|
Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Hanna Neumann 1914-1971
By M. F. Newman and G. E. Wall
This memoir was originally published in Records of the Australian Academy of Science, vol.3, no.2, 1975.
Fellowship of the Australian Academy of Science and Fellowship
of the Australian College of Education are formal recognition
of Hanna Neumann's impact
on a country she had first set foot in only in August 1963. But
then Hanna Neumann was a remarkable person. Throughout her life
she had won the love and respect of many people. The extent of
this can not really be measured, however some indications can
be given. A memorial meeting held in Canberra overflowed a large
lecture theatre even though it was virtually vacation time. A
collection of papers dedicated to her memory and a fund to provide
some form of memorial to her have both drawn quite overwhelming
support from many parts of the world. One finds a tremendous list
of words describing her memorable qualities: warm, enthusiastic,
inspiring, energetic, firm, tactful, sympathetic, efficient, patient,
shrewd, humble, peace-loving, courageous, gracious,...No words
can hope to evoke more than a pale shadow of such a person; this
story must be read in such a light.
A description of Hanna's life (she was not a formal sort of person
and much preferred this simple style of address) divides rather
naturally into three parts: Germany 1914-38, Britain 1938-63;
Australia 1963-71.
Hanna was born in Berlin on 12 February 1914 the youngest of three
children of Hermann and Katharina von Caemmerer. Her father was
the only male descendant of a family of Prussian officer tradition.
He broke the tradition to become an historian. He had a doctorate
and his venia legendi (right to lecture) and was well on
the way to establishing himself as an archivist and academic historian
when he was killed in the first days of the 1914-18 war. Her mother
was descended from a Huguenot family which had settled in Prussia
in the second half of the eighteenth century. The older children
were a brother Ernst (1908) and a sister Dora (1910). Her brother
was Professor of Law at Freiburg i.Br.-he was for a time Rektor
(Vice-chancellor). Her sister (who also has a doctorate) worked in
Berlin in the re-training of social workers.
As a result of her father's death the family lived impecuniously
on a war pension which had to be supplemented by other earnings.
Already at the age of thirteen Hanna contributed to the family
income by coaching younger school children. By the time she reached
the final years at school she was coaching up to fifteen periods
a week. This presumably helped teach her to organize her time
efficiently.
After two years in a private school she entered the Augusta-Victoria-Schule,
a girls' grammar school (Realgymnasium), in 1922. She graduated
from there early in 1932. Her school report for university entrance
lists fifteen subjects taken. She attained a grade of 'good' or
higher in all but one of these in the Abiturium (final examination);
the exception was music which she none the less liked and maintained
an interest in throughout her life. The report comments that she
showed independence of judgement, acute thinking (well beyond
the requirements of the school) in mathematics and natural science
and a note-worthy willingness to help. Only one teacher stood
out in Hanna's memory of her school days Fraulein Otto, her form
mistress and French teacher for the final two years. This woman,
who was to become a trusted friend in the turbulent Nazi years
ahead, by the example of her fortitude, sense of humour, tolerance
and wisdom, strongly influenced Hanna's view of people and events;
her lack of hatred and bitterness, more than anything else, convinced
Hanna that they have no place, ever, in human relations.
Her early hobby was botany. She collected plant specimens and
built up voluminous herbaria for about four years until at about
the age of fourteen this interest was superseded by her interest
in mathematics.
Hanna entered the University of Berlin at the Easter of 1932.
Her first year, the summer semester of 1932 and the winter semester
of 1932-33, was all that she had dreamt it would be. The lecture
courses in mathematics she took that year were: Introduction to
Higher Mathematics given by Feigl; Analytical Geometry and Projective
Geometry both given by Bieberbach; Differential and Integral Calculus,
E. Schmidt; and The Theory of Numbers, Schur. The first of these
courses eventually appeared in print in 1953 under the names of
Feigl and Rohrbach; in the introduction one finds an acknowledgement
to use made of notes taken by Hanna in that summer semester of
1932. She was introduced to physics by the Nobel Laureate Nernst
in a course of lectures on Experimental Physics. She also attended
a course, Introduction to the Theory of Physics, by Orthmann.
As well as these formal courses she took full advantage of the
German tradition of attending lectures on a wide variety of topics.
She listened to Kohler, one of the originators of Gestalt theory,
on Psychology; to the well-known Roman Catholic theologian Guardini
on Dante, and to Wolff, the leading academic lawyer in Germany,
on Common Law (his popularity was such that he always had overflow
audiences in the biggest lecture theatre in Berlin University).
Bieberbach, Schmidt and Schur, all full professors of mathematics,
were to have strong mathematical and personal effects on her life.
Bieberbach was the first strong mathematical influence. He was,
to her, an inspiring mathematician in spite of disorganized lecturing.
He nearly turned her into a geometer. In fact she seems to have
had quite a strong geometrical bent. Schmidt and Schur were, respectively,
responsible for her introduction to Analysis and Algebra.
In this first year at university besides the excitement of study
and the inevitable coaching there were, because lectures started
early (8 a.m. and sometimes in summer 7 a.m.) and finished late,
coffee breaks. Hanna soon found herself in a group of people,
all senior to her some already with doctorates many of whom were
later to make their mark in mathematical circles. It included
Werner Fenchel and his future wife Käte (both professors at Copenhagen),
Kurt Hirsch (recently retired as Professor of Pure Mathematics
at Queen Mary College, London), Rudolf Kochendörffer (Professor
at Dortmund, for a time Professor of Pure Mathematics in the University
of Tasmania), Erika Pannwitz (formerly Chief Editor of the Zentralblatt
für Mathematik), Richard Rado (Emeritus Professor at Reading),
Helmut Wielandt (Professor at Tübingen and longtime editor of
Mathematische Zeitschrift) and, in particular, her future
husband Bernhard H. Neumann
(Professor of Mathematics at the Australian National University).
