The Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas hosted an eclipse party on the plaza, inviting thousands of people to experience the eclipse together with astronomers guiding them along the way.
An hour before the gates opened outside the Perot Museum of Nature and Scienceโs Great North American Eclipse event, Jean Martin and Christopher Erickson lined up for the last leg of their latest eclipse journey.
โWe came from the San Francisco Bay Area and came here just for this,โ said Martin.
Monday marked their second total solar eclipse experience. In 2017, the couple was in Oregon and said they couldnโt miss the chance to see it again.
Get top local stories in DFW delivered to you every morning. >Sign up for NBC DFW's News Headlines newsletter.
โWe felt like the universe was putting on a show and reminding us of the beauty of space and earth and life,โ said Martin. โIt was just amazing.โ
Thousands gathered at the Perotโs watch party outside the museum in Downtown Dallas. Astronomers from Carnegie Science in Pasadena, California mingled with the crowd to answer questions and offer guidance.
Jack Minard of Maryland said the opportunity to connect with scientists brought him to the Perot event.
โItโs a field Iโm interested in,โ said Minard. โItโs quite an opportunity and a half, to say the least.โ
Organizers at the Perot said the event was at least two years in the making. Tickets sold out by February.
Monday morning, thick clouds hovered over downtown, threatening to obscure the view.
โIโve been watching the forecast like a hawk and everybody who lives here whoโs from here, that I talked to, said the weather changes 10 times a day,โ laughed Dr. Jeff Rich, astronomer and outreach coordinator from Carnegie Science.
As the eclipse began, the clouds parted. The crowd felt quiet as the moon eclipsed the sun. The temperature dropped and skyscraper lights flickered on.
โThis is awesome,โ a man said as he peered up. โItโs so dark out too. This is excellent.โ
The three minutes, 52 seconds of totality nearly brought Rhonda Coleman to tears.
โIt was magical. Just makes us realize how small we are,โ Coleman said. โIโm at the point I feel like crying. It was so beautiful.โ