Charles Babbage, a brilliant polymath, is remembered today as the first man to build a computing machine. He not only helped found the Astronomical Society but also had a keen interest in creating a calculating machine. Although his first attempt, the Difference Engine, could not be completed, he persevered and designed a more complex machine called the Analytical Engine. This revolutionary device was programmed using punched cards. However, Babbage’s brilliance extended beyond computing. He made significant contributions to various fields, including electrodynamics, cryptography, transportation, and mathematics. As a Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge, he was also one of the pioneers of operational research. Babbage’s innovative ideas, such as the ‘Babbage Principle’ and his support for natural law, continue to influence and shape our understanding of science and technology.
Quick Facts
- British Celebrities Born In December Died At Age: 79
- Family:
- Spouse/Ex-: Georgiana Whitmore
- Father: Benjamin Babbage
- Mother: Betsy Plumleigh Babbage
- Children: Benjamin Babbage
- Born Country: England
- Inventors
- Mathematicians
- Died on: October 18, 1871
- Place of death: Marylebone, London, England
- City: London, England
- Discoveries/Inventions: Analytical Engine
- Education: Trinity College, Cambridge, Peterhouse, Cambridge, University of Cambridge
Childhood & Early Life
Charles was one of the four children born to Benjamin Babbage, a banking partner in Praed’s & Co and the owner of the Bitton Estate in Teignmouth, and Betsy Plumleigh Babbage. At eight, he was sent to a country school in Alpington in order to recover from a life-threatening fever. He joined King Edward VI Grammar School in South Devon, and then Holmwood academy, in Middlesex, under the Reverend Stephen Freeman. The school library inspired love for mathematics in him. He left the academy to be taught by two private tutors – a clergyman from Cambridge from whom he did not learn much, and the other an Oxford tutor who taught him the Classics. He joined the Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1810. He and his friends formed the Analytical Society, the Ghost Club that investigated paranormal occurrences, and the Extractors Club to free members of mental asylums. In 1812, he shifted to Peterhouse, Cambridge and as the best mathematician there, he received a degree without examination, two years later. He had defended a controversial thesis in a debate.
Career
Following his graduation from Cambridge, Babbage applied for numerous posts, but found little success. He lectured on astronomy at the Royal Institution and in 1816, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 1820, he helped establish the Astronomical Society, which asked Babbage and Herschel to improve The Nautical Almanac by removing the errors in the tables. This inspired in him, the concept of mechanical computation. He published “Observations on the Application of Machinery to the Computation of Mathematical Tables” in 1822, in the Astronomical Society and constructed a small machine to compute the table of squares. In 1823, following the Royal Society’s recommendation, the British government assured to fund the difference engine— an automatic mechanical calculator designed to tabulate polynomial functions. His friend and engineer Marc Brunel recommended Joseph Clement, an artisan, for the construction of the engine. The difference engine was not completed because of agreements over costs with Clement. A second difference Engine did not receive government funding and was abandoned; however, it was finally constructed between 1989 and 1991 to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Babbage’s birth. He worked with his Cambridge friend and fellow mathematician John Herschel, on Arago’s rotation and the electrodynamics surrounding the phenomenon, in 1825. Their work was used and broadened by Michael Faraday. In 1826, he bought George Barrett’s actuarial tables. Barrett had died leaving unpublished work. Based on his study of Barrett’s work, Babbage published ‘Comparative View of the Various Institutions for the Assurance of Lives’. He was denied secretaryship of the Royal Society despite being promised. In 1826, he published his design for an open submarine vessel with adequate air for four persons to last more than two days. From 1828 to 1839, Babbage was Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge, an esteemed academic post, and was voted as Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He tried to enter Parliament and twice was a candidate from Finsbury borough in the 1830s, but lost narrowly. His political views included broadening political franchise and, separation of state and Church. In 1830, as a polemicist, he published ‘Reflections on the Decline of Science and some of its Causes’. It led to the formation of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (BAAS). His, ‘On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures’, in 1832, is one of the earliest work on operational research. The “Babbage principle” supported division of labor on the degree of skill. In 1837, he published his Ninth Bridgewater Treatise under the title ‘On the Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God’. He outlined his concept of creation in which natural law dominated. In cryptology, he was able to decode the Vigenere’s autokey cipher during the 1850s at the height of the Crimean War, but his discovery was kept a military secret and not published.
Major Works
Babbage designed a complex machine called the Analytical Engine which could be used for general computation and was programmed by punched cards. The Engine was continuously redesigned and developed from 1833 until his death. In 1838, he invented the pilot, a metal frame in front of locomotives that clears the tracks of obstacles and designed a dynamometer car that would record the progress of the locomotive.
Personal Life & Legacy
In 1814, Babbage married Georgiana Whitmore. Of the couple’s eight children, only, four namely, Benjamin Herschel, Georgiana Whitmore, Dugald Bromhead and Henry Prevost, survived till adulthood. He died of renal inadequacy at the age 79, and was buried in London’s Kensal Green Cemetery. A green plaque commemorates the 40 years he resided at 1 Dorset Street, Marylebone. Among the many things named after him, is a crater on the moon and a locomotive, while The Charles Babbage Institute, an information technology center, functions at the University of Minnesota.
Trivia
This polymath’s friend and admirer Ada Lovelace is regarded as the world’s first computer programmer because she prepared an algorithm designed to be executed by a machine. This mathematician was one of the four scientists who independently discovered dendrochronology or the study of tree rings; however, A. E. Douglass is regarded as the father of dendrochronology.