The friendship between Hanna and Bernhard started in January 1933
and quickly blossomed into something special. In August 1933 Bernhard
left for Cambridge in England; it had become clear that Germany
would be no place for Jews for some time to come. At the Easter
of 1934 Hanna visited Bernhard in London and they became secretly
engaged; already the climate in Germany, and soon the law, was
against such 'mixed' marriages. Then Hanna returned to her studies.
As a result of her work in her first year, Hanna won three-quarters
remission of fees and got a job as a part-time assistant in the
library of the Mathematical Institute. This meant not only a lighter
load of coaching but also, very importantly, an earlier than usual
introduction to a wider range of mathematical books and to mathematical
journals.
In Germany at that time the first university degree was a doctorate
(of philosophy). However university study could also lead to the
Staatsexamen which was a necessary prerequisite for entry into
the public service including the teaching service. The formal
requirements for both were similar. There were certain attendance
requirements: at lecture courses, at exercise classes, at practical
classes, at seminars and at a physical education course (swimming
in Hanna's case). There was also for each a final examination.
The examination for the Staatsexamen laid more stress on breadth,
it consisted of two essays and an oral examination in two major
fields of study and one subsidiary (the example of Hanna's examination
will be given a little later). The examination for the doctorate
laid more stress on depth; it consisted of a thesis usually embodying
some original results and an oral examination in two major fields
(for example, Algebra and Analysis), a minor field (say, Experimental
Physics) and a subsidiary (say, Philosophy). As a consequence,
in the first couple of years the final goal was relatively unimportant.
In her second year Hanna attended lectures on Higher Geometry,
Differential and Integral Calculus, Differential Equations, The
Theory of Functions, Ideal Theory, Mechanics, and General Experimental
Chemistry. She took part in the exercise classes associated with
some of these courses, in the beginners' practical classes in
Astronomy and Physics, and in a junior (pro-)seminar.
There is a story about the practical Physics class which illustrates
a significant feature of Hanna's make-up. During the course the
students, working in pairs, were required to use a theodolite
to measure the height of a distant chimney stack. Hanna and her
partner made the measurements, did the appropriate calculations
and took the work for marking. They were told their result was
significantly wrong and to repeat the work. This they did with
essentially the same result. They were then told how far short
their result was and to try again. They did with again much the
same result. They then managed to persuade the demonstrator to
check the measurements. Much to his surprise his agreed with theirs.
Investigations revealed that a few years earlier the stack had
been lowered by several courses of bricks!
During Hanna's first year at university the Nazis came to power
and Hanna was outspokenly critical of them. The Nazis tried to
stop the lectures of Jewish staff by organizing protests and violence
in them. In her second year Hanna was active in a group of students
who tried to protect the Jewish lecturers by ensuring that only
genuine students attended their lectures. In spite of this student
support the objective was achieved. Moreover people with Jewish
ancestry were prevented from studying in universities. Hanna lost
her job in the Mathematical Institute, presumably as a result
of these activities. However she had by then won, and continued
to earn for the rest of her course, full remission of fees.
In her third year Hanna attended lectures on Set Theory, Elliptic
Functions, Groups of Linear Transformations, The Theory of Functions,
The Theory of Invariants, the Theory of Electricity and Magnetism,
Logic and Fundamental Questions of Metaphysics. She did practical
Physics and attended the Analysis, Geometry and Algebra seminars
and also the Philosophy of Religion seminar of Guardini (this
latter she regarded as a particular honour as attendance was by
invitation only and it was not one of her major studies).
Early in the third year Hanna was invited to become a reviewer
for the Jahrbuch über die Fortschritte der Mathematik. A
couple of years later she had a vacation job in the editorial
office; employed, as she was much later to describe it, 'rather
like a superior office boy'.
In her fourth year she attended courses in the Theory of Functions,
Additive Number Theory, Galois Theory, The Philosophy of History,
The Principal Problems of Systematic Philosophy and The History
of the Development of German Education. She attended exercise
classes in the Introduction to Philosophy and on Plato's Republic,
a Philosophy colloquium, further practical Physics classes and
again the Analysis and Algebra seminars and the pro-seminar of
A. Brauer.
The Nazi terror had the effect of polarizing people; it was almost
impossible to remain neutral. Hanna was fascinated and frightened
by this process fascinated by the way she and others developed
a sixth sense for detecting the direction in which people had
become polarized, frightened by the way some people reacted (one
eminent mathematician started writing in all seriousness about
the differences between Aryan and Jewish mathematics).
There was also a direct effect on her studies. Hanna had by now
set her sights directly on a doctorate. However in her fourth
year she was warned that in the oral examination the above-mentioned
mathematician would personally examine her on 'political knowledge'
which was by now compulsory. She was advised to switch quickly
to the Staatsexamen for which, though it had a similar requirement,
the oral might be arranged with a different examiner. She could
then go on and do a doctorate at another university.
As remarked earlier the Staatsexamen had requirements which placed
more emphasis on breadth than those for the doctorate. Hanna chose
to be examined in Mathematics, Physics and Philosophy. This involved
an oral examination in all three subjects and extended essays
in Mathematics and Philosophy. The switch also involved some last
minute changes in her course for the eighth semester to meet the
requirements in Philosophy. Fortunately she was able to find a
Philosophy lecturer who was sympathetic to her difficulties. He
suggested the essay topic: The epistemological basis of number
in Plato's later dialogues. Though this work was intended as a
make-weight, Hanna tackled it with commendable thoroughness. In
order to be able to compare the translations of critical passages
she acquired a rudimentary knowledge of Greek in a couple of months
of private study. The mathematical essay was: The construction
of relative cyclic fields. The summer semester of 1936 was spent
on leave from courses preparing for the orals in August. Preparation
was seriously disrupted by an attack of scarlet fever. Nevertheless
she obtained distinctions in both Mathematics and Physics and
good in Philosophy for an over-all award with distinction.
During all this time Hanna and Bernhard kept in contact by correspondence.
It was, in the circumstances, not an easy correspondence; it was
conducted anonymously through various friendly channels. They
met only once during this period in Denmark for a couple of weeks
in 1936 when Bernhard was travelling from the International Congress
of Mathematicians in Oslo.
