Grand Central’s Fly-On-The-Wall (Or Technically, the Ceiling)

Arguably one of the most famous ceilings in the world, the mural high above Grand Central Terminal’s main concourse is as fascinating as it is awe-inspiring.  While much has been written about it (yes, it is mostly backwards and no, no one’s really sure why Orion’s turned the way he is) one detail that seems to be overlooked is in hidden in plain sight, the proverbial fly-on-the-wall.  Or in this case, a fly on the ceiling.

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The mural depicts a section of the sky visible to the Northern horizon during the wintertime.  As one of the busiest, brightest, and most recognizable areas of the celestial sphere it’s no wonder why this particular area was chosen for the mural.  The major constellations it depicts (Pegasus, Aquarius, Pisces, Aries, Taurus, Orion, Gemini, and Cancer) are familiar to almost everyone whether through an interest in astronomy, history, mythology, or astrology.

A quick glance at a star atlas will tell you much about all of these constellations.  You’ll even find details about the triangles over Aries’ head (a constellation called Triangulum), but what you won’t find much about is the small insect hovering just over Aries’ rump.  It’s not in any modern star guides, and it wasn’t in any back in 1912 when the mural was painted.  So where did it come from?

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The constellation is typically labelled “Musca Borealis” or “the Northern Fly”.  Considered a ‘modern’ constellation (that is, it wasn’t one of the 48 constellations laid out by Ptolemy in the second century AD), Musca Borealis first appeared in 1613 on a celestial globe designed by Flemish astronomer Petrus Plancius, who referred to it as “Apes” or “the Bee”.  The four stars that made up “Apes” were familiar to astronomers prior to this but were generally considered part of the Aries grouping and had never been specifically set aside on their own.

It’s not surprising that Plancius used these stars to make a new constellation, as this was something of a hobby of his.  Over his lifetime Plancius introduced 21 new constellations, many of which are still recognized by the International Astronomical Union (IAU)[1].

In 1624, in a work called “Usus Astronomicus”, German astronomer Jakob Bartsch included Plancius’ Bee (although he changed the name to “Vespa”, or “Wasp”)[1][2].  By the end of the 1600’s this small constellation had become common in star charts, now typically referred to as “Musca”, Latin for “Fly”.

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Musca as depicted in the Cutler-Halley Atlas, 1728

The name “Musca” led to some confusion with another constellation of the same name, this one in the southern hemisphere near the celestial South Pole.  Adding to the confusion, the southern Fly, also introduced by Plancius, was initially called “Apis”, poorly distinguishing it from its northern counterpart “Apes”.  To clear this up the northern insect became “Musca Borealis”, with its southern twin known as simply as “Musca”.

The Northern Fly would fall out of favor with astronomers, perhaps owing to all the confusion.  By the end of the nineteenth century it had essentially disappeared from the charts.  So how did it end up on the ceiling at Grand Central?

To try and answer that we have to piece together the design of Grand Central’s mural.  To construct the mural an astronomer at Columbia University, Dr. Harold Jacoby, was consulted.  French artist and engraver Paul Helleu worked on the design with muralist J. Monroe Hewlett, the actual painting being done by Charles Basing, both of the Brooklyn-based Hewlett-Basing Studio.[4]

All of the individual constellations (with the exception of the “Fly”) were taken, almost line for line, from the 1603 celestial atlas Uranometria (literally “Measuring the Sky”) by German astronomer Johann Bayer.  Also referred to as the “Bayer Atlas”, the Uranometria is significant for two reasons; first: it introduced the labeling of stars with Greek letters, a practice still in place today, and second: it was the first celestial atlas to use such detailed and artistic designs for the constellations.

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Orion as he appears in the Uranometria versus the Grand Central mural.  Uranometria image courtesy of the United States Naval Observatory Library.

The Bayer Atlas does depict the stars that would make up Musca on the same page as Aries, but doesn’t label them at all, much less form a constellation from them.  Appearing in 1603, the Bayer was 10 years too early to depict the stars as their own constellation and put them with Aries, as had been done for centuries.  If Musca Borealis wasn’t in the Bayer, like all the others on the ceiling, how did it end up in the mural?

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Bayer’s Aries.  The four stars that would later make up Musca Borealis can be seen above the Ram’s hindquarters.  Image courtesy of the Linda Hall Library of Science, Engineering & Technology.

Taking a bit of a logical leap, it appears that the mural design might have also referenced a later celestial atlas for the design of the Fly: either the 1820 Celestial Atlas by Scottish professor Alexander Jamieson or the 1824 Urania’s Mirror which is a more colorful version of Jamieson’s work printed as a set of constellation cards.  The reason for this conclusion is that Jamieson was the first person to depict the Fly as having two sets of wings, like the design on the mural.  Previous versions only showed one.

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Musca as it appears in Urania’s Mirror. Note the two sets of wings.

While Jamieson’s book came first, the Mirror is much more famous, so it is likely the Fly on the ceiling was influenced by the card, but why this single, small figure would be added to a design otherwise entirely sourced from Bayer is unknown.

By the latter part of the nineteenth century Musca Borealis had fallen out of favor with the astronomical community.  Writing in 1899, Richard Hinckley Allen said that while “the constellation has been retained in some popular astronomical works” it is “not figured by the scientific Argelander, Heis, nor Klein, nor recognized in the British Association Catalogue.”[2]  When the IAU met at their first General Assembly in 1922 they declined to declare Musca an official constellation, officially returning the stars to Aries.[3]

Grand Central Postcard

Next, check out “The Hidden History of Grand Central Terminal’s Celestial Ceiling”

Sources:

[1] Herlihy, Anna Friedman. “Renaissance Star Charts.” The History of Cartography, Volume 3. Ed. David Woodward. Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press, 2007. 99-122. Digital.

[2] Allen, Richard Hinckley. Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning. New York: Dover Publications, 1899 reprinted 1963. Print.

[3] Barentine, John C. The Lost Constellations. Chichester: Springer Praxis Publishing, 2016. Print.

[4] Belle, John and Maxinne R. Leighton. Grand Central: Gateway to a Million Lives. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2000. Print.

4 thoughts on “Grand Central’s Fly-On-The-Wall (Or Technically, the Ceiling)

  1. Pingback: The Hidden History of Grand Central Terminal’s Celestial Ceiling – Bookworm History

  2. Pingback: Central Park Oddities – Bookworm History

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