Beta Help us improve: share your feedback on our new website.

Mary Somerville

Astronomer, scientist and polymath, known as ‘the queen of science’.

Plaque Inscription

Mary Fairfax Somerville
1780–1872
"The Queen of 19th century science"
Astronomer, scientist & polymath, lived here

Black and white drawing of a person in period dress wearing a bonnet-style hat.
Scottish scientific writer Mary Somerville (nee Fairfax) - James R. Swinton / Stringer.

Location

53 Northumberland Street, Edinburgh

Category

Science, Writers

Year

2016

Mary Somerville was one of Scotland’s greatest scientists. She studied mathematics and astrology, wrote widely across scientific disciplines, and was hailed by the Morning Post newspaper as “the queen of science”.

Born Mary Fairfax in Jedburgh in 1780 and raised at the family home in Burntisland, Fife, she developed an appetite for learning from a young age.

In 1831, she published ‘Mechanism of the Heavens’ to great acclaim, followed by ‘On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences’ in 1834. The work included a mathematical prediction of a yet-undiscovered planet orbiting Uranus. Her calculations inspired John Crouch Adams to search the skies for Neptune, which was discovered in 1846.

She would go on to publish another three books including her ‘Personal Reflections’, in which she wrote: “From my earliest years my mind revolved against oppression and tyranny, and I resented the injustice of the world in denying all those privileges of education to my sex which were so lavishly bestowed on men."

A lifelong liberal, Somerville was a great advocate for women’s education and refused to take sugar in her tea in protest to the transatlantic slave trade. She was one of the first women to be made honorary members of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1835, was the first signatory on John Stuart Mill’s unsuccessful petition for women’s suffrage in 1868, and tutored Ada Lovelace, the first computer programmer.

Somerville College, Oxford, is named after her, as well as a lunar crater, an asteroid, a ship and an island in Canada.

Explore more plaques

View all

Madge Easton Anderson

Trail blazing lawyer and Scotland’s first female solicitor.

Groups of women at some kind of reception sit at tables decorated with flowers. There is a row of five women of varying ages in the rear of photo, along a straight table.

Alexander Bain

Inventor of the fax machine and electric clock.

Black and white portrait photograph of a person. They are wearing a suit with a bow tie, and they have a long, full beard.

Andrew Blain Baird

Blacksmith who attempted the first heavier-than-air powered flight in Scotland.

Old, sepia-toned portrait photograph of Andrew Baird. He is well dressed with dark hair and a large moustache.

John Logie Baird

Inventive engineer who was the first person to demonstrate a working television live.

Black and white photograph of a person seated behind a microphone and a bank of light bulbs. They are holding a ventriloquist's doll in each hand as if they are having a conversation.

Charles Glover Barkla

1917 Nobel Prize winner for Physics.

Black and white photograph of a person wearing a suit and tie seated at a table. They are looking into the camera and holding a large book in their hands, as if reading.

Sir Arnold Bax

Leading composer of 20th century symphonies.

Black and white photo of three people seated at a table inside a public house. All are drinking and smiling, as if sharing a joke, and the person in the centre is looking at the camera and holding a pipe.