Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2016
It is more than 91 years since, on January 17th 1871, a group of twenty-six men met in another place and formed the Association for the Improvement of Geometrical Teaching, which twenty-five years later became the Mathematical Association. Most were schoolmasters; some were clergymen; the account of the proceedings in the first annual report adds: “There were also a few gentlemen present who were not members of the Association.” The ladies were allowed to join later.
Presidential Address to the Mathematical Association at the Annual General Meeting at King’s College London, April 17th 1962.
page note 187 * G. Bell & Sons Ltd., 1952.
page note 188 * Hutchinson’s University Library, London 1960, p. 10.
page note 188 † Simon & Schuster, New York 1953, p. 189.
page note 189 * Math. Gaz. XLV (Dec. 1961) pp. 305-318.
page note 191 * Rend, del Circ. Mat. di Palermo, XLII, 1917, pp. 173-205.
page note 191 † “Albert Einstein” by Carl Seelig (trs. Mervyn Savill), Staples Press Ltd., London 1956, pp. 70-71.
page note 191 ‡ “What is Cybernetics”? (trs. Valerie MacKay), Heinemann, 1959, p. 96.
page note 192 * Victor Gollancz, 1956, pp. 77-78.
page note 195 * “I am a mathematician,” Victor Gollancz, 1956, p. 33.