Clarence Augustus Chant
Clarence Augustus Chant (May 31, 1865–November 18, 1956) was a Canadian astronomer and physicist. He was educated at the University of Toronto and Harvard University, and he taught at the University of Toronto from 1891 until his retirement in 1935. Chant was notable for his early work on X-ray photographs and his development of Canadian astronomy. He organised the department at the University of Toronto and built up the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada (est. 1890) into one of the world’s most successful organisations of its kind. In 1907, during his last year as President of the Royal Astronomical Society, he created the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and the Observer’s Handbook. He would remain the editor of both publications until his death in 1956. In 1928 he published Our Wonderful Universe with enormous success; it was translated into five languages. Through his efforts, the dream of a great observatory near Toronto came to fruition in 1933, when Mrs David Dunlap presented to the University of Toronto an observatory with a 74-inch (1.88 m) telescope. It remains to this day the largest optical telescope in Canada. He died at 91 during the November 1956 lunar eclipse, while still residing at the Observatory House. Asteroid 3341 is named in his honour, and in 1940, the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada created the Chant Medal, awarded each year to a Canadian amateur astronomer in recognition of their work in astronomy.