With the Staatsexamen completed and through the good offices of
Hans Rohrbach, a lecturer at Göttingen and former Assistant at
Berlin (later Emeritus Professor at Mainz), Hanna was accepted as
a research student by Hasse, one of the professors in Göttingen.
He also found her a minor tutoring and assistant's job with which
she could finance her stay. Before taking up studies there in
the summer of 1937, Hanna spent six months working in the statistics
department of an institute of military economics. Göttingen was
very active though it was no longer the outstanding centre that
it had been before the advent of the Nazis. As well as Hasse and
his team, there was Siegel and his co-workers. Hasse believed
in team work: he assigned each of his school some task towards
a common goal. At that time it was the Riemann conjecture in algebraic
function fields of characteristic p. Seminars were used
to ensure that everyone retained an overall picture of the project.
The most powerful members of the team were Witt, H. L. Schmid,
and Deuring; fellow students were Günther Pickert and Paul Lorenzen.
In Göttingen Hanna found time for some chess and some gliding.
She also found time to attend a course on Czech this because a
friend wanted to learn the language and the minimum class size
was two. The course was no hardship as Hanna had a flair for learning
languages, one that she put to good use later in her professional
career in reading papers in a wide variety of languages.
Early 1938 saw the annexation of Austria and summer the Czechoslovak
crisis. Hanna decided it would be impossible to complete her course
without risking a prolonged delay in her marriage plans. So, after
three semesters, she gave up her course and in July 1938 went
to Britain. Hanna never harboured any bitterness or resentment
against Germany and was later to enjoy a number of visits there.
The first years in Britain were far from easy, yet they saw the
beginning of her family, and the beginning of productive research.
Hanna and Bernhard felt they could not openly marry until his
parents were safe from possible reprisals. Bernhard was a Temporary
Assistant Lecturer in Cardiff. Hanna went to live in Bristol.
There she started working on a problem, suggested to her by Bernhard,
that was to be the seed for her first paper, 'On the elimination
rule'. The opening two paragraphs of the paper tell the story:
Chess matches are often decided according to the following elimination
rule. The team with the higher score wins, of course. If both
teams score the same number of points, the one that lost at the
last board at which the game was not drawn wins the match. The
problem is to find an arithmetical equivalent of this rule, i.e.,
to attribute to the single boards positive integral weights (which
then have to be chosen as small as possible) such that the result
is in accordance with this rule. We solve this problem as a special
case of the following more general problem.
It was also then that she started working on finite plane geometries,
an interest that was to remain with her throughout her life. The
interest was inspired by a report Bernhard gave her of a lecture
describing the connection between Graeco-Latin squares and finite
planes that he heard at the British Association meeting in August
1938. Her work on finite planes, though rarely a major interest,
provided material for several lecture courses and occasional lectures,
and in 1954 a paper 'On some finite non-desarguesian planes'.
In a memorial lecture in Toronto the leading geometer Coxeter
described this as an important contribution. She showed the existence
of finite planes with two types of quadrangles: some whose diagonal
points are collinear, and some whose diagonal points are not (the
Fano configuration). She made the bold (according to Coxeter)
conjecture that a finite plane in which all quadrangles are of
the same type is desarguesian. This conjecture is still unresolved.
Late in 1938 Hanna and Bernhard were secretly married in Cardiff.
They finally set up house together in Cardiff early in 1939 when
Bernhard's parents joined them. Later that year their first child,
Irene, was born. During this time in Cardiff Hanna's earlier interest
in botany was turned to practical use. The family were able to
vary and supplement their diet with the use of such plants as
sorrel which could be found growing wild.
Both Hanna and Bernhard were classified as 'least restricted'
aliens. This meant that at first they were not affected by restrictions
on aliens. However, after Dunkirk a larger part of the coast was
barred to all aliens and they were required to leave Cardiff.
They moved to Oxford because it was a university town. Within
a week Bernhard was interned and a few months later released into
the British army. Meanwhile Hanna, expecting a second child, made
arrangements to complete a doctorate (D.Phil.). This was made
possible by the Society of Oxford Home Students (later St Anne's
College) through which she enrolled, and a generous waiver of
fees that Oxford University granted to all refugee students whose
courses had been interrupted. Just after Christmas the second
child, Peter, was born (he became a mathematics don at Oxford
after himself gaining a D.Phil. from there).
On leaving Germany Hanna had abandoned her research on algebraic
function fields feeling that it was not fruitful to continue this
line outside the team. (She was not aware till after the war that
Weil had solved the problem in 1940). For her D.Phil. thesis she
chose the problem of determining the sub-group structure of free
products of groups with an amalgamated subgroup. This had been
suggested in the paper of Kuro in which he solved the corresponding
problem when there is no amalgamation. Her research supervisor
was Olga Taussky-Todd (then a lecturer at Westfield College, London,
which had been evacuated to Oxford; she became professor at the California
Institute of Technology). The supervision was largely a formality
as Hanna made good progress and her supervisor was not especially
interested in the topic of research. Hanna also had once or twice
a term to visit her College Tutor. On these occasions fellow students
would mind the children in the common room. The children used
to travel in a side-car attached to Hanna's bicycle. The combination
became well-known throughout Oxford.
The major problem during this time was accommodation. The original
flat became unavailable towards the end of 1941. It was not easy
to find accommodation with two young children and was made no
easier by having to compete with refugees from the bombing of
London. All Hanna could find was a sub-letting of part of a house with
shared facilities. A year later another move became necessary.
This time Hanna found a brilliant solution. She rented a caravan
and got permission from a market gardener to park it on his farm.
She also, as was necessary had it declared 'approved rooms' by
the Oxford Delegacy of Lodgings.
It was then that the thesis was largely written; in a caravan
by candlelight. The typing was done on a card-table by a haystack
when the weather permitted. The thesis was submitted in mid-1943.
