Percy Ludgate


Percy Edwin Ludgate was an Irish amateur scientist who designed the second analytical engine in history.
Ludgate was born in Skibbereen, Cork, to Michael Ludgate and Mary McMahon. In the 1901 census, he is listed as Civil Servant National Education in Dublin. In the 1911 census he's also in Dubiln, as a Commercial Clerk. He studied accountancy at Rathmines College of Commerce, earning a gold medal based on the results his final examinations in 1917. At some date before or after then he joined Kevans & Son, accountants. He died in Dublin aged 39, of pneumonia, his death certificate listing him as an accountant.
It seems that Ludgate worked as a clerk for an unknown corn merchants, in Dublin, and pursued his interest in calculating machines at night. Charles Babbage in 1843 and Ludgate in 1909 designed the only two mechanical analytical engines before the electromechanical analytical engine of Leonardo Torres y Quevedo of 1920 and its few successors, and the six first-generation electronic analytical engines of 1949.
Working alone, Ludgate designed an analytical engine while unaware of Babbage's designs, although he later went on to write about Babbage's machine. Ludgate's engine used multiplication as its base mechanism. It incorporated the first multiplier-accumulator, and was the first to exploit a MAC to perform division. Ludgate's engine used a mechanism similar to slide rules, but employed his unique discrete Logarithmic Indexes, and provided a very novel memory using concentric cylinders, storing numbers as displacements of rods in shuttles. His design featured several other novel features, including for program control. The design is so different from Babbage's as to be a second type of analytical engine, preceding the third and fourth types. The engine's precise mechanism is unknown as the only written accounts of the engine which survive do not detail its workings, although he stated in 1914 that "omplete descriptive drawings of the machine exist, as well as a description in manuscript" – these have never been found.
He was one of a few independent workers in the field of science and mathematics. His inventions were worked on outside a lab. He worked on the inventions only part-time, often until the early hours of the morning. Many publications refer to him as an accountant, but that came eight years after his 1909 analytical engine paper. Little is known about his personal life, as his only records are his scientific writings. The best source of information about Ludgate and his significance lie in the work of Professor Brian Randell. As from 2016, a further investigation is underway at Trinity College, Dublin under the auspices of The John Gabriel Byrne Computer Science Collection.
He died of pneumonia in 1922, and is buried in Mount Jerome Cemetery in Dublin.
In 1991, a prize for the best final year project in the Moderatorship in computer science course at Trinity College, Dublin – the Ludgate Prize – was instituted in his honor, and in 2016 the Ludgate Hub e-business incubation centre was opened in Skibbereen, where he was born.