John Flamsteed, 
astronomer, was born on 
August 19, 
1646 in 
Denby[?], 
Derbyshire, 
England. He was ordained deacon and was preparing to take up a living in Derbyshire, when he was invited to London. On March 4, 1675, he was appointed by royal warrant "The King's Astronomical Observator" - the first British 
Astronomer Royal, with an allowance of £100 a year.  In June 1675, another royal warrant provided for the founding of  the 
Royal Greenwich Observatory, and Flamsteed laid the foundation stone in August. In February 1676, he was admitted a Fellow of the 
Royal Society, and in July, he moved into the Observatory where he lived until 1684, when he was finally appointed priest to the parish of 
Burstow[?], 
Surrey. He held that office, as well as that of Astronomer Royal, until his death on 
January 12, 
1719. In 1720 he is buried at 
Burstow[?], 
Surrey. 
In 1666 and 1668, Flamsteed calculated accurately the solar eclipses. He is responsible for the earliest recorded sighting of the planet Uranus, which he mistook for a star and catalogued as 34 Tauri.