Soon after, restrictions on aliens were eased and Hanna was able
to return to Cardiff. In November of that year the third child,
Barbara, was born (she graduated in Mathematics from Sussex University
and went on to teach mathematics). The thesis was examined by
two Fellows of the Royal Society Philip Hall (later Sadleirian
Professor of Pure Mathematics at Cambridge) and Henry Whitehead
(later Wayneflete Professor of Pure Mathematics at Oxford). The
oral examination took place in Oxford in April 1944. Hanna returned
to Cardiff with her D.Phil.
A year later the war in Europe was over. Bernhard was demobilized
from the army and resumed his university career at the beginning
of 1946 with a Temporary Lectureship at the University College
in Hull. At the same time the fourth child, Walter, was born (after
studying at universities in New York, Adelaide and Bonn, he gained
a doctorate and is now active in mathematical research). For the
next academic year Bernhard was made a Lecturer. Hanna was offered
a Temporary Assistant Lectureship which she took and thus began
her formal teaching career.
Hanna was to stay in Hull for twelve years rising through the
ranks to be by the end of her time there a Senior Lecturer. She
also saw the transformation from a college of about 500 students
being prepared for London external degrees to an autonomous university
of about 1400 students. Bernhard, on the other hand, received
an invitation to a Lectureship at Manchester and from October
1948 spent his terms in Manchester.
The curriculum of British universities was not one which Hanna's
training had specifically equipped her to teach. In reviewing
the book of Feigl-Rohrbach, Einführung in die höhere Mathematik,
she regretted that a course of that kind was not suitable for
use in British universities 'where so much more time is spent
on enabling a student to solve problems or perhaps: so much more
care is taken to turn out students not worried by an integral
or a differential equation'. With characteristic energy, and she
would no doubt say because of her more mathematical training,
she learnt the requisite techniques and was able to give lectures
which students found clear and illuminating though demanding.
The head of the department in Hull was an applied mathematician.
So Hanna, with her (by British standards) very pure background,
became the focus for moves to change the curriculum to introduce
some of the more recent developments in pure mathematics. Here
her ability to argue a case clearly, firmly and with tact was
invaluable in getting changes made.
She took an active interest in her students. She was a strong
supporter of the student mathematical society. She gave lectures
to it on a number of occasions on such topics as: Dissection of
rectangles into incongruent squares; Difficulties in defining
the area of surfaces; and Prime numbers. Her aim was to exhibit
some of the facets of mathematics for which there was not enough
time in the regular courses and, as always, to convey her joy
in mathematics. It was one of Hanna's striking qualities that
she found joy in so much. The model-building group also had her
active support; in particular she participated in the making of
paper models of regular and other solids. The outstanding feature,
though, was her coffee evening. She often invited staff and students
to meet at her house over coffee. This turned into a regular weekly
open house at which her students were always welcome and, as one
of her colleagues of those times says, 'many benefited greatly
from being able to drop in for company, discussion and often help
with personal affairs'. She was very interested in people and
in seeing that they made the most of their abilities. One finds
over and over that her interest in someone's work and her encouragement
of it played a significant role.
A number of people now teaching in British universities received
significant help from Hanna. One of the undergraduates, John Britton,
stayed on to take a Master's degree under Hanna's direction. This
involved preparing him for two examination papers; he chose Group
Theory and Analysis. The latter involved Hanna in learning a lot
of hard analysis by working through Whittaker and Watson's A course of modern analysis. He then
went to Manchester to work for a doctorate under Bernhard's supervision
and became a professor at Queen Elizabeth College, London. One
of her young colleagues, John Shepperd, who had a Master's degree
for work of an applied nature, became interested in Group Theory,
and, under Hanna's guidance, gained a doctorate for work in it.
John Bowers, later a lecturer at Leeds, took a Master's degree
under Hanna and went on to London to do a doctorate.
Meanwhile the family thrived and grew with the addition of a fifth
child, Daniel, born in 1951 (he has completed a university course
in Mathematics and Greek). This was, of course, a very busy time
for Hanna. Even with a home-help (in whom she invariably inspired
intense loyalty), she had to be well-organized and call on all
her resources of stamina, will-power and self-discipline. Visitors
were always struck by the organization of the children: all had
tasks to do and carried them out with responsibility and efficiency.
Research continued too. Two papers were prepared from material
of the thesis and published in the American Journal of Mathematics.
In Manchester Bernhard shared an office with Graham Higman, (Whitehead's successor at Oxford) and this led to a joint paper,
Embedding theorems for groups, in 1949 which is much quoted
and has led to certain groups being called HNN-groups. Her own
research and joint research with Bernhard also progressed well
and resulted in a number of papers. In 1955 her published work
was submitted to Oxford and judged worthy of a D.Sc. A lecture
given by H. Hopf, a very distinguished topologist, to the fourth
British Mathematical Colloquium in 1952 helped revive interest
in a group-theoretic problem of his which is related to the structure
of certain manifolds. Hanna was invited to lecture at the sixth
British Mathematical Colloquium in 1954 and chose to report on
Hopf's problem. The problem involved a property of groups which
is now called the Hopf property. Hanna reported on the state of
knowledge about Hopf groups and went on to ask a number of questions
about them. One of these, whether the free product of finitely
many Hopf groups is again a Hopf group, was to concern her for
quite a number of years. In 1954 she attended the International
Congress of Mathematicians in Amsterdam and reported on some work
on near-rings. This led on to work on varieties of groups which
was to be a very significant part of her mathematical career and
in which she was to be a leading figure.
As if she didn't already have a full load, Hanna also took on
for a time the job of Secretary of a local United Nations Association
branch.
At various times from 1948 on Hanna looked for a suitable position
in Manchester so that the family could lead a life under one roof.
This search finally succeeded in 1958, when the Faculty of Technology
of the University of Manchester (now The University of Manchester
Institute of Science and Technology) decided to set up an honours
programme in mathematics and were looking for a relatively senior
pure mathematician to be responsible for that aspect of the courses.
