|
Augusta Ada
King, countess of Lovelace
Born: 10 Dec 1815 in Piccadilly, Middlesex (now in London), England
Died: 27 Nov 1852 in Marylebone, London, England
Augusta Ada Byron's father was the famous poet Lord George Gordon
Byron and her mother was Anne Isabelle Milbanke. Ada's parents
married on 2 January 1815 but separated on 16 January 1816, a month
after she was born. On 25 April 1816 Lord Byron went abroad and Ada
never saw her father again. Lord Byron never returned to England and
died in Greece when Ada was eight years old. Lady Byron was given
sole custody of her daughter Ada, who was declared a Ward in Chancery
in April 1817, and she tried to do everything possible in bring up
her child to ensure that she would not become a poet like her father.
Lady Byron had been interested in the study of mathematics herself.
Lord Byron, before his marriage, had called his future wife "the
Princess of Parallelograms" and had written to her on 18 October 1812
(see for example [3] where the letter is quoted):-
I agree with you quite upon Mathematics too - and must be content to
admire them at an incomprehensible distance - always adding them to
the catalogue of my regrets - I know that two and two make four - and
should be glad to prove it too if I could - though I must say if by
any sort of process I could convert two and two into five it would
give me much greater pleasure. The only part I remember which gave me
much delight were those theorems (is that the word?) in which after
ringing the changes upon A, B and C, D etc I at last came to "which
is absurd - which is impossible" and at this point I have always
arrived and I fear always shall through life ...
Given this mathematical frame of mind, which Lord Byron clearly did
not share, it was natural that Lady Byron should try to encourage Ada
in that direction. Also she considered mathematics a good subject for
training the mind to ensure that her daughter took a disciplined
approach. Music, Lady Byron believed, was a topic that provided a
girl with the right social skills so this was also emphasised in
Ada's education. However although Lady Byron devoted much energy to
organise Ada's upbringing she herself seems to have spent very little
time with her. Lord Byron must have heard about the problems for he
wrote to Lady Byron on 1 March 1816 (see for example [3] where the
letter is quoted):-
They tell me young [Ada] is well and shows marvellous indications of
acquaintance with her nurse and her grandmother - it is perhaps time
she should begin to recognise another of her relations.
The grandmother that Lord Byron refers to in this quote was Lady
Noel, Lady Byron's mother, who was indeed much more in daily contact
with Ada than was her mother. Lady Noel, however, died in 1822.
A number of tutors were employed, often for only a short period, to
direct Ada's education. At age about six she had a Miss Lamont as a
tutor and, despite her mother's emphasis on mathematics, Ada's
favourite subject was geography while arithmetic she only studied
reluctantly in order to please her mother. On discovering that Ada
preferred geography to arithmetic, Lady Byron insisted that one of
Ada's geography lessons be replaced by an arithmetic lesson and
shortly after this Miss Lamont was replaced as Ada's tutor. Some
members of the family feared that Lady Byron was insisting that her
daughter be driven too hard.
Lady Byron ignored the family concerns and kept a constant pressure
on her daughter to work hard and long at her lessons. Some rewards
were offered but pressure was usually applied by giving Ada
punishments like solitary confinement, making her lie motionless, and
demanding that she write apologies such as (see for example [3]):-
I, Ada, have not done the Notes very well, but I'll try to do it
better tomorrow.
Ada's mathematical education was undertaken by a number of private
tutors. William Frend, who had tutored Lady Byron in mathematics, was
involved in Ada's mathematical education but by this time he was an
old man who had not kept pace with mathematical developments. Dr
William King was also engaged as a tutor to Ada in 1829 but his
interest in mathematics was not very deep and he confessed that he
had studied mathematics by reading it rather than by doing it. He
continued to give advice for some years and in correspondence with
Ada Byron in 1834 he wrote:-
... you will soon puzzle me in your studies.
It is evident that King, the tutor, was rather out of his depth. We
say King "the tutor" since by 1834 there was a second William King in
Ada Byron's life, namely the man she would marry in the following
year.
Returning to the tutors Lady Byron employed to teach the thirteen
year old Ada we might also mention Miss Arabella Lawrence who Lady
Byron instructed to change Ada's "argumentative disposition". Few can
have done more to mould the character of their child than Lady Byron
did! The young Ada, however, had long suffered some health problems
and in 1829 contracted measles from which she took a long while to
recover.
In 1833 Ada Byron was presented at court and, on the 5 June that
year, she met Charles Babbage at a party. Two weeks later Ada and her
mother visited Babbage's London studio where the Difference Engine
was on display. Ada was fascinated and, according to Sophia Frend,
William Frend's daughter and later De Morgan's wife, wrote that Ada:-
... young as she was, understood its working, and saw the great
beauty of the invention.
In 1834, when Ada was eighteen years old, she met Mary Somerville
[3]:-
Mrs Somerville sent Ada mathematics books, advised her on study, set
problems for her, and above all, talked to her young protégée about
mathematics. Some of the conversation was about Babbage and his
engines. Babbage and Mrs Somerville had been friends for years and
corresponded regularly.
Ada Byron enjoyed attending mathematics and scientific demonstrations
with Mary Somerville, but she also enjoyed her company on other
occasions. In June 1835 she wrote to William King, her future husband
(see for example [3] where the letter is quoted):-
I am going this evening to my friend Mrs Somerville's to stay the
night. She has kindly offered to take me to a concert, which my love
of music could not resist.
