George Francis FitzGerald was born on 3 August 1851 in
Monkstown,
Dublin, the son of The Reverend
William FitzGerald and Anne Frances Stoney (sister of
George Johnstone Stoney and
Bindon Blood Stoney). Professor of Moral Philosophy at
Trinity College Dublin and vicar of
St. Ann's Church, Dawson Street, at the time of his son's birth, William FitzGerald was consecrated
Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross in 1857 and
translated to
Killaloe and Clonfert in 1862. FitzGerald was homeschooled; his tutor was the sister of
George Boole, who was Professor of Mathematics at
Queen's College Cork. FitzGerald entered Trinity College Dublin at the age of 16, graduating in 1871 in Mathematics and Experimental Science. He became a Fellow of Trinity College in 1877, and was appointed
Erasmus Smith's Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy in 1881. Along with
Oliver Lodge,
Oliver Heaviside and
Heinrich Hertz, FitzGerald was a leading figure among the group of "Maxwellians" who revised, extended, clarified, and confirmed
James Clerk Maxwell's mathematical theories of the
electromagnetic field during the late 1870s and the 1880s. In 1883, following from
Maxwell's equations, FitzGerald was the first to suggest a device for producing rapidly oscillating electric currents to generate
electromagnetic waves, a phenomenon which was first shown to exist experimentally by Hertz in 1886. FitzGerald suffered from many digestive problems for much of his shortened life; he became very ill with stomach problems. He died on 21 February 1901 at his home in Dublin at the age of 49, shortly after an operation on a
perforated ulcer. He is buried at
Mount Jerome cemetery. == Length contraction ==