(There was and is no formal contact between the Department of
Mathematics in the Faculty of Technology and that in the other
part of the university in which Bernhard was by then a Reader;
they are also physically quite separated.) Hanna applied for and
was appointed to a Lectureship in the Faculty of Technology with
the understanding that the drop from Senior Lecturer would be
short-lived; and indeed it was. It was considered by some that
this was not only a drop in rank but also a drop to a lower kind
of institution. Hanna did not feel this and in a lecture to her
former colleagues at Hull a year later was able to report from
experience that she saw no justification for that view.
Before taking up the appointment in Manchester in October, Hanna
and Bernhard fitted in a stay at the International Congress of
Mathematicians in Edinburgh and a cycling holiday with the family.
Longish cycling trips with the children had become very much part
of their life and cycling remained an important recreation with
Hanna.
During Hanna's first year in Manchester Bernhard took his first
study leave. In the nine months of it he visited India and Australia.
Hanna took over the supervision of one of his research students
(MFN).
Hanna set about organizing courses which would show the students
something of mathematics as she saw it. She was able to introduce
into the first year course, which had till then been entirely
problem-oriented, a small strand of one lecture a week of an introduction
to mathematics in the style of Feigl-Rohrbach. The later-year
algebra courses much more thoroughly reflected her own interests
and views. She continued to develop a style of teaching which
aimed at making the acquisition of very abstract ideas accessible
through judicious use of more concrete examples and well-graded
exercises. Through the use of books like those of Kemeny and others,
she was able to emphasize to undergraduates that parts of mathematics
other than calculus were being applied to branches of human endeavour
other than physics, Hanna also set about building up an active
teaching and research team around her. After a year John Shepperd
came from Hull and soon became involved with
and solved a problem raised by a braid manufacturer which was
first taken to the textile engineers and was brought by them to
the mathematicians. The solution of this used some quite deep
group theory. Hanna was delighted with this application and built
it into a lecture for non-specialist audiences. In the following
year (1960-61) Jim Wiegold, a former research student of Bernhard's
with whom Hanna had started joint work on certain products of
groups which they called linked products, joined the staff. That
year Hanna started supervising her first research students: Ian
Dey, later a Senior Lecturer at the Open University, and Chris
Houghton, later a Lecturer at Cardiff. Ian Dey worked on the
problem of whether the free product of finitely many finitely-generated
Hopf groups is again Hopf and settled a number of special cases.
Life thus continued very busy. Hanna would sometimes work all
night reading manuscripts or preparing lectures, take a good long
shower and appear in the office seemingly as fresh as if she had
had a night's sleep. She did not allow this pressure of work to
interfere with her contact with fellow staff and students nor
with taking an interest in their work. There were regular coffee
sessions at which they would discuss problems of interest. She
was not beyond getting new experiences such as that of wall-papering.
In the summer of 1959 she went on a fortnight's tour of universities
in Hungary lecturing on various aspects of her research. Hanna
also received an invitation to address the twelfth British Mathematical
Colloquium in 1960. On this occasion she talked about Wreath Products a
group construction which had implicitly seen the light of day
in the work of Frobenius in the 1890s but which had really burst
into prominence in the 1950s. It had played a key part in some
work with Bernhard and was to play a key part in some other work
a year later.
Group theory is studied by mathematicians largely for the fascination
of its problems and the appeal of its ideas. However certain aspects
of it have proved useful in the application of mathematics to
various fields but especially physics. While Hanna was always
at pains to stress that she saw the intrinsic motivations of beauty
and joy as quite crucial, she was also interested in exploring
such applications. Therefore she agreed to take part in a postgraduate
course run by mathematicians and physicists on representations
of groups. The mathematicians were to begin by giving a detailed
account of those parts of the theory of interest to the physicists
and then the physicists were to take over and explain how the
theory was used. Hanna gave the mathematical lectures during 1960-61;
the physical part never eventuated.
During 1960-61 preparations were made for a joint study leave
by Hanna and Bernhard at the Courant Institute of Mathematical
Sciences in New York in 1961-62; Hanna was a Visiting Research
Scientist. It was also then that an offer came to Bernhard to
set up a research department of mathematics at the Australian
National University. Hanna was offered a post as Reader (now called
Professorial Fellow) in that department. They accepted, with Bernhard
to take up his appointment after the year in New York and Hanna
a year later after discharging her obligations to her research
students in Manchester.
The year in New York was very successful. They were accompanied
on the trip by their three sons. The eldest (by then an undergraduate
at Oxford) started an active interest in research under the guidance
of one of the professors there, Gilbert Baumslag (another former
student of Bernhard's), and was soon involved in his parents'
research. During the year Bernhard, Hanna and Peter solved the
problem of the structure of the semigroup of varieties of groups,
showing that it is free. Together with Baumslag the three of them
also made a significant study of varieties of groups that are
generated by a finitely-generated group. Hanna gave a number of
invited lectures in the course of the year.
While Hanna was away, the group at Manchester grew with the addition
of another staff member, Laci Kovacs (yet another former student
of Bernhard's who was later at the Australian National University),
and three more research students (supervised by some of the other
staff). One of these, Carl Christensen, was a recent graduate
of the department who had been inspired to do further work in
mathematics by Hanna. The year of winding up was also a hectic
year. Hanna was invited to give a number of lectures around the
country on the New York work. She also gave a graduate course
on varieties of groups: notes were taken by her two students.
The course was to be very influential in stimulating the growth
of interest in this part of group theory. It was during this year
that the so-called finite basis problem for varieties generated
by a finite group (first posed by Bernhard in 1935) was solved
in stages in Oxford. Hanna reported on progress as it happened.
Very typically she kept tabs on what was happening and by her
interest encouraged the people making the progress. It also involved
a lot of effort on Hanna's part working into an area of group
theory with which she was not very familiar. Soon after she reached
Australia she was able to report the successful completion of
the solution.
While in Manchester Hanna took an active role in the Mathematical
Society, a group of people interested in mathematics in a wider
and to some extent non-professional sense.
