Chancellor Barnard, who was fond of astronomy, designed the observatory to house the world's largest refracting telescope. He also stocked the observatory with other scientific equipment, such as a state of the art barometer. However, due to the outbreak of the Civil War, the telescope was never delivered.[5] The observatory also housed the chancellor's family quarters, into which Barnard moved in 1860.[6] With the outbreak of the Civil War, the University of Mississippi closed in 1861 and Barnard left.[7]
Professor Alexander Quinche and Burton Harrison, entrusted by the board of trustees to safekeep the university, lived in the observatory's quarters.[8]
Due to Oxford's proximity to much of the war, many buildings in town and on campus were used by armed forces, including the observatory which served as a hospital.[4] However, it was the former chancellor's relationship with General William Tecumseh Sherman that spared both the observatory and the university from Union troops burning it down. Writing to Chancellor Barnard, General Sherman explained his reasoning for sparing the observatory.
"I assure you that last November, when I rode through the grounds of the College and Oxford, I thought of you and.... thought I saw the traces of your life in the Observatory, of which I remember you spoke...."
↑Federal Register. Vol.43. Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration. 1978. p.48587. Archived from the original on May 6, 2021. Retrieved May 6, 2021.
Works cited
Sansing, David (1999). The University of Mississippi: A Sesquicentennial History. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN9781578060917.