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Robert Adrain

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Robert Adrain

Birth
Carrickfergus, County Antrim, Northern Ireland
Death
10 Aug 1843 (aged 67)
New Brunswick, Middlesex County, New Jersey, USA
Burial
Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey, USA Add to Map
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PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS, 1827 - 1834.

Head of private academies in New Jersey and Pennsylvania
Professor at Queens College and Columbia College
Author and journal editor.

Robert Adrain was born in Carrickfergus, Ireland, September 30, 1775, the son of a school teacher who also made mathematical instruments. His parents died when Robert was about fifteen, leaving him to support both himself and his four brothers and sisters. His employment as a teacher provided him with enough resources to marry Ann Pollock in 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion. Because of his participation as an officer in the rebel army, Adrain received a severe wound and was obliged to flee with his wife to America.

After arriving in America, Adrain headed a succession of private academies, as Master of Princeton Academy in New Jersey, Principal of York County Academy and then of Reading Academy in Pennsylvania. From 1809 to 1813 Adrain was Professor of Mathematics in Queens College, now Rutgers College, and then resigned to accept the Chair of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Columbia, receiving the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from Columbia in 1818. After his resignation from Columbia in 1825, he returned to Rutgers College as Professor of Mathematics, remaining until 1827 when he accepted the Professorship of Mathematics in the University of Pennsylvania. Adrain continued as a Penn faculty member until his resignation in 1834 because of problems with discipline in his classes. He returned to New Brunswick where he tutored privately and taught at the Columbia College Grammar School before retiring in 1840.

Adrain was also an author of mathematical essays and editor of mathematical journals. His first published essays were as a frequent contributor to the Mathematical Correspondent, after its founding in 1804 as America's first mathematical journal. In 1808 he began editing his own short-lived journal, Analyst or Mathematical Museum. Adrain was also editor of the Mathematical Diary from 1825 to 1826. His published articles addressed such topics as the steering of a ship and Diophantine algebra (the study of rational solutions to polynomial equations), the normal law of errors, and the ellipicity of the Earth.

Adrain died in New Brunswick, New Jersey, August 10, 1843. One of his seven children, Garnett Bowditch Adrain, would represent New Jersey as a Democratic member of the United States Congress from 1857 to 1861.




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PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS, 1827 - 1834.

Head of private academies in New Jersey and Pennsylvania
Professor at Queens College and Columbia College
Author and journal editor.

Robert Adrain was born in Carrickfergus, Ireland, September 30, 1775, the son of a school teacher who also made mathematical instruments. His parents died when Robert was about fifteen, leaving him to support both himself and his four brothers and sisters. His employment as a teacher provided him with enough resources to marry Ann Pollock in 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion. Because of his participation as an officer in the rebel army, Adrain received a severe wound and was obliged to flee with his wife to America.

After arriving in America, Adrain headed a succession of private academies, as Master of Princeton Academy in New Jersey, Principal of York County Academy and then of Reading Academy in Pennsylvania. From 1809 to 1813 Adrain was Professor of Mathematics in Queens College, now Rutgers College, and then resigned to accept the Chair of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Columbia, receiving the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from Columbia in 1818. After his resignation from Columbia in 1825, he returned to Rutgers College as Professor of Mathematics, remaining until 1827 when he accepted the Professorship of Mathematics in the University of Pennsylvania. Adrain continued as a Penn faculty member until his resignation in 1834 because of problems with discipline in his classes. He returned to New Brunswick where he tutored privately and taught at the Columbia College Grammar School before retiring in 1840.

Adrain was also an author of mathematical essays and editor of mathematical journals. His first published essays were as a frequent contributor to the Mathematical Correspondent, after its founding in 1804 as America's first mathematical journal. In 1808 he began editing his own short-lived journal, Analyst or Mathematical Museum. Adrain was also editor of the Mathematical Diary from 1825 to 1826. His published articles addressed such topics as the steering of a ship and Diophantine algebra (the study of rational solutions to polynomial equations), the normal law of errors, and the ellipicity of the Earth.

Adrain died in New Brunswick, New Jersey, August 10, 1843. One of his seven children, Garnett Bowditch Adrain, would represent New Jersey as a Democratic member of the United States Congress from 1857 to 1861.




PLEASE:
Do not use VIRTUAL FLOWERS feature to post ancestral lines or corrections. VIRTUAL FLOWERS are only for tributes...
Thank you...







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  • Created by: Noname
  • Added: Jan 12, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/46615834/robert-adrain: accessed ), memorial page for Robert Adrain (30 Sep 1775–10 Aug 1843), Find a Grave Memorial ID 46615834, citing Saint James Episcopal Church Cemetery, Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey, USA; Maintained by Noname (contributor 47160738).