Robert Murphy was born in 1806 in
Mallow, County Cork, Ireland and was baptized in the
Church of Ireland on 8 March 1807, the third son (of seven children) of John Murphy, a shoemaker, and Margaret Murphy. When he was 11, Murphy was run over by a cart in an accident that resulted in a fractured thighbone. This incident left him bedridden for one year. During this time, Murphy read the works of
Euclid and studied algebra. Anonymous solutions to mathematical problems posed in a local newspaper brought Murphy attention from a mathematical tutor in Cork, named Mulcahy. Money was found for him to attend Mr Hopley's school in Mallow. Murphy then had sponsorship to take him to
Trinity College, Dublin, in 1823; but was not admitted. With support from
Robert Woodhouse, he was brought to Cambridge on the strength of a pamphlet on the
duplication of the cube. He was admitted as a pensioner to
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, on 7 July 1825. Murphy won the 1st Mathematics Prize in 1826 and went on to graduate with a first class degree, B.A. in 1829, as 3rd
wrangler. It led to Murphy being awarded a
Perse Fellowship. At the same time, to help his financial position, he was appointed as Librarian. == Later life ==