Charlie Mary Noble of Texas was a stellar astronomy teacher

High school mathematics teacher Charlie Mary Noble of Texas was a stellar pioneer in teaching astronomy to students of all ages. Photo credit: Fort Worth Museum

Many outstanding educators make significant contributions to their chosen fields of study. One stellar teacher who did this was Charlie Mary Noble, a mathematics and astronomy teacher from Fort Worth, Texas.

Charlie Mary was born to a pioneer family at Giddings, Texas on Oct. 31, 1877. As a young woman, she attended Warren Institute in Fort Worth and Sam Houston State College. At a time when most women didn’t go to college, Charlie Mary earned a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas and a Master’s degree from Texas Christian University (TSU).

Charlie Mary inaugurated her 46-year career as a public school teacher in 1897. She taught mathematics at Paschal High School. While there she established the campus Penta Club, one of the first science clubs for young people to exist in Fort Worth. She also served her school as the Chair of the Mathematics Department. Although she officially retired from the public school system in 1943, she didn’t stop her teaching activities.

During World War II, Charlie Mary agreed to teach a course in celestial navigation designed for US Navy officer trainees at TCU, and in 1947 she began teaching an astronomy course at TCU. That same year she organized a Junior Astronomy Club at the Fort Worth Children’s Museum. A similar club for adults was organized, and was christened the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, an organization that still exists today. Read more about this organization at Fort Worth Astronomical Society.

From 1957—1958 Charlie Mary organized and ran an innovative group she called the Moonwatch Program. Participants were members of her Junior Astronomy Club at the Museum. She trained the children to track the positions of Sputnik and other satellites for the US government, and the kids also helped scientists to determine their precise orbits. For their work, the Moonwatch team was recognized by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.

And as if all this were not enough, Charlie Noble was a member of the Woman’s Club, the Daughters of the American Revolution, Colonial Dames, Delta Kappa Gamma, the Lecture Foundation, the Faculty Women’s Club of Texas Christian University, the Texas Academy of Science, and the Tarrant County Historical Society.

For her many years of service as an educator, Charlie Mary earned many accolades. She garnered an honorary doctorate from TCU in 1950. In 1954 she received an Altrusa Civic Award which recognized her as the “First Lady of Fort Worth” for promoting interest in astronomy in young people. In 1955 the Museum’s planetarium was dedicated in her honor, and in 1956 she became the first woman to receive the Astronomical League’s annual award for her promotion of knowledge in the field of astronomy.

This amazing Chalkboard Champion passed away Nov. 30, 1959, in Fort Worth, at the age of 82. She was interred in Greenwood Cemetery.