91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Person    | Male  Born 18/5/1850  Died 3/2/1925

Oliver Heaviside

Categories: Science

Countries: Denmark

Oliver Heaviside

Born in Camden Town. Aged 12 the family could no longer afford to send him to school so he continued studying on his own. Thus he was largely self-taught, no secondary education or university.

In 1847 his mother’s sister married Charles Wheatstone who influenced the careers of Oliver and his brother Arthur in the direction of telegraphy.  In 1868 Heaviside became a telegraph operator in Denmark with the Danish-Norwegian-English Telegraph Company. By 1871 he was back in England as a chief operator. 1874 he was elected Associate Member of the Society of Telegraph Engineers (later the Institution of Electrical Engineers).

1874 he left the cable company to live with his parents again. He spent the rest of his life as an unpaid researcher into telegraphy, an important topic given the new use of submarine cabling. He also studied James Clerk Maxwell’s 1873 Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, significantly developing the maths.

In 1876 he moved with his parents to 3 St Augustine’s Road, then in 1889 they relocated to Devon, living above his brother's music shop.  Oliver continued to live in the area after his parent's deaths in 1894 and 96.  Living on his own for almost 10 years he became increasingly eccentric. He died in a Torquay nursing home.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Oliver Heaviside

Commemorated ati

Oliver Heaviside

Heaviside lived here 1863-8 and 1874-6.

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

Major-General William Roy

Major-General William Roy

Military engineer, surveyor, antiquary. Born South Lanarkshire.  Founder of the Ordnance Survey. 1749-55, one of a team that produced "The Duke of Cumberland's Map", commissioned by  George II as ...

Person, Armed Forces, Engineering, History, Science, Scotland

2 memorials
Hipparchus

Hipparchus

Astronomer, geographer, and mathematician.  190 BC – c. 120 BC.   Founder of trigonometry.   Possibly invented the armillary sphere, which we've discovered is occasionally used as a memorial, e.g. ...

Person, Science, Greece, Turkey

1 memorial
Ambrose Godfrey

Ambrose Godfrey

Apothecary. Born in Köthen (Anhalt). Also known as Ambrose Godfrey-Hanckwitz and Gottfried Hankwitz or Hanckewitz. In 1679 he travelled to London and became an assistant to Robert Boyle. They worke...

Person, Science, Germany

1 memorial
Richard Sheepshanks

Richard Sheepshanks

Astronomer. Trained as a barrister and also as a Church of England minister. But he inherited enough wealth that he instead was a practicing astronomer at Trinity College Cambridge. Publicly critic...

Person, Science

1 memorial
Galileo Galilei

Galileo Galilei

Physicist, mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher.  Born Pisa, Italy.  His improvements to the telescope enabled him to make new important astronomical observations which supported Copernicus’s...

Person, Science, Seriously Famous, Italy

2 memorials