Frank Morley

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Frank Morley
Frank Morley

Frank Morley (September 9, 1860October 17, 1937) was a leading mathematician, known mostly for his research into algebra and geometry. Among his accomplishments was his discovery and proof of the celebrated Morley's trisector theorem in elementary plane geometry.

Morley was born in the town of Woodbridge in Suffolk, England. His parents were Elizabeth Muskett and Joseph Roberts Morley, Quakers who ran a china shop. After being educated at Woodbridge School, Morley received his Sc.D. degree from Cambridge University and moved to Pennsylvania in 1887. He taught at Haverford College until 1900, when he became chairman of the mathematics department at Johns Hopkins University. His publications include Elementary Treatise on the Theory of Functions. (1893), with James Harkness; and Introduction to the Theory of Analytic Functions (1898).[1] He was President of the American Mathematical Society from 1919 to 1920 and was the editor of the American Journal of Mathematics from 1900 to 1921.

He was a strong chess player and once beat fellow mathematician and then world champion Emmanuel Lasker in a game of chess.

He died in Baltimore, Maryland.

His sons are novelist Christopher Morley, Pulitzer Prize winner Felix Morley, and another mathematician Frank Vigor Morley.

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