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  1. June 1882 (aged 70) Houghton-le-Spring, County Durham, England. Scientific career. Fields. schoolmaster, mathematician. Institutions. School at Houghton-le-Spring. William Shanks (25 January 1812 – June 1882) [1] was an English amateur mathematician. He is famous for his calculation of π (pi) to 707 places in 1873, which was correct up to ...

  2. William Shanks married Jane Elizabeth Pringle (1815-1904) in London in 1846. In 1847 he moved to Houghton-le-Spring, a small town in the coal-mining area of County Durham. We get more information about him from the census. In 1851 he was living at Quality Hill, Houghton-le-Spring, with his wife, his widowed mother-in-law Sarah Pringle, and a ...

  3. 1853: Contributions to Mathematics, comprising chiefly the Rectification of the Circle Critical View These tremendous stretches of calculation ... prove more than the capacity of this or that computer for labor and accuracy; they show that there is in the community an increase in skill and courage ...

  4. William Shanks. 1812-1882. English mathematician who calculated extraordinarily precise values of π, e, and Euler's constant, g. Shanks's calculations of π, carried out manually to 707 decimal places, were unfortunately found to be correct for only the first 527 decimal places. Similarly, a minor mistake in his calculations of e resulted in ...

  5. Mar 6, 2019 · William Shanks didn’t limit himself to calculating the digits of Pi – he also calculated the digits of the mathematical constants and , as well as making a list of the first 60,000 prime numbers, and calculating natural logarithms with bases 2,3,5 and 10. In his day William Shanks was known as a ‘computer’, he was a human version of the ...

  6. Daniel Charles Shanks (January 17, 1917 – September 6, 1996) was an American mathematician who worked primarily in numerical analysis and number theory. He was the first person to compute π to 100,000 decimal places.

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  8. SHANKS, WILLIAM. ( b. Corsenside, Northumberland, England, 25 January 1812; d, Houghton-le-Spring, Durham, England, 1882) mathematics. Shanks’s contributions to mathematics lie entirely in the field of computation, in which he was influenced by William Rutherford of Edinburgh. From 1847 his life was spent in Houghton-le-Spring, a small town ...

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