Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2017
Attempts in the 1930s and 1940s to determine the spiral structure of the Milky Way by star counting methods, essentially the continuation of the work of the Kapteyn Astronomical Laboratory, failed to reach this goal. A new foundation for the search was laid by Walter Baade in his studies of stellar populations. With the recognition that highly luminous objects, especially H II regions, would outline the spiral structure, W.W. Morgan and his young associates Sharpless and Osterbrock carried out the observational program that first delineated, in 1951, the nearby arms of the Milky Way. The full paper was never published, so the historical details have remained somewhat vague, primarily because the 21-cm discoveries so quickly overtook the optical researches.