Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- SECTION I FROM 1806 TO 1827
- SECTION II FROM 1827 TO 1831
- SECTION III FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION IV CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION V FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VI CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VII FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION VIII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION IX FROM 1856 TO 1865
- SECTION X CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1856 TO 1866
- SECTION XI FROM 1866 TO 1871
- SECTION XII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1867 TO 1870
- LIST OF WRITINGS
- INDEX
SECTION III - FROM 1831 TO 1836
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- SECTION I FROM 1806 TO 1827
- SECTION II FROM 1827 TO 1831
- SECTION III FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION IV CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION V FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VI CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VII FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION VIII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION IX FROM 1856 TO 1865
- SECTION X CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1856 TO 1866
- SECTION XI FROM 1866 TO 1871
- SECTION XII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1867 TO 1870
- LIST OF WRITINGS
- INDEX
Summary
1831
At the time when he left the College, Mr. De Morgan was living with his family in Guilford Street, but removed in the autumn of 1831 to 5 Upper Gower Street, where he lived till our marriage in 1837. His only sister had been married the year before to Mr. Lewis Hensley, a surgeon of ability and good practice. My own family left Stoke Newington and settled at 31 Upper Bedford Place, Russell Square, in 1830.
State of Science
In May 1828, shortly after his first coming to London, Mr. De Morgan had been elected a Fellow of the Astronomical Society, and in February 1830 took his place on the Council. Of the state of Science just before that period, Sir John Herschel said: ‘The end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth century were remarkable for the small amount of scientific movement going on in this country, especially in its more exact departments. … Mathematics were at the last gasp, and Astronomy nearly so—I mean in those members of its frame which depend upon precise measurement and systematic calculation. The chilling torpor of routine had begun to spread itself over all those branches of Science which wanted the excitement of experimental research.’
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Memoir of Augustus De MorganWith Selections from His Letters, pp. 41 - 74Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1882