Peter Calamai's story on Babbage's difference engine (Texas Mac Man's link repeated
here), could have included at least a paragraph on
Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace, a gifted mathematician and Lord Byron's daughter, who worked with Babbage as he developed the engine.
QUOTE
When inspired Ada could be very focused and a mathematical taskmaster. Ada suggested to Babbage writing a plan for how the engine might calculate Bernoulli numbers. This plan, is now regarded as the first "computer program." A software language developed by the U.S. Department of Defense was named "Ada" in her honor in 1979.
<snip>
She has been used as a character in Gibson and Sterling's the Difference Engine, shown writing letters to Babbage in the series " The Machine that Changed the World" and I have gathered her letters and writings in "Ada, The Enchantress of Numbers: A Selection from the Letters of Lord Byron's Daughter and Her Description of the First Computer Though her life was short (like her father, she died at 36), Ada anticipated by more than a century most of what we think is brand-new computing.
This
Wikipedia entry relates that she died at age 36 and from the same cause as her father — medicinal bloodletting.
Googling "lady lovelace" hauls up 44,200 hits.