In August 1963 Hanna left Britain to face new challenges in Australia.
Hanna came to a research post in which she hoped to pursue her
research interests and guide some research students to doctorates.
In fact two students were waiting for her when she arrived. They
were Martin Ward and Bob Burns; both successfully completed doctorates
and later held university teaching posts at the Australian National
University and York University (Canada) respectively. Her first
goal was to polish the lectures on varieties of groups into a
monograph.
Instead Hanna found herself heading into major teaching responsibility.
She was invited to take the newly created chair of Pure Mathematics
in the National University's School of General Studies (that is
the part of the university which is responsible for the teaching
of undergraduate students and in which the academic staff are
expected to devote a significant part of their time to teaching
duties). With the chair went the headship of the Department of
Pure Mathematics which, together with the Department of Applied
Mathematics, had grown out of the fission of the former Department
of Mathematics. She accepted the invitation and took up the appointment
in April 1964.
She also quickly became involved with helping teachers in secondary
schools with some of the problems being created by the introduction
of the Wyndham scheme into secondary schooling in New South Wales.
This scheme involved a radical restructuring which forced the
creation of new syllabuses. In mathematics these new syllabuses
reflected some of the changes that were taking place in the teaching
of mathematics in other parts of the world. Many teachers found
that their training had not prepared them to teach some aspects
of these syllabuses. In the first term of 1964 Hanna and Ken Mattei,
one of the mathematics masters in Canberra, ran (under the auspices
of the Canberra Mathematical Association) a once-a-week course
for teachers entitled 'The language of sets in school mathematics'.
This was Hanna's first excursion into this kind of activity, however
her experience and sensitivity enabled her to hit the right note
and she was thanked '...for the lessons and guidance given so
cheerfully and efficiently'. This direct involvement with secondary
teachers was, as will be seen, to continue for the rest of her
life.
Meanwhile Hanna set about building up a department of pure mathematics
under difficult circumstances. Most of the more experienced staff
of the former Department of Mathematics had, because of their
research interests, joined the Department of Applied Mathematics.
At that time experienced staff was almost impossible to come by.
Fortunately Hanna was, in time, able to attract some of her former
students to join her (Martin Ward, Carl Christensen and Ian Dey)
and by her guidance and enthusiasm to build up an active and keen
young department round her. In this she was helped by being able
to draw on some of the people in Bernhard's department for occasional
advanced courses, by being able to attract some more senior people
as visitors (including M. Stone, professor at Chicago, and Coxeter,
professor at Toronto, for a term each and Jim Wiegold for two
years), and to use some of the research students to help with
part-time tutoring.
Hanna was concerned to see that all students got courses suited
to their needs. On the one hand she wanted the better students
to get a real appreciation of mathematics so that they could sensibly
decide whether they wanted to make a career within mathematics
and be well prepared to do so. In this respect, besides making
available an intensive course of study through lectures, she instituted
forms of examining, especially take-home assignments, which encouraged
more sustained use of the ideas and techniques involved than the
conventional short closed-book examination. She also made a supervised
project an important component of the final honours year. While
this was not intended, these projects occasionally produced original
research some of which has been published. On the other hand she
was deeply concerned that students with a limited background who
were intending only one year's study of mathematics should get
as clear an understanding as possible of the nature of the subject
because many of these people would be required to make some use
of mathematics later in their lives. She was keen to get over
the idea that doing and thinking about mathematics can be joyous
human activities, though it needed effort to get the rewards.
She conveyed this by her own obvious joy in the subject and her
willingness to work hard. It is not really possible to assess
how successful these shorter courses were in achieving their aims;
certainly the classes seem quite happy with them. The success
of the intensive course is more easily measurable, at least a
dozen students have gone on to complete doctorates in such widely
scattered places as Cambridge, Edinburgh and Oxford in Great Britain,
Chicago and Seattle in USA and Kingston in Canada as well as in
Australia; mostly in mathematics but also in computing, physics
and the history of science. These doctorates have been attained
by graduates from the honours classes of 1965 to 1968 and represent
about half the graduates from those classes. At the time of writing, quite a few of the
later graduates were working towards doctorates.
Not only did she have these ideas about teaching which she put
into operation, she also created an atmosphere in which her staff
were encouraged to have ideas about teaching and to discuss, plan
and execute them. Some of these won their way into wide acceptance.
For instance a suggestion by a part-time tutor was the seed from
which a course on distributions (in the sense of Schwartz) to
third year pass students grew. Hanna gave this course a number
of times and the lecture notes have been published. These notes
were used by Erdélyi, professor at Edinburgh, in connection with
a course he gave at the tenth Summer Research Institute of the
Australian Mathematical Society and have been used for a course
at the University of New South Wales. A short course on computing
designed by Bill Steiger and Martin Ward has been made available
to the first year students.
As well as creating the course on distribution, Hanna designed
some of the details of the more problematic elementary courses
and used courses to the final year honours students to work up
a knowledge of important areas related to her research interests
such as: cohomology of groups and Lie methods in group theory.
She supervised the project work of a number of fourth year students
on these topics but also on normal numbers and Hilbert's tenth
problem.
Hanna believed in making herself available: as far as formal commitments
allowed, she was always in her office with the door open. She
encouraged students to seek help with their difficulties and she
was often to be seen explaining a point at her blackboard. She
also found herself helping students with non-mathematical problems.
Her impact here is best summed up by the following extract from
a letter by two students published in the local paper just after
her death:
We will remember her not only as a mathematician; she was a friend
who always had a sympathetic ear for any student, and was never
too busy.
We will always miss her tremendous dedication and sincerity, and
the friendliness of her presence.
Of course the price was paid in much midnight oil.
The new responsibilities drastically reduced the time Hanna had
for research and research related activities. Production of the
monograph slowed down. In 1965 she helped organize in Canberra
a very successful international conference on the theory of groups.
