Charles Hutton

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Charles Hutton
Born14 August 1737
Died27 January 1823(1823-01-27) (aged 85)
London, England, UK
NationalityBritish
AwardsCopley Medal 1778
Scientific career
Fieldsmathematics
InstitutionsRoyal Military Academy

Charles Hutton

surveyor. He was professor of mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich from 1773 to 1807. He is remembered for his calculation of the density of the earth from Nevil Maskelyne's measurements collected during the Schiehallion experiment
.

Life

Hutton was born on Percy Street in

colliery at Old Long Benton. Following Ivison's promotion to a church living, Hutton took over the Jesmond school, which, in consequence of his increasing number of pupils, he relocated to nearby Stotes Hall, since demolished. While he taught during the day at Stotes Hall, which overlooked Jesmond Dene, he studied mathematics in the evening at a school in Newcastle. In 1760 he married, and began teaching on a larger scale in Newcastle, where his pupils included John Scott, later Lord Eldon, who became Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain.[3]

In 1764 Hutton published his first work, The Schoolmasters Guide, or a Complete System of Practical Arithmetic, which was followed by his Treatise on Mensuration both in Theory and Practice in 1770.[3] At around this time he was employed by the mayor and corporation of Newcastle to make a survey of the town and its environs. He drew up a map for the corporation; a smaller one, of the town only, was engraved and published.[4] In 1772 he brought out a tract on The Principles of Bridges, a subject suggested by the destruction of the sole Newcastle bridge by the Great Flood of 1771.[3]

Hutton left Newcastle in 1773, following his appointment as professor of mathematics at the

LL.D. from the University of Edinburgh. He became the foreign secretary of the Royal Society in 1779. His resignation from the society in 1783 was brought about by tensions between its president Sir Joseph Banks and the mathematicians amongst its members.[3] He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1788.[7]

While working on the Schiehallion experiment, Hutton recorded 23 Gaelic place-names on or near his measurement contour. Less than half are to be found on the modern Ordnance Survey map.[8]

After his Tables of the Products and Powers of Numbers, 1781, and his Mathematical Tables of 1785 (second edition 1794), Hutton issued, for the use of the Royal Military Academy, in 1787 Elements of Conic Sections, and in 1798 his Course of Mathematics. His Mathematical and Philosophical Dictionary, a valuable contribution to scientific biography, was published in 1795 and the four volumes of Recreations in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy, mostly translated from the French, in 1803. One of his most laborious works was the abridgment, in conjunction with G. Shaw and R. Pearson, of the Royal Society's Philosophical Transactions. This undertaking, the mathematical and scientific parts of which fell to Hutton, was completed in 1809, and filled 18 quarto volumes.[3] From 1764 he contributed to The Ladies' Diary (a poetical and mathematical almanac established in 1704), and became its editor in 1773–4, retaining the post until 1817.[9] He had previously begun a small periodical called Miscellane Mathematica, of which only 13 numbers appeared; he subsequently published five volumes of The Diarian Miscellany which contained substantial extracts from the Diary.[3]

Due to ill health, Hutton resigned his professorship in 1807,[3] although he served as the principal examiner of the Royal Military Academy, and also to the Addiscombe Military Seminary for some years after his retirement. The Board of Ordnance had granted him a pension of £500 a year.[2] During his last years, he worked on new editions of his earlier works.[10]

He died on 27 January 1823, and was buried in the family vault at Charlton, in Kent.[2]

During the last year of his life a group of his friends set up a fund to pay to have a marble bust made of him. It was executed by the sculptor Sebastian Gahagan. The subscription exceeded the amount necessary, and a medal was also produced, engraved by Benjamin Wyon, showing Hutton's head on one side and emblems representing his discoveries about the force of gunpowder, and the density of the earth on the other.[2]

References

  1. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d "Charles Hutton, LL.D. F.R.S." The European Magazine, and London Review. 83: 482–7. June 1823.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chisholm 1911.
  4. ^ Bruce 1823, p.13
  5. .
  6. ^ "Background to Boys' experiment to determine G". University of Oxford Department of Physics. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  7. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter H" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
  8. ^ Murray, John (2019), Reading the Gaelic Landscape: Leughadh Aghaidh na Tire, Whittles Publishing, pp. 23 & 24.
  9. ^ Niccolò Guicciardini, 'Hutton, Charles (1737–1823)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 9 April 2015
  10. ^ Bruce 1823, p.27

Sources

Works

External links