Fitz globe


Fitz globe

Item Information

Title:
Fitz globe
Description:
Designed for educators to use in the classroom, this twelve-inch globe was published in Boston by the textbook firm of Ginn and Heath. A special feature of this globe is its mounting with two vertical rings showing the changing daylight, twilight and nighttime hours any place on the Earth. The mounting system of vertical rings was patented by Ellen Fitz, a governess from New Brunswick. She was the first woman involved in the design and manufacturing of globes. The actual globes that were used with the Fitz mountings were fairly standard mid-19th century globes, derived from the ones published by Gilman Joslin of Boston or W. & A.K. Johnston of Edinburgh. By the third quarter of the 19th century, the outlines and interiors of all the major land masses, except Greenland and Antarctica, had been fairly well explored and mapped. In promoting the study of physical geography, the globe also shows ocean currents (white lines) and average isotherms (lines of equal temperature) for January (blue lines) and July (red lines). The globe's mounting, which was Fitz's unique contribution to this educational tool, was designed to help students understand the effects of the Earth's daily rotation on its axis and yearly revolution around the Sun, with regard to daylight, twilight, and nighttime. By turning the globe's base in relation to the pointer representing the Sun's vertical ray, it is possible to observe these changes through the seasons.
Creator:
Fitz, Ellen Eliza, b. 1836
Name on Item:
Ellen Fitz.
Date:
[1879]
Format:
Maps/Atlases
Objects/Artifacts
Location:
Boston Public Library
Norman B. Leventhal Map Center
Collection (local):
Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection
Subjects:
Globes
Extent:
1 globe : hand col., paper gores over core, mounted on a spindle, on a cast iron turntable, on cast iron stand supporting a brass meridian three fourth ring and another brass three fourth ring ; 16 cm. in diam.
Terms of Use:
No known copyright restrictions.
No known restrictions on use.
Publisher:
[Boston] : Ginn & Heath
Scale:
Scale [ca. 1:80,000,000]
Language:
English
Notes:
Relief shown by hachures.
The globe sphere was produced by Gilman Joslin, but the significance of this work relates to the mounting which was invented by Ellen Eliza Fitz.
Ellen Eliza Fitz patented a mount for a terrestrial globe, designed to show the passage of the sun.
Exhibited in “Journeys of the Imagination,” at the Boston Public Library, Boston, MA, April - August 2006. MB (BRL)
Notes (date):
This date is inferred.
Notes (exhibitions):
Exhibited: "Back to School: Geography in the Classroom" organized by the Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library, 2014-2015.
Exhibited: "Women in Cartography: Five Centuries of Accomplishments" organized by the Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library, 2015-2016.
Identifier:
06_01_000013
Call #:
G3170 1879 .F6
Barcode:
39999052509013
LCCN:
2002623484