Wesley Stoker Barker Woolhouse (6 May 1809 – 12 August 1893) was an English actuary with diverse interests in music theory, the design of steam locomotives, measurements, and many other fields, publishing books in all these fields.
Biography
He was born in North Shields, England, and at the age of thirteen won a mathematical prize offered by The Ladies' Diary, competing against the adult competition.[1]
His book, Essays on Musical Intervals, Harmonics, and the Temperament of the Musical Scale, advocated 19-tone equal temperament and used a division of the octave into 730 parts, now designated as Woolhouse units,[3] for measuring musical intervals.
^The Monthly Chronicle of North-Country Lore and Legend – Vol. V. Newcastle upon Tyne, England: Walter Scott. 1891. pp. 327–328.
^Biggs, N. L. (1981), "T. P. Kirkman, mathematician", The Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, 13 (2): 97–120, doi:10.1112/blms/13.2.97, MR0608093.