Title
Drawings and tracings of Difference Engine No. 2.
Reference
BAB/B
Production date
1847 - 1848
Creator
- Babbage, CharlesBiographyBiography
(1792-1871), mathematician
Charles Babbage was born in 1791 in London. He began to show his talent for mathematics and invention from an early age. Following a private education, Babbage went to study at Cambridge in 1810. However, he disagreed with the theories of mathematics taught there and set about supplementing his lectures with European theories of mathematics instead. Babbage established the Analytical Society with a group of fellow mathematics undergraduates. They wrote and published a history of calculus and a translation of Sylvestre Francois Lacroix's book on differential and integral calculus.
Whilst still at Cambridge, Babbage speculated about producing a machine to calculate logarithm tables for astronomy and navigation. He graduated in mathematics from Cambridge in 1814 and was made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1816. In 1819 Babbage began to design and construct a reliable mechanical calculator capable of producing and printing accurate tables. By 1822 he had built a small calculating machine, or 'Difference Engine', able to work out complicated equations. With the backing of the Royal Society, Babbage secured an initial government grant of £1,500 to build a larger machine.
Work on the Difference Engine began in 1823, but was slower and more expensive than Babbage anticipated. Babbage's progress was further interrupted by personal tragedy when his wife and two of his children died in 1827. By 1834, the government had contributed £17,000 to build the machine. However, Babbage's disagreements with both his engineer, Joseph Clement, and the government meant work on the Difference Engine ceased altogether. In 1842 the government took the final decision to abandon the Difference Engine.
By this time, Babbage was working on a more sophisticated engine, the 'Analytical Engine', which could perform multiple calculations, store numbers and be programmed using punched cards. Babbage's detailed drawings reveal the engine to be in many ways analogous to modern computers. He applied what he had learnt to design the 'Difference Engine No. 2', an improved version of his original engine.
Babbage continued to work on the design of the Analytical Engine for the rest of his life, creating several different versions of the machine. He was convinced of its usefulness but lacked the funding to build it. The machine was never completed.
Although Babbage is best known for his calculating engines, he was a lifelong inventor with a passion for improvement. His designs included an ophthalmoscope, an automaton for playing noughts and crosses, a ‘black box’ recorder for monitoring railway tracks and ‘speaking-tubes’ linking London and Liverpool amongst many other ideas.
Babbage was also enthusiastic about promoting the usefulness of science in society. He helped set up the Astronomical Society (1820), the British Association for the Advancement of Science (1831) and the Statistical Society of London (1834). Between 1827 and 1835 he held the Lucasian Chair of Mathematics at Cambridge. He died in London in 1871, still working on the Analytical Engine.
In 1991 the Science Museum constructed the Difference Engine No. 2 to commemorate the 200th anniversary of Babbage’s birth. The machine was based on Babbage’s original plans and demonstrated for the first time the viability of his designs.
Scope and Content
This series comprises 17 tracings of the original design drawings in Series A for Difference Engine No. 2.
However tracings BAB B/18 and BAB B/19 refer to both the Analytical and Difference Engines. The relevant original design drawings and tracings are cross referenced to each other on both drawing and tracing. Some of the tracings were made from the original drawings to show more clearly certain aspects of the machine by eliminating overlaid detail.
The drawings were not dated, but probable dates have been indicated in the date fields, to reflect the period of time when the original drawings were made.
Extent
17 drawings
Physical description
The condition of the original tracing paper is yellowed and brittle due to acidification. The original tracing paper was glued and mounted on board, but not to conservation standards.
Language
English
Level of description
SERIES
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions
System of arrangement
The series is arranged alpha-numerically in date order.
The drawings were originally numbered amongst the drawings of the Analytical Engine, Series A, but the tracings in Series B were subsequently separately renumbered by Babbage. Descriptions and numberings of the tracings, as indicated by Babbage, were transcribed directly from the drawings for the purposes of this retro conversion input into the electronic catalogue.
There are gaps in the series numbering, where numbers have not been used.