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Autograph letter signed ('Mary Somerville') to Ada, Countess of Lovelace, n.p., 12 June n.y. [after 1840].
Details
SOMERVILLE, Mary (1780-1872)
Autograph letter signed ('Mary Somerville') to Ada, Countess of Lovelace, n.p., 12 June n.y. [after 1840].
One page, 110 x 75mm; autograph envelope ('The Countess of Lovelace / 19 Great Cumberland Street').
A letter linking two of the most important female scientists of the 19th century. The letter is a simple note declining an invitation: 'I have an engagement on the 22d otherwise I should have had much pleasure in dining with you that day'.
Although self-taught, Mary Somerville had by the mid-1820s established herself as a significant figure in London scientific circles. In 1831 she published The Mechanism of the Heavens, a condensation of Laplace's Mécanique céleste, and the first in what was to be an immensely successful and influential series of scientific text-books which were to make her arguably the most widely recognised woman of science before Marie Curie. Somerville was not only a friend but an early intellectual influence on Ada Lovelace, and it was most likely she who introduced the then Ada Byron to Charles Babbage in 1833, when she was seventeen.
Autograph letter signed ('Mary Somerville') to Ada, Countess of Lovelace, n.p., 12 June n.y. [after 1840].
One page, 110 x 75mm; autograph envelope ('The Countess of Lovelace / 19 Great Cumberland Street').
A letter linking two of the most important female scientists of the 19th century. The letter is a simple note declining an invitation: 'I have an engagement on the 22d otherwise I should have had much pleasure in dining with you that day'.
Although self-taught, Mary Somerville had by the mid-1820s established herself as a significant figure in London scientific circles. In 1831 she published The Mechanism of the Heavens, a condensation of Laplace's Mécanique céleste, and the first in what was to be an immensely successful and influential series of scientific text-books which were to make her arguably the most widely recognised woman of science before Marie Curie. Somerville was not only a friend but an early intellectual influence on Ada Lovelace, and it was most likely she who introduced the then Ada Byron to Charles Babbage in 1833, when she was seventeen.
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