Life and work
Aitken was born on 1 April 1895 in Dunedin, the eldest of the seven children of Elizabeth Towers and William Aitken. He was of Scottish descent, his grandfather having emigrated from Lanarkshire in 1868. His mother was from Wolverhampton.[9]
He was educated at Otago Boys' High School in Dunedin (1908–13) where he was school dux and won the Thomas Baker Calculus Scholarship in his last year at school. He saw active service during World War I enlisting in April 1915 with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, and serving in Gallipoli from November 1915, in Egypt, and at the Western Front. He was seriously wounded at the Somme.[10] He spent several months in hospital in Chelsea before being invalided out of the army and shipped home to New Zealand in March 1917.[9]
Resuming his studies Aitken graduated with an MA degree from the University of Otago in 1920, then worked as a schoolmaster at Otago Boys' High School from 1920 to 1923.
Aitken studied for a doctorate (PhD) at the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland, under Edmund Taylor Whittaker where his dissertation, "The Graduation of Observational Data", was considered so impressive that he was awarded a DSc degree in 1925.[11][3] Aitken's impact at the university had been so great that he had been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE) the year before the award of his degree, upon the proposal of Sir Edmund Whittaker, Sir Charles Galton Darwin, Edward Copson and David Gibb. In 1927, Aitken published what became known as Aitken delta-squared process as part of an extension to Bernoulli's method.[12][13] Aitken was awarded the Makdougall-Brisbane Prize for 1930–32, and was active in the affairs of the RSE, serving as Councillor (1934–36), Secretary to Ordinary Meetings (1936–40), and vice-president (1948–51; 1956–59). He was also an active member of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society and a Fellow of the Faculty of Actuaries.
Aitken spent his entire career at the University of Edinburgh, working as lecturer in Actuarial Mathematics & Statistics (1925–36), Reader in Statistics (1936–46), and finally Professor of Mathematics (1946–65).
During World War II he worked in Hut 6 Bletchley Park decrypting ENIGMA code.[14]
Aitken was one of the best mental calculators known, and had a prodigious memory. This ability was researched by the psychologist Ian M.L. Hunter. He knew the first 1000 digits of
, the 96 recurring digits of 1/97, and memorised the Aeneid in high school. However, his inability to forget the horrors he witnessed in World War I led to recurrent depression throughout his life.[3]
Aitken was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1936[1] and an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand (Hon FRSNZ) in 1940,[15] both for his work in statistics, algebra and numerical analysis. He was an accomplished writer, being elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL) in 1964 in response to the publication of his war memoirs, Gallipoli to the Somme.[16] His book was the basis of an oratorio of the same name by the New Zealand composer Anthony Ritchie.[17] He was also an excellent musician, being described by Eric Fenby as the most accomplished amateur musician he had ever known, and was a champion athlete in his younger days.