Ada Byron
Lovelace
The First Computer Programmer
1815 - 1852
Ada Byron
Lovelace was one of the most
charming personalities in computer
history. She is known as a British
mathematician, musician, and is
best known as the first computer
programmer. She wrote about
Charles Babbage’s “Analytical
Engine”, explaining the process
with such clarity and precision
that her work became the leading
text explaining the process now
known as computer programming. A
software language that was
developed in 1979 by the U.S.
Department of Defense was named
Ada in her honor.
Ada Byron
Lovelace was born on December 10,
1815 to the famous poet, Lord
Byron and Annabella Milbanke. Lord
Byron was a strikingly handsome
man who traveled widely and wrote
his poetry with a biting criticism
of British society. While he fell
in love with Annabella, their
marriage lasted only a year. Five
weeks after Ada was born, Lady
Bryon asked for a separation from
her husband, and was given sole
custody of the child. Lord Byron
left for Italy and never returned
to his home. He never saw his
daughter again. He died in Greece
when Ada was eight years old.
Ada was an
active athletic child, loving
gymnastics, dancing, and horseback
riding. She became an accomplished
musician, playing the piano,
violin, and harp
As a teenager, Ada
had all the advantages of the
elite in London. She attended
concerts, theaters, and elegant
parties. She met many famous
people, including the queen.
Even though
she loved the arts, Ada was more
interested in how things worked.
She was fascinated by mechanical
things and loved to figure out
what make machines work. Lady
Byron, being afraid that Ada would
end up being a poet like her
father, encouraged her daughter in
her studies of mathematics and the
sciences.
When she was
seventeen years old, Ada met Mrs.
Somerville, a remarkable woman who
had just published a book on
mathematical astronomy, “The
Mechanism of the Heavens”. This
woman became a mentor to Ada and
while she encouraged the young
lady in her mathematical studies,
she also tried to put mathematics
and technology in a human context.
It was Mrs. Somerville who
arranged for Ada to meet Lord
William King, Earl of Lovelace,
who was to later become her
husband.
Ada met
Charles Babbage at a dinner party
put on by Mrs. Somerville. It was
here that she first heard of Mr.
Babbages Analytical Engine and Ada
was intrigued by his ideas. As his
idea progressed in later years,
Ada suggested to Babbage that a
plan be written for how the engine
might calculate Bernoulli numbers.
He commissioned Ada to write that
plan, and this very plan is now
considered the first “computer
program”.
After she
wrote the description of Babbage’s
Analytical Engine, her life was
difficult. She was plagued with
illnesses and she died of cancer
in 1852 at the age of 36. |