At the conference she gave one of the major survey talks on varieties
of groups in which she was able to report on some of the work
that had been inspired by her original course. In 1966 she attended
the International Congress of Mathematicians in Moscow and reported
on recent work in Canberra on varieties. The monograph was finished
towards the end of 1966 and appeared early in 1967. It showed
quite clearly the influence of the earlier course in developing
interest in the subject. The monograph listed some of the unsolved
problems, many of Hanna's own devising, about varieties. Many
have been by now solved, quite a number of these by people in
Canberra who have been inspired by Hanna to take up an interest
in the subject. Almost immediately a Russian translation was started
by mel'kin in Moscow this was ready with a couple of appendices
a year later but did not appear till 1969. She was invited to
give talks on this work at various Australian universities and
had been invited to give one of the major lectures at the Australian
Mathematical Society meeting in 1972. In 1966 her first two research
students in Australia completed their courses and Hanna took on
two new students, Chau and Itqan Farouqi, who also went on to
take doctorates and take university appointments in Sudbury (Canada)
and Karachi (Pakistan) respectively. These two were followed in
1969 by two more, Bill Haebich and George lvanov, who completed their doctorates after her death.
Of course family life continued. Only one child was still living
at home. However the family was supplemented by a year-long visit
by a niece and a longish visit by Hanna's mother. There was also
quite a lot of entertaining of a wide range of colleagues and
students, of visitors to Canberra and of friends from their other
activities. Hanna served her term on the executive of her local
Parents' and Citizens' Association. Hanna's recreations were listed
in Who's Who as cycling and photography. The former continued
unabated: it was a common sight to see Hanna and Bernhard cycle
to and from their offices or to their lunch-time coffee in the
city. They also developed a fondness for four-wheel travel and
saw much of Australia, especially the back-blocks which so many
city-dwellers never see. The photography, which had been a brief
interest during student holidays, was revived by coming across
some old photos that she had taken. The royalties of the monograph
bought a new camera. This interest was combined with the old interest
in botany to build up an impressive collection of photographs
of flowers and trees of all sorts but especially of many varieties
of acacia. The chase for these involved much use of four wheels.
It also resulted in bodily damage, and at least one broken rib
is directly attributable to a chase after an elusive acacia. Such
ailments had no noticeable effect on her work, and even a leg
in plaster could do no more than keep her away from classes for
a week she still prepared the lectures for a colleague to give.
The interest in secondary education that had been kindled continued
to grow. Later in 1964 Hanna gave an in-service course to teachers
in Goulburn (a city about sixty miles from Canberra) on the new
emphases in mathematics in the junior secondary school. That year
also saw her taking an active part in the discussions on the new
syllabuses for the senior forms. It was undoubtedly her work in
evaluation of the draft proposals and her energetic work on suggestions
for improvements which earned for the Canberra Mathematical Association
a reputation for trenchant and constructive criticism. The following
year when the syllabuses had been published she gave in-service
courses on aspects of them in both Canberra and Goulburn. She
visited Armidale and Newcastle in New South Wales and lectured
to the Mathematical Associations there. In Armidale she also gave
an intensive course to honours students on group representations.
In Canberra she continued her support for the new spirit in the
junior forms by giving a lecture (for the Canberra Mathematical
Association) to parents 'Learning Mathematics and learning Chinese',
a title she borrowed from the introduction to a book by W.
W. Sawyer. She set out to explain to (an overflow audience
of over two hundred) parents the ideas behind the new syllabuses
and to enlist their co-operation in making them a success. She
believed that the community had to be educated to create a more
favourable climate (one in which mathematics is not feared) for
the learning of mathematics especially among girls. At the beginning
of 1966 she lectured to the University of New South Wales' Summer
School for Mathematics Teachers on Évariste Galois and the theory
of equations.
January of 1966 also saw the meeting which finally, after four
years of discussion, set up the Australian Association of Mathematics
Teachers. Hanna was immediately elected to be one of the foundation
Vice-Presidents. In that role she had, in September of that year,
to deliver the first presidential address in the absence overseas
of the President (Bernhard). In her address 'Education in Semut'
she described a semi-utopia in which mathematical education had
reached the stage of incorporating all the best features of mathematical
education that she had personally observed in various parts of
the world. She admitted that no one system had all these features
but felt that their existence somewhere made the achievement of
the system she described realizable. She also had to chair the
lengthy meetings of the first council and succeeded in moulding
into a group this collection of individuals from all over Australia
many of whom were meeting each other for the first time.
A little later in 1966 Hanna was elected Vice-President of the
Canberra Mathematical Association as a prelude to becoming its
President for 1967-68. It was during this time that the Canberra
Mathematical Association pamphlets for teachers were largely prepared.
This is a series of notes intended to provide teachers with background
to the new topics in the senior forms which was inspired by some
of the misunderstandings which showed up in many of the first
text-books written for these syllabuses. Hanna wrote a pamphlet
on Probability which is the best-seller in the series. It has
been described by one recent text-book author as the best account
available anywhere of an introduction to this topic. The pamphlet
is used as a text for first year students at La Trobe University.
This series of pamphlets spawned the series of Notes in Pure
Mathematics published by Bernhard's and Hanna's departments
in which her notes on distributions are published.
In 1967 she gave the Canberra Mathematical Association lecture
to school pupils on her much favoured topic of 'Braids'. These lectures which had been started early in the life of the Canberra
Mathematical Association were at that time being replaced by the
Friday evenings of which Hanna was a very active supporter. She
often attended and took an active part in the discussions over
refreshments. When the ANU-AAMT National Summer School for talented
high school students was started in 1969 she was an enthusiastic
supporter of it and on two occasions gave lectures on geometry
which proved very popular.
In November of 1968 she was invited to give the inaugural address
to the Riverina Mathematical Association. Under the title 'Who
wants Pure Mathematics?' she illustrated her view that the range
of mathematics which is being applied had broadened a lot as have
the fields of human endeavour to which it is being applied.
