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Max attended the City of London School, entering in 1908. From there he gained a scholarship to St John's College, Cambridge, which he entered in 1915. Of course World War I had already begun when he entered university and as a consequence, after obtaining First Class in Part 1 of the Mathematical Tripos, he interrupted his studies. As we mentioned above, it was at this time that he changed his name by deed poll from Neumann to Newman. From 1916 until 1919 Newman undertook work related to the war, doing various jobs such as army paymaster and schoolmaster. He returned to Cambridge after his war related duties ended in 1919, graduated in 1921, and then became a Fellow of St John's College in 1923. During a visit to Vienna in session 1922-23 he was strongly influenced by Reidemeister . From 1927 he was a lecturer at Cambridge in addition to his holding his Fellowship. Newman visited Princeton in 1928-9 during which time he was a Rockefeller Research Fellow working closely with Alexander . Newman married Lynn Lloyd in 1934. She was the daughter of Alexander Lloyd, a Presbyterian minister, and she was an accomplished author. They had two sons. Newman returned to Princeton for a second visit in 1937-8. In 1939 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society . He was later (1958) to receive the Sylvester medal from the Royal Society :
In 1942 he joined the Government Code and Cipher School at Bletchley Park and worked there with Turing . His important contribution is described in :
At the end of the War Newman was appointed to a chair to succeed Mordell as Fielden Professor of Mathematics at Manchester and, three years later, he appointed Turing to the post of Reader in Mathematics in his Department. He made other fine appointments such as Bernhard Neumann and Cassels . Along with Hodge and Henry Whitehead , Newman set up the British Mathematical Colloquium. His mathematical work was in the field of combinatorial topology where he greatly influenced his friend Henry Whitehead . A series of papers by Newman on this topic between 1926 and 1932 revolutionised the field. He achieved this by giving a totally new definition of combinatory equivalence based on three elementary moves, rather than on the notion of subdivision which had previously been used. This allowed him to recast the subject avoiding the difficulties which had previously arisen. Newman also wrote an important paper on theoretical computer science, produced a topological counter-example of major significance in collaboration with Henry Whitehead , and wrote an outstanding paper on periodic transformations in abelian topological groups . He only wrote one book Elements of the topology of plane sets of points (1939). Writing in , Peter Hilton claims that:
In 1962 Newman was presented with the De Morgan Medal from the London Mathematical Society . The President of the Society, Mary Cartwright , gave a tribute to Newman's work which is reported in :
In 1964 Newman retired from his Manchester chair but he most certainly did not give up mathematics. He taught a course at the University of Warwick and at this time I [EFR] was a research student there and met him and attended lectures he gave. He was an outstanding teacher, clearly giving much attention to the organisation of his material. Retirement was also an opportunity for Newman to relaunch his research career which he did with the vigour of a young academic. He published a highly significant paper in 1966 which proved the Poincaré Conjecture for topological manifolds of dimension greater than 4. Lynn Newman died in 1973, and later in the same year he married Margaret Penrose, the daughter of a professor of physiology, who was the widow of the physician Professor Lionel Sharples Penrose. Wylie, writing in the Dictionary of National Biography, gives an indication of Newman's interests outside mathematics:
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |