Toronto Star

Key events in the life of Stephen Hawking

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Jan. 8, 1942: Born in Oxford, England, the eldest of four children of Frank Hawking, a biologist, and Isobel Hawking, a medical research secretary. 1952: Attends St. Albans School. 1959: Receives a scholarshi­p to attend University College, Oxford, from which he graduates with a degree in natural science. 1962: Begins graduate research in cosmology at Cambridge University. 1963: Diagnosed with the degenerati­ve nerve disorder ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, at the age of 21. He is given two years to live. 1965: Marries his first wife, Jane Wilde, a modern languages student he met at Cambridge. 1967: The couple’s first son, Robert, is born. 1970: Jane gives birth to a daughter, Lucy. 1974: Elected as a fellow of the Royal Society at age 32, one of the youngest people to receive the honour. 1979: Becomes Lucasian Professor of Mathematic­s at Cambridge, a prestigiou­s position once held by Isaac Newton. Hawking holds the post until 2009. Jane gives birth to a third child, Timothy. 1985: Admitted to a hospital in Geneva with pneumonia. He survives after an operation, but loses what remained of his speech. The next year he begins communicat­ing through an electronic voice synthesize­r that gives him his trademark robotic “voice.” 1988: Publishes A Brief History of Time, a book on cosmology aimed at the general public that becomes an instant bestseller. 1989: Made a Companion of Honor by Queen Elizabeth. 1995: Marries his nurse, Elaine Mason. 2007: Divorces Elaine Mason. 2014: His life is celebrated in the Oscar-winning biopic The Theory of Everything, based on the memoir Travelling to Infinity: My Life with Stephen, by Jane Hawking. March 14, 2018: Stephen Hawking dies.

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