John Dobson - A Brief Biography 
John Dobson has been called the "Pied Piper of Astronomy," the "Star Monk," and the "MacGuyver
         of Astronomy." He is arguably one the most influential personalities in amateur astronomy in the last 50 years. He has
         almost single-handedly revolutionized backyard astronomy by bringing it out to the street, making it accessible for anyone
         who has ever looked up in wonder, and asked "Why?" 
.
.
John
         Dobson was born in Peking (Beijing), China, on September 14, 1915. His maternal grandfather was the founder of Peking University.
         His mother was a musician; his father taught Zoology at the University. 
.
In 1927,
         John and his family moved the to San Francisco due to political and social unrest in China. John had 3 brothers: Ernest, Lowry,
         and Harrison. John's father accepted a teaching position at Lowell High School and taught there from 1927, until he retired
         in the 1950's. 
.
After completing a degree in Chemistry at the University of California
         at Berkeley in 1943, John and worked in a number of defense-related jobs. John was what he describes at a "belligerent"
         atheist. Attending a service at the Vedanta center in San Francisco, he realized they were on to something and soon after,
         he joined the Vedanta Monastery in San Francisco in 1944, becoming a monk of the Ramakrishna Order. He spent the next 23 years
         in the Monastery. When he joined the Order, known for its intellectual rigor and public service, he was given the assignment
         of reconciling the teachings of religion with those of science. 
.
Having graduated
         from the university as a chemist, he wanted to see for himself what the Universe looked like, so John built his first telescope
         in 1956. It was a 2", made from a lens he got in a junk store and an eyepiece from an old pair of Zeiss binoculars; through
         it, he could see the rings of Saturn. One of his fellow monks told him that it was possible to grind a telescope mirror, so
         John then made his first mirror out of a marine-salvage 12" porthole glass. When he looked at the third-quarter moon
         with his finished telescope, he was surprised and deeply moved by what he saw. His first thought was, "Everybody's got
         to see this." 
.
So began John's long commitment to public-service in astronomy.
         
.
John was transferred to the Vedanta Monastery in Sacramento in 1958 and started
         getting seriously involved in telescope making. The first telescope he made at Sacramento was a 5-inch reflector; the mirror
         made from the cut-out bottom of a discarded gallon jug. It was John's greatest delight to share the beautiful things he saw
         through the telescopes with others. One of his friends was so amazed by what he saw through the 5-inch telescope, that he
         told John, "You've got to make something bigger!", and donated some salvaged portholes. 
.
The
         portholes had to be smuggled into the monastery in fertilizer boxes. John also had to screen his own sand for grinding and
         made his own rouge out of garden supplies (ferrous sulfate and oxalic acid). All of this had to be done without attracting
         the attention of those members of the monastery who felt that his continued telescope making and public service astronomy
         were not an appropriate pursuit for monks or the best use of his time. 
.
The noisy
         job of grinding mirrors had to be done under water to deaden the sound. Since John was a monk and had no money, he had to
         find a way to mount the mirrors using scrap materials that could be gathered up at no cost. His telescopes were made from
         discarded hose reels, lumber core cut-outs from school house doors, and scrap wood. 
.
Such
         was the humble origin of what has come to be known as the "Dobsonian" telescope. These are Newtonian telescopes.
         A Dobsonian mount is really a type of alt-azimuth telescope mount. What makes its so unique is its simplicity, it moves up
         and down, left and right. 
.
John never thought of getting a patent for his design
         although many suggested it. It's like re-inventing a cup, we've had cups all along, and if you try to patent a cup with a
         handle, you can't. While patenting his design might have been difficult, it wouldn't have been difficult to copyright the
         name "Dobsonian", but that was never something John even considered. His mission was to get as many telescopes out
         there as possible by making it as easy as possible, not making it harder with restrictions. 
.
The
         desire that drove John to make more and larger telescopes, and to put himself in increasing peril of expulsion by monastic
         authorities, was to give everybody the opportunity to see the Universe first-hand. He put discarded wagon wheels on his telescopes
         to facilitate wheeling them around the residential neighborhood surrounding the monastery - delighting kids and adults with
         the views of the night sky. 
.
Naturally, when people started to look through John's
         telescopes some of the neighbors and their kids wanted John to help them make their own telescopes. He realized that this
         would make his life more difficult because his AWOL hours from the monastery would increase. Nevertheless, he continued and
         expanded his activities, till he was asked to leave the monastery in the Spring of 1967, after 23 years as a monk. Ironically,
         the "last straw" event was a mistake, they thought John was absent with his telescope but in fact he was weeding
         the lawn out side the wall, out of sight. He was not expelled because the monks were against his telescope making, but because
         it was perceived to be taking time away from his monastic duties. 
.
With no "profession"
         and an overwhelming desire to show the night sky, John decided to dedicate the rest of his life to public service astronomy
         and hitchhiked to San Francisco. Then as now, John had many friends, and they helped to keep him fed, clothed, and sheltered.
         He retrieved some of his telescopes from Sacramento and set them up at the corner of Broderick and Jackson streets in San
         Francisco every clear night. Thousands of people looked through the telescopes while John talked to them in detail about what
         they were seeing. (This practice is still an integral part of Sidewalk Astronomy: astronomical information must be supplied
         by the telescope operator so the viewers can understand what they see.) Eventually, John was able to support himself by teaching
         classes in telescope-making and astronomy at the Jewish Community Center and at the California Academy of Sciences. 
