Hallof Ivy: The first one is famous! When Gauss was just a child, the story goes, his elementary school teacher set the entire class the problem of adding all numbers from 1 to 100, just to keep them busy.
Please, excuse me for throwing a little cold water here. When I first heard the story in school, I was under the impression that this "Gaussian Sum," was actually discovered first
by young Gauss. Very inspiring! However, if that were true, how could the teacher have found the sum?
In any case, the sum was known to Pythagoras.
Now http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/50686?&print=yes points out a certain amount of questions here. The story was published by Sartonius in 1856, but he gave no amounts involved. It has been argued that the sum from 1-100 has only been generally settled on in recent times, and others amounts have been supposed, such as 1-50, 1-80, or even 1-1000. Depending upon(?) what some feel schoolchildren are capable of.
I remember reading something quite different in Men of Mathematics by Eric T Bell, and he proposes that the question was sum up the series: 81297+81495+81693+++100899, where each difference is 198.
Of course, the idea of Bell is many times harder to work with than a simple sum like 1-100, and it all suggests that, as some have said, The story has grown with the telling. A few have even suggested that the event never even occurred.
However, to its credit, it’s a GOOD STORY and has been an inspiration to many a budding math student. Doubtless it will live on and on. Perhaps, growing even more wonderful as time passes.