Ada King became Countess of Lovelace when her husband William King,
whom she married on 8 July 1835, was created an Earl in 1838. They
had three children; Byron born 12 May 1836, Annabella born 22
September 1837 and Ralph Gordon born 2 July 1839. It was after this,
in 1841, that Lovelace began advanced study in mathematics which was
provided by De Morgan.
As we mentioned above, in 1833 Ada Byron (as she still was at that
time) had become interested in Babbage's analytic engine and, ten
years later, she produced an annotated translation of Menabrea's
Notions sur la machine analytique de Charles Babbage (1842). Babbage
[2] describes how this came about:-
Some time after the appearance of [Menabrea's] memoir on the subject
in the "Bibliothèque Universelle de Genève," the late Countess of
Lovelace informed me that she had translated the memoir of Menabrea.
I asked why she had not herself written an original paper on a
subject with which she was so intimately acquainted? To this Lady
Lovelace replied that the thought had not occurred to her. I then
suggested that she should add some notes to Menabrea's memoir; an
idea which was immediately adopted.
We discussed together the various illustrations that might be
introduced: I suggested several, but the selection was entirely her
own. So also was the algebraic working out of the different problems,
except, indeed, that relating to the numbers of Bernoulli, which I
had offered to do to save Lady Lovelace the trouble. This she sent
back to me for an amendment, having detected a grave mistake which I
had made in the process.
The notes of the Countess of Lovelace extend to about three times the
length of the original memoir. Their author has entered fully into
almost all the very difficult and abstract questions connected with
the subject.
These two memoirs taken together furnish, to those who are capable of
understanding the reasoning, a complete demonstration - That the
whole of the developments and operations of analysis are now capable
of being executed by machinery.
In the annotations, which were called "Notes", Ada Lovelace described
how the Analytical Engine could be programmed and gave what many
consider to be the first ever computer program. She described the
Analytical Engine in the following way [6]:-
The distinctive characteristic of the Analytical Engine, and that
which has rendered it possible to endow mechanism with such extensive
faculties as bid fair to make this engine the executive right-hand of
abstract algebra, is the introduction into it of the principle which
Jacquard devised for regulating, by means of punched cards, the most
complicated patterns in the fabrication of brocaded stuffs. It is in
this that the distinction between the two engines lies. Nothing of
the sort exists in the Difference Engine. We may say most aptly that
the Analytical Engine weaves algebraical patterns just as the
Jacquard loom weaves flowers and leaves.
She also wrote in the Notes [6]:-
Again, [the Analytical Engine] might act upon other things besides
number, were objects found whose mutual fundamental relations could
be expressed by those of the abstract science of operations, and
which should be also susceptible of adaptations to the action of the
operating notation and mechanism of the engine . . . Supposing, for
instance, that the fundamental relations of pitched sounds in the
science of harmony and of musical composition were susceptible of
such expression and adaptations, the engine might compose elaborate
and scientific pieces of music of any degree of complexity or extent.
Lovelace's Notes were published in Richard Taylor's Scientific
Memoirs Volume 3 in 1843 with the author's name given as AAL. This
was the high point of her achievements and for a while she basked in
the admiration that she received from her friends who knew who AAL
was, but already these friends were showing concern about her health.
By the end of the year she was taking several medicines for different
health problems which troubled her.
Following the publication of the Notes her life deteriorated, almost
certainly the lack of a scientific project, and particularly the fact
that she lacked friends with whom she could discuss mathematical and
scientific problems, being a major reason for her decline. Certainly
she regarded the Notes as her first mathematical publication and
wrote in many letters about the many mathematical works that she
anticipated would follow. She considered writing a long review,
perhaps in the style of her Notes, of Ohm's work On galvanic series,
mathematically determined but Babbage, who she looked to for
encouragement, was becoming depressed at his own lack of success with
financing the development of his computers and failed to give her the
necessary support. In 1844 Lovelace wrote to De Morgan's wife saying
that because of a recent illness:-
... I have been utterly unable to think even of my studies. I
yesterday resumed them; but for some time I must only give them half
an hour to an hour a day. Pray tell Mr De Morgan all this; he must
wonder at not having heard from me.
Lovelace flirted with several of her male acquaintances and there
were several scandals. Her husband made sure that over 100 of her
letters to such friends were destroyed. There was also a problem with
over indulgence in wine which became worse when drinking with her
meals changed to drinking instead of meals. At one point she
considered writing a scientific study of the effects of opium and
wine gained from her own experiences. Gambling on horses was another
passion in these years and she pawned some of her jewels to finance
it. She owed 2000 in gambling debts when she died.
Perhaps had her husband been a stronger personality, particularly had
he been able to match her intellectual abilities, some of the
problems might have been avoided, for it was Lady Byron who dominated
the whole family. However around 1850 Lovelace fell out with her
mother, almost certainly when she discovered that for years her
mother had lied to her about her father Lord Byron. Lady Byron had
tried all her life to make sure her daughter was as different from
Lord Byron as possible and eventually Lovelace discovered the extent
of her mother's manipulation.
By January 1852 Lovelace was wracked with pain, as the cancer which
presumably had been a major cause of her health problems for some
time, became more acute. Her mind however remained as sharp as ever.
Her husband wrote (see for example [5]):-
Her mind was invigorated by the society of the intellectual men whom
she entertained as guests. ... She mastered the mathematical side of
a question in all its minuteness ... her power of generalisation was
indeed most remarkable, coupled as it was with that of minute and
intricate analysis. Babbage was a constant intellectual companion and
she ever found in him a match for her powerful understanding, their
constant philosophical discussions begetting only an increased esteem
and mutual liking.
In 1852, when only 37 years of age, Ada died of cancer.
Top
|