Mathematician:Leslie John Comrie

Mathematician
Mathematician and astronomer who was a pioneer in the field of mechanical computation.

Produced two editions of, making significant extensions and enhancements.

Computerised the British football pools.

Nationality
New Zealander

History

 * Born: 15 August 1893, Pukekohe, New Zealand
 * 1912 - 1916: Attended (part of the )
 * 1916: Fought in France with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force
 * February 1918: Lost his left leg to a British shell
 * 1918: Started using a mechanical calculator while recovering.
 * 1920-22: First director of the Computing Section of the British Astronomical Association
 * 1923: Received a PhD from St John's College of the University of Cambridge
 * 1924: Traveled to the USA to teach at Swarthmore College and then Northwestern University. Pioneered the teaching of numerical analysis.
 * 1926: Became deputy superintendent of HM Nautical Almanac Office at the Royal Greenwich Observatory
 * 1928: The first to use punched card equipment for scientific calculations
 * 1930: Promoted to Superintendent of the Nautical Almanac Office
 * August 1936: Suspended because of tensions with his superiors, caused by his unconventional use of machines for calculation
 * 1937: Founded Scientific Computing Service, Limited, the world's first private company for scientific computing
 * During World War II: he headed a team of 30 scientists to computerise war work, such as the creation of bombing tables for the Allies
 * 1948: Visited USA and New Zealand
 * March 1950: Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London
 * Died: 11 December 1950 after a series of strokes

Publications

 * 1921: Eclipse of Rhea by the shadow of Titan (with )
 * April 1928: On the Construction of Tables by Interpolation (in which he describes the innovation of the use of punched card equipment for interpolating tables of data)


 * 1930: Edited
 * 1941: Edited


 * 1932: The application of the Hollerith tabulating machine to Brown's tables of the moon
 * 1933: The computation of total solar eclipses
 * 1933: The total solar eclipse of 1940 October 1
 * 1937: The application of the Brunsviga twin 13Z calculating machine to the Hartmann formula for the reduction of prismatic spectrograms
 * December 1941: Line of Planets (Popular Astronomy 49: pp. 397–398)
 * December 1942: Errors in Mathematical Tables (Nature 150: p. 738)
 * December 1949: The Green (?) Flash (?) (Popular Astronomy 57: pp. 42–43)