Hanna went on study leave in August 1969. Her first stop was at
the First International Congress on Mathematical Education at
Lyons. This provoked her into writing a letter (one of a very
few) to the editors of several Australian newspapers which it
seems appropriate to quote here:
'The proceedings of this congress have confirmed my impression
that the development of mathematical education in Australia is
lagging behind that of the rest of the world to a frightening
extent.'
Typically, while we in Australia are asking whether to teach computer
programming in schools, the discussion here takes it for granted
that this is done and goes on to consider the question of how
the (new!) mathematics programmes have to be changed and re-organised
to take account of the impact of computers on the content of mathematics.
It is clear that the great advances in other countries stem from
experimentation made possible by the enlightened flexibility of
examining bodies and their clientele (for example, employers,
universities) and the availability of funds.
Certainly, mathematical education in Australia is changing, but
the rate of change has to increase vastly if we want to catch
up with the progress made elsewhere.
Because of Hanna's known interest in educational matters she was
proposed for membership of the Australian College of Education
early in 1968, was elected to Fellowship (FACE) in 1970 and was
a member of the ACT Chapter committee in 1971.
Hanna's post as Professor of Pure Mathematics involved her in
committee work within the university. On these committees her
qualities of commonsense, balance, fairness and impartiality won
her respect and her views were listened to. She was asked to take
on some of the more demanding administrative tasks but usually
felt she could not accept them without putting an unfair load
on her young staff. She did, however, accept the position of Dean
of Students from January 1968 till August 1969. In this she played
an important role in maintaining good relations between the student
body and the university authorities. The students appreciated
the time and effort that she put into acting on their behalf and,
though she could not always agree with their position, she was
respected for her integrity and the soundness of her judgement.
The Australian Mathematical Society also made use of Hanna's organizational
abilities. She was invited to be the director of the ninth Summer
Research Institute held in January 1969. She invited Mac Lane,
professor at Chicago, and Gaschütz, professor at Kiel, as main
lecturers. This attracted the greatest attendance ever at a Summer
Research Institute. Bonuses were visits by Erdös and Hirsch.
In March 1969 her academic excellence was given further recognition
by her election to a Fellowship of the Australian Academy of Science.
The next stop after Lyons in the year long study leave (taken
with Bernhard) was a meeting on Decision Problems in Group Theory
held in California. Then they went on to a five-month stay at
Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, where Hanna was
on a National Science Foundation Senior Foreign Scientist Fellowship.
Another visitor to Vanderbilt at that time was their eldest son
Peter. Hanna gave a course to graduate students on Varieties of
Groups. Into this she was able to incorporate a solution to one
of the fundamental questions in the theory: the finite basis problem.
News of a negative solution of the problem by a young Russian
Ol'anskii (a student of mel'kin) reached them early in their
stay. A better solution was found by Vaughan-Lee who was then
also at Vanderbilt, having just completed a doctorate at Oxford
under Peter's supervision. The course was concluded by Vaughan-Lee
presenting his solution. However, the highlight of the stay was
the solution of the problem on the free product of finitely many
finitely-generated Hopf groups. Hanna and Ian Dey had been continuing
work on the problem making some progress. Now with Hanna having
more time to devote to the problem the final difficulty was overcome.
It turned out that such free products are indeed Hopf groups.
The solution required almost all the techniques of this area of
group theory often in specially sharpened form. This work was
indeed a fitting climax to Hanna's research career. However with
typical modesty Hanna's report to the university on the leave
apologizes for her having only achieved this. During her time
in Nashville Hanna was invited to give many lectures in other
parts of North America. In spite of declining some invitations
she still gave at least fifteen lectures in places as far apart
as Atlanta, Houston and Toronto; usually on varieties or the Hopf
problem. They then moved on to Cambridge in England where they
stayed for the next four months, Hanna as Honorary Bye-Fellow
at Girton College and as a Visiting Professor to the University.
In the latter capacity she gave a course of lectures on varieties
of groups. Here again she gave invited lectures up and down the
country including one to the London Mathematical Society. She
also managed to visit her (at that time) nine grand-children.
This stay was followed by six weeks at the Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut
of the University of Freiburg delightfully situated in the Black
Forest in Germany. Hence, refreshed, they did a three-week lecture
tour of the Indian sub-continent spending the main time in Lahore,
Madras and Madurai before returning to Australia in August 1970.
No sooner was Hanna back than she was invited to make a lecture
tour of Canada under the Commonwealth Universities Interchange
Scheme. This was arranged for the (Canadian) winter of 1971-72.
In her department she found that the tightening financial position
was making it more difficult to continue to offer the same services
to students. This together with some changes in the structure
of the university and problems which were becoming more clearly
visible with some of the courses convinced her that a major new
planning of courses would be needed and she set about initiating
it.
During 1971 she was invited to give two talks. First in Adelaide
to a joint meeting of the Mathematical Association of South Australia
and the Australian Mathematical Society in which she talked on
'Teaching first year undergraduates: fads and fancies', and second
at Wodonga Technical High School to a regional meeting of teachers
on 'Modern Mathematics Symbolism and its importance at the secondary
and tertiary levels'.
At the end of October Hanna set off on her Canadian lecture tour.
She visited in quick succession the University of British Columbia,
the University of Calgary, the University of Alberta, the University
of Saskatchewan and the University of Manitoba. She arrived at
Carleton University, Ottawa, on the 8th November for a somewhat
longer stay. On the evening of the 12th she felt ill, admitted
herself to hospital and quickly went into a coma. She died on
the 14th without regaining consciousness.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Hanna's family, friends and colleagues for
providing much useful information. They are too many to mention
individually, however, we must record our special gratitude to
her husband who has been a patient and tireless source of information
and has given us access to many private papers.
Michael Frederick Newman, PhD, a first cousin
once removed of the late Professor Hanna Neumann's husband, Senior Fellow in Mathematics, Australian National University.
Gordon Elliott Wall, PhD, Professor of Pure
Mathematics, University of Sydney; he was elected to the Academy
in 1971.
The text of this obituary is reprinted with permission from the Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society 17 (1974),
1-28.
|