On the evening in question I happened to be returning from a snowshoe tramp, and was in the act of tightening up the straps on my foot when my companion called out: "Look! Look!" and I immediately threw my head up and caught sight of the large meteor, which appeared to be travelling very slowly... so slowly that the stateliness of its motion excited my liveliest surprise and wonderment...While my gaze was riveted on the large body, and just when it was about passing out of sight, my companion again called out "Look! There and there!" and I looked up an saw the first group of following meteoric bodies...Before I could recover from my astonishment a new group of smaller ones...came sailing along...I likened them at the time, and the resemblance seems yet apt and appropriate to a large battleship moving ahead with attendant squadrons of torpedo-destroyers and torpedo boats (the report of eyewitness Walter L. Haight)
Texas State astronomer says meteor show was 7,000 miles long
On the evening of Feb. 9, 1913, a dazzling procession of meteors crossed over Canada and the northeastern United States, travelling northwest to southeast. Because the night was cloudy, the procession was seen by just a fraction of a potential viewing audience of 30 million. But it was sighted as far west as Saskatchewan at 7 p.m. Mountain time and as far east as Bermuda at 10 p.m. Atlantic time, putting the length of this light show at 2,400 miles. Read more
The meteor procession of February 9, 1913, was a unique meteoric phenomenon reported from locations across Canada, the north-eastern United States, Bermuda and from several ships at sea, including one off Brazil, giving a total recorded track of some 9105 km. The meteors were particularly unusual in that there was no apparent radiant, that is to say, no apparent point in the sky from which the meteors appeared to originate. The observations were analysed in detail, later the same year, by the astronomer Clarence Chant, leading him to conclude that as all accounts were positioned along a great circle arc, the source had been a small, short-lived natural satellite of the Earth. Read more
An obscure painting by the Canadian artist Gustav Hahn (1866-1962) has played a crucial role in unravelling a literary mystery. It's a story that blends art, poetry, science and history, and involves not only Hahn but also a great American painter from half a century earlier, Frederic Church, as well as the poet Walt Whitman.
"Meteoric Display of February 9, 1913, as seen near High Park. Drawn by Gustave (sic) Hahn"
Hahn's painting depicts a neighbourhood in Toronto's west end on a winter evening in 1913. At the bottom are a row of houses; above, we see the stars of the winter sky, including the constellation Orion. But the most striking element is a series of bright objects - apparently a stream of meteors - streaking across the sky. Hahn was an amateur astronomer as well as a painter, and his father, Otto Hahn, owned a valuable collection of meteorites. Read more
This shower was an unusual one-time event that occurred on the 9th February, 1913. The event was unusual because the meteors did not radiate from a single point in the sky; which meant their orbital path was probably around the Earth, rather than the Sun. Because of a lack of a radiant the shower is named after the feast day of St. Cyril of Alexandria, on which the event was observed.