Eskdalemuir Observatory entrance
                                Date
                            
                            
                                ca.1910
                            
                            
                        
                            
                            
                            
                                Creator
                            
                            
                                Albert Edgar Gendle (1886 - 1923, British) , Meteorologist
                            
                            
                        
                            
                            
                            
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                                Dimensions
                            
                            
                                height (print): 147mm
width (print): 196mm
height (paper support): 203mm
width (paper support): 253mm
                            
                        
                            
                            
                            width (print): 196mm
height (paper support): 203mm
width (paper support): 253mm
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                                Description
                            
                            
                                Landscape view, captioned: ‘Entrance to Observatory’. The main gate has an admittance notice and a small boy is visible, sitting to the left of the gate as viewed.  
Eskdalemuir Observatory was constructed in 1904 to make geomagnetic and other observations. It was sufficiently remote (located near Eskdalemuir, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland) to be free from electrical interference. Many of the instruments had originally been located at Kew Observatory
Albert Edgar Gendle (1886-1923) was Clerk Assistant to the Eskdalemuir Observatory until 1913, having worked as a boy at Kew Observatory. He then joined the Meteorological Office before becoming a lieutenant in the Royal Air Force in 1919. He was killed near Baghdad, Iraq, in 1923.
                            
                            
                        
                            
                            
                            Eskdalemuir Observatory was constructed in 1904 to make geomagnetic and other observations. It was sufficiently remote (located near Eskdalemuir, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland) to be free from electrical interference. Many of the instruments had originally been located at Kew Observatory
Albert Edgar Gendle (1886-1923) was Clerk Assistant to the Eskdalemuir Observatory until 1913, having worked as a boy at Kew Observatory. He then joined the Meteorological Office before becoming a lieutenant in the Royal Air Force in 1919. He was killed near Baghdad, Iraq, in 1923.
                                Associated place