R. Anthony Hyman | |
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Born | 1928 London, England |
Died | 2011 |
Occupation | Historian of computing |
Education | Dartington Hall School |
Alma mater | Trinity College, Cambridge |
Years active | 1973–2007 |
Employer(s) | English Electric LEO University of Oxford |
Notable works | Charles Babbage, Pioneer of the Computer (1982). |
Spouse | Laura Alice Boyd (1934–1999), daughter of the 6th Baron Kilmarnock |
Children | 3, including the biologist Anthony A. Hyman |
Robert Anthony Hyman (1928–2011) was a British historian of computing.
Anthony Hyman wrote especially on the early Victorian computer pioneer, Charles Babbage (1791–1871). He liaised with the London Science Museum, the Royal Society, the Crawford Library, the Oxford Museum of the History of Science, the Cambridge University Library, the Edinburgh Royal Observatory for source material.[1]
Hyman was born in 1928 in London. He studied at Dartington Hall and then Trinity College, Cambridge. He worked on transistors in the early 1950s, became a polymer scientist, and then worked as a computer researcher for English Electric LEO, before becoming "a free-lance computer consultant and historian of science", and the Alastair Horne Modern History Fellow at the University of Oxford.[2] In 1962, Hyman married Hon. Laura Alice Boyd (1934–1999), daughter of the 6th Baron Kilmarnock. They had three children, including noted biologist Anthony A. Hyman. Hyman died in 2011.[3]