Babbage's Difference Engine |
A poet of Byron's stature would normally have been buried in Poet's Corner at Westminster Abbey, and his remains were sent there, but the Abbey refused to bury him there for the reason of "questionable morality." (The Abbey finally put in a memorial stone to him in Poet's Corner in 1969; he died in 1824.) Following are more pictures of Lady Ada and Lord Byron's resting place at Hucknall, which seems happy to have them there. (Personal note - I had to post a ton of pictures, as this is one of two locations for which I drove a car in England! This and Newton's home were not really accessible by public transportation, but both were close to Lincoln, England, so I made that my home base and drove here from there.)
The light you see shining up out of the grave is for a wreath that was given at the time of his death that has been well preserved and proudly displayed. (That light isn't shining all the time; they turned it on for me to show off the wreath!)
There's also an opening that allows for viewing into the vault.
Along with the grave, there are also wall plaques and a stone in the floor. The stone in the floor was sent by the King of Greece. Lord Byron had died in Greece - having given money to the Greeks for their war of independence from the Ottoman Turks. His money went to refit the Greek fleet. Byron had planned to be part of the attack on the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto, but he fell ill and died of his illness. The Greeks saw him as a hero, and the marble slab in the floor of the church in Hucknall was given by the King of Greece.
Though Ada never knew her father, she was fascinated by him and came to call herself a "poetical scientist."
Portrait of Lord Byron - Charlotte Bronte Bicentennial Celebration - National Portrait Gallery - London |
One of these other female mathematicians who had had to struggle in order to study mathematics and whose family feared she would go mad (her father said they would have her in a strait-jacket if she didn't stop studying mathematics) was Mary Fairfax Somerville of whom I posted earlier. She was 35 years Ada's senior and became one of Ada's math tutors. Another of Ada's math tutors was Augustus de Morgan, but though he was her tutor, even he felt that mathematics was too much for the mind of a woman in general. He wrote to her mother that women should avoid doing hard mathematics - "the reason is obvious - the very great tension of mind which mathematics requires is beyond the strength of a woman's physical power of application." In the same letter he stated, however, that Ada unquestionably had as much power as would require all the strength of a man's constitution.
Mary Somerville and Ada developed a close friendship, as did their families. Mary mentored Ada, and it was Mary who introduced Ada to Charles Babbage, he who developed ideas for early computing devices - the Difference Engine and the Analytical Engine - and is considered by some to be a father of modern computing. He is described as a pre-eminent polymath among the many polymaths of his day - involved in mathematics, inventing, philosophy and mechanical engineering.
The pictures below and the picture at the very top of this post are of the uncompleted Difference Engine on display at the National Science Museum, London.
Babbage was not the only well-known personage with whom Ada was in contact. Among other acquaintances were Michael Faraday and Charles Dickens. Ada's life was one of privilege, and at one point she nearly became a lady-in-waiting to Queen Victoria.
I had opportunity as part of these studies to read the correspondence between the Byron/Lovelace and Somerville/Grieg families, and it was amazing to see this relationship unfold. Early-on Ada's mother writes to Mary Somerville of her appreciation for the affect she has on balancing Ada's mind. Later Ada herself writes to Mary and sweetly asks her if she will be her chaperone to go to parties put on by Babbage so that she could interact with him and learn more about his computing machines. Ada threw herself into understanding the Analytical Engine, and saw, even more than Babbage did, the full extent of what it could do. She saw that the hardware was only half of the story - and that the computer needed software if it were to be able to calculate any type of equation (Babbage's vision having been mostly about number-crunching and creating tables of logarithms).
Ada Byron Lovelace - from a display in St. Mary Magdalene Church, Hucknall |
Display at St. Mary Magdalene Church, Hucknall |
From a display about Ada in St. Mary Magdalene Church Hucknall |
There's so much I wanted to share about Ada that I fear this post is very disjoint! I think that any commentary about her life needs a book, or maybe an epic poem, rather than a blog post! But this is the best I can do for now.
Lord Byron's memorial outside St. Mary Magdalene Church, Hucknall, England |
On her father's memorial outside the Hucknall church is a quote from his work Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, "But there is that within me . . . that shall breathe when I expire." I'd certainly say that is true of Ada!
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