George Boole (1815-1864) George Boole must be considered the most important person associated with the Lincoln Mechanics' Institute. In 1854 he published
The Laws of Thought which provided the basis for
Boolean Algebra and the framework for modern
Information Technology. Boole was born and lived in nearby Silver street. He did not attend the grammar school but Bainbridge's commercial academy in St Michael's Lane before training as a teacher. His father was the first Curator of the Mechanics’ Institute. George Boole gave many lectures and was an "instructor" for mathematics. While George Boole was largely self taught, he was also encouraged and lent books by Sir
Edward Bromhead, chairman of the Mechanics' Institute and a notable mathematician. At the time he was recognised by the institute as youthful prodigy. In April 1835 when the Mechanics' Institute was presented a bust of Sir
Isaac Newton by the Earl of Yarborough he gave a lecture to the Mechanics' Institute on Newton and
The hope expressed by the excellent President Sir Edw. Ffrench Bromhead, at the close of the lecture, said that Mr. G. Boole would go on in the course he had commenced, and one day be an honor to Lincoln, was we believe echoed by every breast We trust that many youths present would also feel the spring of laudable ambition touched within them, while listening to honourable testimonies and encomiums thus given to genius and industry. The noble Patron (Earl of Yarborough) also gave a handsome testimony to the powers of the youthful lecturer. At the age of 19, in 1834, Boole set up his own school in Free School Lane, close to the
Greyfriars and in 1838 he moved to
Waddington where he took over Hall's Academy before opening his own ‘Boarding School for Young Gentlemen’ in 1840, at Pottergate, Lincoln. Boole became a prominent local figure in Lincoln, an admirer of
John Kaye, the bishop. He took part in the local campaign for early closing and reduction of shop workers hours in Lincoln and also the establishment of the Penitent Females Home. In 1847, with the Rev Edward Larken and others, he set up a
building society in Lincoln. He associated with the Chartist, Thomas Cooper who was married to his cousin Susannah Chaloner. Boole could read French, German and Italian, and, aged 16, read
Lacroix's
Calcul Différentiel, a book given to him by Rev. George Stevens Dickson, rector of
St Swithin's church. In 1838, Boole worked in Waddington on his first paper for publication,
On Certain Theorems in the Calculus of Variations, prompted by his reading of
Lagrange's
Mécanique Analytique. He published a paper on the mathematical basis of logic, which was published in the
Mechanics’ Magazine in 1848. ===
Charles Seely (1803-1887)=== '', 21 December 1878 A member of the Committee of the Mechanics’ Institute from 1834 until it moved to the Buttermarket in 1862, Seely was an industrialist and Liberal politician, who served as an MP for Lincoln from 1847 to 1848 and again from 1861 to 1885. He was born in Lincoln and became one of the wealthiest industrialists of the Victorian era. He was a miller who built a large mill on the Brayford. He purchased coal-mines in Derbyshire and eventually purchased extensive estates in the Isle of Wight.
Thomas Michael Keyworth (1800-1858) Described as an "Ultra-Radical", Keyworth was a Lincoln wine merchant, who was the business partner of Charles Seely from 1835 onwards and involved in the opening of Lincoln's first steam mill in 1836. He was a partner in
Clayton & Shuttleworth’s engineering company and played a prominent part in Lincoln politics. He was Chairman of the Lincoln Corn and Market Hall Company until his death in 1858.
Thomas Cooper (1805–1892) A poet and leading
Chartist, married to Susannah Chaloner, a cousin of George Boole,
Thomas Cooper joined the Lincoln Mechanics' Institute in 1834 and shortly afterwards was on the Committee of the Institute. He probably continued on the Committee until he left Lincoln in 1838. His prison rhyme the "Purgatory of Suicides" (1845) runs to 944 stanzas. He is commemorated in Lincoln by the Thomas Cooper Memorial Chapel in the High Street.
Edward Parker Charlesworth (1783–1853) Chairman of the Mechanics' Institute for nearly twenty years,
Edward Parker Charlesworth was a surgeon at Lincoln Hospital and a visiting physician at Lincoln Asylum for the Insane (The Lawn). Charlesworth won national recognition for his removal of restraint procedures for mentally ill patients and worked closely with Richard Gardiner Hill (Physician to the Lincoln Dispensary) who gave a public lecture outlining the new methods of treatment to the Mechanics' Institute in 1838. ==References==