduled visitor
nights open to the general public. On those nights the auditorium became jammed
with people listening to presentations on the stars while another group crowded
up the circular staircase waiting their turn to mount an observation platform
for a glimpse through the 5,200-pound telescope at the evening sky.
Cuffey continued his research into star clusters at the
observatory until World War II intervened, and he left in June 1941 to serve in
the navy, teaching navigation at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.
He returned to the Bloomington campus in 1946 as an assistant professor.
Following the war, IU astronomers, in cooperation with the International
Astronomical Union, used the observatory to track the orbits of asteroids
(called minor planets in those days) that had been lost track of during the war
years. For the asteroid observations, Link and the university reached agreement
with the University of Cincinnati for the permanent loan of a ten-inch diameter
astrographic lens. Link funded the construction of a separate building for the
telescope. From 1948 to 1967, astronomers at the observatory took more than 6,000
photographs and discovered more than a hundred new asteroids.
Shortly after arrangements had been made for the
installation of the new astrograph, Link decided in 1948 to donate the
observatory along with twelve acres to IU. He later told a reporter that as he
got older he could no longer do as much work in astronomy as he wanted to
because of the late hours involved. Doctor Frank K. Edmondson, chairman of the
IU astronomy department, noted that Link’s generous gift greatly expanded the
scope of the department’s activities. “It gave us a large telescope, a vital
element which we lacked and which is necessary to support a graduate program in
astronomy leading to a Ph.D. degree,” Edmondson said. In 1978 the university,
with financial help from the National Science Foundation, added a control room
to the main dome for the use of researchers.
By the 1980s, light pollution from Indianapolis’s urban
sprawl had hampered use of the Link observatory’s telescopes and IU had to move
its research activities to other locations. The public, however, continued to
visit the site whenever possible for programs given by the university and the
IAS, as well as to marvel at the numerous varieties of daffodils planted on the
grounds by Helen Link—a pastime she started with a gift of bulbs from her
husband. The couple continued to enjoy the beauties of Tanager Hill until their
deaths; Goethe, at the age of 101, in 1981, and Helen, at the age of ninety, in
2002. For Goethe, there existed no great secret to his long life. “I never
drank, never smoked, stayed physically active and always left the table a
little bit hungry.”
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