Longitude, those fine lines that run from the top of a map
to the bottom, is described as the distance east or west of a standard meridian
and is measured in degrees, minutes and seconds. This knowledge was 500 years
ago and until the 1790s as esoteric as time travel is today. The sea farers of
long ago risked falling off the edge of the world.
They were driven by avarice, possessed by courage and a
knowledge of the sea, and they depended on ‘dead reckoning’ to understand the
distance east or west of their home port. This was done by the heaving of a log
of wood overboard. The captain would observe how quickly his ship sailed away
from this bobbing, swirling marker and keep a record of this time in his ‘log
book’, checking the direction of his course by a compass or by looking at the
stars at night if he could find them. Bearing in mind fickle winds and sea
currants, he would work out where in the world he was. A very dangerous
business! He could miss his mark, and crash into reefs. He could run out of
water and food. Long ocean voyages deprived men of vitamin C, which caused
scurvy and terrible death. Lack of knowledge of longitude also caused serious
economic problems, especially in times of war, when all shipping was using the
known, safe passages or lanes. The quest for longitude was an urgent and
desperate issue.
"They that go down to the sea in ships, that do
business in great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in
the deep." (Psalm 109)
He snapped the battered Bible shut. The salty wind, more
than his eyes could bear, and looked astern towards the Madre de Jesus trailing
in his wake. She was a tiny thing on the very edge of the horizon. Above, the
sky, a faultless bowl of the purest blue, formed a perfect circle. Around and
about, the endless rolling of the waves and a steady south-easterly wind
carried him with every ticking minute away. Proof, they say, is an idol before
which every mathematician tortures himself. He was a mathematician, and he was
in search of truth. He was also an astronomer, and as such felt convinced of
the certainty of the stars.
Born in Spain in 1759, he had been described as a handsome,
melancholy, learned man, and was by his nature a problem solver. He was endowed
with two incompatible qualities - restless imagination and a patient tenacity.
He was well known as a scientific navigator and a model Spanish officer, with
the rank of vice-admiral. He had been seconded for duty with the expedition
formed to fix the longitude of various important points in the Americas in
relation to Cadiz. He had been further honoured by being put in charge of that
section dealing with the Antilles and Mexico. On the 17th June, 1792, he had
sailed from Cadiz with two brigantines. He was 33.
Trinidad de Barlovento, to the windward, appeared to
starboard as a low blue smudge of mountains, then a shattered gap of tiny
islets, marked 'Boca del Drago', then, from the mainland, a rugged peninsular
like a finger, pointing at the island which had the appearance on the chart of
a cowhide laid flat. It was square to the points of the compass, having four
coastal regions or 'bandes'. Rolling with the pitch of the Atlantic breakers,
the brigantines sailed the length of the island's 'bande de l'est', its eastern
coast. Seeking the comparatively safe passage of the Columbus Channel, marked
Boca de Sierpe, the Serpent's Mouth, and entered the vast and placid Gulfo de
Baline, the Gulf of Whales, on the 21st of July. To stand down gently before a
refreshing breath to the hamlet marked ‘Porto de los Hispanioles’, named by his
parents with some imagination and perhaps an apprehension of his future
profession.
He was called Cosmo Damien Churruca. The little habitation
on the verge of a vast tropical wilderness contained some warehouses, mud and
thatch dwellings, a wooden church, a landing attended by a small redoubt of
five guns that was connected to the mainland by a mole or land bridge. It was
peopled by a lunatic assortment of foreigners of every possible sort, condition
and combination of skin colour, and overflown by huge griffin vultures that had
been imported from Spain for the purpose of sanitation.
Riding in the company of the governor to his ‘palace’ along
the Plaza del Marina, Churruca noticed a busy commerce and saw many French who
appeared to be gentlemen. Don José was also a naval officer of the same rank
and age, and within days and in his company he commenced a survey to ascertain
the best spot to establish an observatory.
To the east of the town was a low ridge, thickly wooded and
known as Laventilla or the Lavant, named for the east winds. This was chosen as
the site, and a winding road cut along the rocky ridges led to it. George B.
Airy, Great Britain’s sixth astronomer royal, penned these lines in praise of
his fellow travelers “who with vigour unequaled, unyielding devotion, surveyed
every coast and explained every ocean, in frigid and torrid and temperate
zones.
This Churruca did, as his charts attest to this day. With
perfect elevations, the four coastlines of the island of Trinidad are
faithfully depicted. It was, however, on the slopes of Laventille hill that he
made geographical and astronomical history. After testing and standardising his
instruments, he observed on the 2nd January with great precision the immersion
of the third satellite of Jupiter in the disc of the moon, and also that of the
first satellite. This most unwieldy lunar method demanded accurate astronomical
observations, and could only be achieved by true genius. From his observations
he fixed for the first time an accurate meridian in the New World. On the 28h
January, 1793, he dismantled his observatory, and sailed for Spain on the 21st
October of that same year. At Cadiz, he made an accurate observation of the
entrance of the star of Aldebaran into the disc of the moon with its exit.
This, with his observations in January in Trinidad, enabled him to link the New
World with the Old and to fix the absolute longitude of the observatory at
Laventille, the first point ever so fixed in the New World. Observatory Street
in Port of Spain still retains a memory, and the observatory at Laventille, now
a police communications post, is called Fort Chacon.
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