“…Overseas studies of the ATP syndrome in the nineteenth century identify research programs, publications and societal involvement as key charac teristics of most of those amateurs who made the transition (Chapman, 1998;Williams, 1988;Ashbrook, 1984;Clerke, 1893); and in cities devoid of professional astronomers, before they became professionals these ATPs often ran their private observatories as de facto city observatories, offering the full range of services and facilities normally available from government-or universityfunded public observatories: public viewing nights; astronomical and meteorological information (particularly through the local media); a local time service; and public lectures, or even courses, on astronomy (Orchiston, 2015).…”