Around 1860, Cambridge University's
Lucasian Professor of Mathematics (
Newton's chair) was supplemented by the new
Sadleirian professorship, using funds bequeathed by Lady Sadleir, with the 42-year-old Cayley as its first holder. His duties were
"to explain and teach the principles of pure mathematics and to apply himself to the advancement of that science." He gave up a lucrative legal practice for a modest salary, but never regretted the exchange, since it allowed him to devote his energies to the pursuit that he liked best. He at once married and settled down in Cambridge, and (unlike Hamilton) enjoyed a home life of great happiness. Sylvester, his friend from his bachelor days, once expressed his envy of Cayley's peaceful family life, whereas the unmarried Sylvester had to fight the world all his days. At first the Sadleirian professor was paid to lecture over one of the terms of the academic year, but the university financial reform of 1886 freed funds to extend his lectures to two terms. For many years his courses were attended only by a few students who had finished their examination preparation, but after the reform the attendance numbered about fifteen. He generally lectured on his current research topic. As for his duty to the advancement of mathematical science, he published a long and fruitful series of memoirs ranging over all of pure mathematics. He also became the standing referee on the merits of mathematical papers to many societies both at home and abroad. In 1872, he was made an honorary fellow of Trinity College, and three years later an ordinary fellow, a paid position. About this time his friends subscribed for a presentation portrait.
Maxwell wrote an address praising Cayley's principal works, including his Chapters on the Analytical Geometry of n dimensions; On the theory of
Determinants; Memoir on the theory of Matrices; Memoirs on skew surfaces, otherwise Scrolls; and On the delineation of a Cubic Scroll. In addition to his work on
algebra, Cayley made fundamental contributions to
algebraic geometry. Cayley and
Salmon discovered the 27 lines on a
cubic surface. Cayley constructed the
Chow variety of all curves in projective 3-space. He founded the algebro-geometric theory of
ruled surfaces. His contributions to
combinatorics include counting the
nn−2
trees on
n labeled vertices by the pioneering use of
generating functions. In 1876, he published a
Treatise on Elliptic Functions. He took great interest in the movement for the university education of women. At Cambridge the first women's colleges were Girton and Newnham. In the early days of
Girton College he gave direct help in teaching, and for some years he was chairman of the council of
Newnham College, in the progress of which he took the keenest interest to the last. In 1881, he received from the
Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, where Sylvester was then professor of mathematics, an invitation to deliver a course of lectures. He accepted the invitation, and lectured at Baltimore during the first five months of 1882 on the subject of the
Abelian and Theta Functions. He was awarded honorary membership of the
Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society in 1859. and in 1893, Cayley became a foreign member of the
Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. ==British Association presidency==