George had four
brothers and one sister but of these one died young
three did not marry and only his brother Thomas Roupall
married. It was Thomas whose daughter Mary was to marry
George Boole, the inventor of Boolean algebra which
is the basis of the logic of a modern computer. [1].
As George Everest was to become a Fellow of the Royal
Society (FRS) so were George Boole and two of his sons
Charles Hinton and Geoffrey Taylor so together it was
a very illustrious scientifi family.
Going backwards the Everest family can be traced in
the Greenwich area East of London to at least the late
1600s [2]. This was at about the same time that the
imposing Observatory was being built on the hill overlooking
the River Thames and Greenwich and the first observations
were made there on 16 September 1676 under the direction
of John Flamsteed, the first Astronomer Royal. In the
1600s the family were butchers but in 1736 John Everest,
one of the direct ancestors of George Everest, started
practising law – a profession later followed by
one of his sons William Tristram. William did not marry
until he was 39 and was to become the father or George.
As far as is known, George had quite an ordinary education
for the time and the Greenwich area then was a busy
naval area because of its Thames side location and nearness
to the North Sea. It would also have been quite a rough
area for children to be brought up in which no doubt
is what led George to get into lots of mischief and
become difficult to control. As a result at the age
of 14 he was sent to the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich
to be a gentleman cadet in the Royal Artillery. His
father, because of his profession, would have had all
the right contacts to get his son to the Academy since
it required high ranking nomination to get acceptance
The Academy had close links with the Honorable East
India Company with which many of the cadets found employment
on completing the course. George was to follow this
route and by early 1806 and within a week of his16th
birthday was landing in India. He did not return to
England until 1826 by which time both his parents had
died as had his elder brother. 1. MacHale D. George
Boole. His life and work. 1985. Boole Press. Dublin.
2. Smith J R Everest. The Man and the Mountain. 1999.
Whittles Publishing Scotland. |