.
In 1968, some of the kids who had made telescopes under John's guidance, and who joined him
         in setting up scopes at Jackson and Broderick, started a public-service organization named the San Francisco Sidewalk Astronomers.
         As the organization grew, larger telescopes were made and taken out to the streets. By 1970, the Sidewalk Astronomers had
         a 24-inch telescope which was freeway portable. The possibility of showing deep sky objects to large numbers of people through
         very large telescopes led the growing band of Sidewalk Astronomers to National Parks and Monuments, Native American reservations,
         and out of the country to places where "dark skies and the public collide." 
.
In
         1978, Swami Swahananda, formerly of the San Francisco and Berkeley Vedanta centers and recently transferred to Hollywood,
         invited John to give a series of lectures at the Vedanta Society of Southern California. The lectures were a great success
         so he bagan teaching telescope making and for 26 years, he continued to teach in Hollywood, spending at least two months
         there each year.  The Brothers at the Vedanta Society in Hollywood have always supported John and his vision.  
.
While John was no longer a monk, his beliefs and his former task of reconciling Vedanta and
         science had a great influence on him and his interpretation of the cosmos. He has written two booklets, Advaita Vedanta and
         Modern Science and Astronomy for Children Under 80 which explain his thoughts and prove him to be as much a philosopher as
         he is a popularizer of astronomy. 
.
Because of his influence, millions of people
         all over the world have looked through the telescopes of the Sidewalk Astronomers (the San Francisco was dropped when chapters
         started forming worldwide). John has helped to simplify the art of mirror making enabling thousands of children and adults
         with no previous experience or special training in optics to experience the joy of turning slabs of glass into powerful eyes
         into the heavens with their own hands. The "Dobsonian" mount has made large, "user friendly" telescopes
         affordable and accessible to the general public. Thousands of people have made their own sturdy, low-cost telescopes under
         John's direction or on their own by using his simple design. 
.
Telescopes with light-weight
         mirrors previously considered unusable, long focal ratios previously considered unmanageable, and apertures previously considered
         unthinkable are now in the hands of lovers of astronomy around the globe. With so many home-made Dobsonians showing up everywhere,
         commercial telescope makers joined the trend and now most offer relatively inexpensive Dobsonians. Because of the popularity
         of home-made and commercial Dobsonians, it is impossible to measure the impact John has made on amateur astronomy and because
         of the changing role of amateur astronomy in discovering comets and other celestial objects, it is equally impossible to measure
         the true contribution his inspiration has made to our knowledge of our Universe. 
.
Timothy
         Ferris, in his book, Seeing in the Dark, states, "the amateur astronomy revolution was incited by three technological
         innovations - the Dobsonian telescope, CCD light-sensing devices, and the Interent." When asked about the "Dobsonian
         Revolution", John usually replies that all previous revolutions were fought with cannons on Dobsonian mounts. 
.
In 2004, Advaita Vedanta and Modern Science was retitled, BEYOND SPACE & TIME - Is there
         an uncaused cause behind the Deep Field? and is now available. Another new title THE MOON IS NEW, a novel, is also in the
         publishing process and should be out early in 2005. 
.
John has recently been shown
         in two documentary films. In the first, "UNIVERSE - The Cosmology Quest", John appears along with Sir Fred Hoyle,
         Dr. Halton C. Arp, Dr. Margaret Burbidge, Dr. Geoffrey Burbidge, Dr. Jayant Narlikar and a host of other astronomers, cosmologist,
         and philosophers questioning the currently popular Big Bang Cosmology. The second film, released in the summer of 2005,
         A Sidewalk Astronomer is a profile on John in tribute to his contribution to amateur astronomy. Completely unscripted, it
         provides a unique insight into a likewise unique individual. 
.
Until 2008, John spent
         most of his time traveling and spreading the art of telescope making and sharing his views on cosmology to amateur astronomy
         clubs around the world, as thier guest. He spent a short two months of the year at his home in San Francisco and another two
         months in Hollywood, the rest of the time he was teaching in Oregon, Connecticut, Chile or even Siberia.
         While John was no longer a monk, he still lived very simply, spending most of his time in the homes of amateur astronomers.
.
In the spring of 2008, John suffered some health
         issues that have considerably limited his ability to travel as he had in the past and at this time he permanently resides
         at the Vedanta Society in Hollywood. He has not become a monk again, but has been accepted into the community where he
         is surrounded by the caring brothers and members of the society. With their continuing support, he still does sidewalk
         observing and gives talks to the Vedantans and amateur astronomers on a limited basis.  
.
John Dobson's life has been a tremendous inspiration to a great many people. The Sidewalk
         Astronomers continue to serve the public with large telescopes, providing free "star parties" and slide shows under
         dark skies and city lights, encouraging the citizens of this planet to think and wonder about the Universe and give them a
         chance to see its beauty with their own eyes. 
.
To members of the Sidewalk Astronomers,
         John continues to provide guidance and inspiration. His unending desire to always keep learning and discovering things for
         himself has affected all of those around him. One of his favorite sayings is "If you figure something out for yourself,
         it doesn't make no never-mind who figured it out first, its yours." His life of enthusiastic, selfless public service
         and his genuine love and concern for this planet and those that live on it are the foundation and guiding principle of our
         organization