Queen Anne of England visited Trinity College, Cambridge on 17 April 1705. Sir Isaac Newton: Knighted by the Queen Anne Isaac surprised his colleague, Edmund Halley an astronomer, with a solution to a problem he worked on four years earlier but never shared with anyone. He would keep his brilliant discoveries to himself and refuse to collaborate with fellow scientists due to a misunderstanding or criticism of his work. This could be attributed to his lonely upbringing. Isaac Newton was quick-tempered and had emotional breakdowns. Other than venting out in his journal, Isaac Newton recorded highlights of his day such as when he made pie on a Sunday night and when he ate an apple in church. He also questioned his allegiance to God. Some of his entries were that he picked on his younger sister. It revealed his other side as a moody teenager, and his fears which most found relatable. He had a notebook with “57 sins” he had committed. This helped him let out his frustrations. Isaac Newton Kept a Journal of his Sinsīeing introverted and secretive, and a lonely person, Isaac Newton recorded his daily transgressions. Isaac later joined Trinity College, the University of Cambridge in 1661, and that’s how he dodged the farming bullet. Through much convincing from his headmaster in Grantham, she let him return to school. She wanted him to go back to Woolsthorpe Manor to become a farmer, just like his father was. She had lost her second husband and was back at her parents, Isaac was then a boarding student due to distance. Isaac Newton’s Mother wanted him to be a FarmerĪt the age of 16, Isaac Newton was ordered to quit school by his mother. His uncle, William Ayscough and his school headmaster, Stokes, saw his intellectual potential. He would create a detailed and complicated system of sundials, a time-telling machine, which was accurate to the minute. He was not fond of literature and poetry but loved mechanics and technology. In one of his journals, he wrote how he hoped to punish them, “threatening my father and mother to burn them and the house over them”.Ī loner and an only child, Isaac buried himself in books for comfort. He felt neglected and loathed his mother and step-father for abandoning him. Isaac Newton grew up lonely and separated from his mother. Interestingly, he did not do well in school, so his mother opted to pull him out of school.ĭetermined, he waited table and paid his way through to college. Isaac hoped to study law at Trinity College Cambridge where he attended. He later attended Free Grammar school in Grantham. He grew up under his grandparents after his mother remarried. On a cold morning on 4 January 1643, Isaac Newton was born albeit prematurely and was not expected to survive since he was so tiny.
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