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Child Prodigies Who Led Tragic Lives

Child prodigies always fascinate us, especially when they outshine adults. But the talents and uniqueness of prodigies don’t shield them from devastating circumstances. In some cases, they are even more likely to lead tragic lives.

Aaron Swartz

Aaron Swartz

https://www.blogherald.com

At age 14, Aaron Swartz had already created a fundamental tool of the Internet: RSS, or the software that allows one to subscribe to online information. Besides his various interests on the Internet, Swartz became a key figure in Internet activism, often hacking systems so that their information could be public. Hacking into the nonprofit site JSTOR using illegal means, Swartz released 4.8 million documents but was indicted by the federal government in 2011.Facing a jail sentence of up to 35 years and a $1 million fine, Swartz hanged himself in 2013 when he was just 26. According to relatives, Swartz had also been struggling with depression and other illnesses.

Robert Peace

Robert Peace

http://www.latimes.com

Robert Peace was always a promising child. When he was in nursery, his nickname was “the professor.” When an executive met Peace at a senior banquet, he was so impressed that he gave Peace a blank check to pay for all his education. Soon, Peace was accepted into Yale University where he studied biochemistry. Secretly, Peace moonlighted as a big-time marijuana dealer, eventually amassing $100,000. Rather than use his education to get a legitimate job, Peace continued to deal drugs and was shot to death in a marijuana greenhouse in 2011 when he was 30.

Peaches Geldof

Peaches Geldof

https://www.telegraph.co.uk

Peaches Geldof was just 11 years old when her mother, TV presenter Paula Yates, died of an overdose in 2000. This incident foreshadowed Geldof’s own death years later. Peaches began her career writing for Elle magazine when she was just 15. By 16, she had left home and was writing for The Guardian and The Telegraph along with working on television, modeling, and launching her own clothing line. Geldof seemed to lead the perfect life but had a dark secret: She was a heroin addict. In 2014, tragedy struck when the brilliant young woman died of a heroin overdose in her Kent home after apparently relapsing.

Barbara Newhall Follett

Barbara Newhall Follett

https://www.findagrave.com

Wilson Follett once wrote to Harper’s Magazine about his daughter, Barbara, who was just three years old but already fascinated by letters and words. In 1926, Barbara finished her book, now titled The House Without Windows. Her editor father was impressed and sent the manuscript to a publishing house. The book was an immediate best seller. More impressively, Barbara was just 12 years old. After her father left the family for another woman, Barbara and her mother were left destitute. However, Barbara continued writing and eventually married. Then in 1939, Barbara and her husband quarreled, and she disappeared into the night. Since that evening, Barbara has never been seen nor heard from again.

Brandenn Bremmer

Brandenn Bremmer

https://factsc.com

Brandenn Bremmer was only 18 months old when he began reading. At three, he played the piano and did first-grade work. By 10, Bremmer had graduated high school, and at 11, he was going to college. Bremmer impressed everyone with his intelligence and the music he composed. He even received the attention of national news. But all this changed in 2005 when he was discovered dead in his home from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. His death was assumed to be a suicide, but he didn’t leave a note.

Philippa Schuyler

Philippa Schuyler

https://www.classicalmpr.org

Philippa Schuyler was born in 1931 to mixed race parents: One was a wealthy Southern woman, and the other was a black journalist. But little did they know that they were the parents of an impressive child. Viewed as an experiment, Schuyler was playing Mozart at age four and her IQ tested at 180. Schuyler’s genius soon led to tragedy. Her mother began to beat her regularly and wouldn’t allow her to be around children her age. Racial prejudice would bring Schuyler’s music career to a halt. She later became a journalist but tragically died in a helicopter crash in Vietnam in 1967.

Sergey Reznichenko

Sergey Reznichenko

https://cumberlink.com

Sergey Reznichenko was two when he learned to read. He wrote poetry, excelled at mathematics and other sciences, and began studying economics at Zaporizhzhya National University in Ukraine at age 15.Reznichenko’s mother was believed to be a member of an extreme Jehovah’s Witnesses cult and isolated her son from his peers. When Reznichenko finally left for college, he was freed from his domineering mother’s grasp and soon began engaging in substance abuse. Reznichenko began to withdraw from reality and immersed himself in a world of video games and anime. In 2011, he sunk into a deep depression and became delusional. He snapped and declared himself a god. Moments later, he jumped out a window and died from his injuries.

Walter Pitts

Walter Pitts

http://infoproc.blogspot.com

In 1923, Walter Pitts was born to a poor family in Detroit, Michigan. He was bullied frequently so Pitts took solace in a nearby library. By age 12, he had taught himself Greek, Latin, mathematics, and logic. His love for such topics came from Principia Mathematica by Bertrand Russell and Alfred Whitehead. Pitts wrote to Russell, who was so impressed that he invited Pitts to study at Cambridge. Since Pitts was only 12, he couldn’t leave. However, despite never graduating high school, Pitts received a PhD from MIT by 1943.His ideas on cybernetics and artificial intelligence led to the computer age. But his ideas that brain function and thought could be explained by pure logic were largely dismissed, causing Pitts to become a severe alcoholic. After a few hospital stays to get help, Pitts died alone from cirrhosis in 1969.

Natalia Strelchenko

Natalia Strelchenko

http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Natalia Strelchenko suffered a tragic fate brought on by her abusive husband’s jealousy. A prodigy at piano, Strelchenko debuted at age 12 with the St. Petersburg Symphony Orchestra and soon became recognized as an international sensation. In 2007, Strelchenko met her future husband, John Martin. The two lived in Manchester, and the marriage began to fall apart. Martin became abusive and wanted Strelchenko to give up her career and become a housewife. On their second wedding anniversary, Martin murdered his wife in cold blood.

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Written by Suddl

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