Adams, Charles C. (Charles Christopher), 1873-1955
Biography
Charles Christopher Adams was born in Clinton, Illinois on July 23, 1873 to William Henry Harrison Adams and Hannah Westfall (Conklin) Adams. Dr. Adams received his bachelor of science degree from Illinois Wesleyan University in 1895. He completed work for his master’s degree at Harvard University in 1899, his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1908 and his Sc.D. at Illinois Wesleyan in 1920.
Dr. Adams married Alice Luthera Norton in October 1908 and together they had one daughter, Harriet Dyer Adams. His wife died September 1, 1931.
Throughout his lifetime, Dr. Adams won acclaim for his work in general animal ecology and the ecology of prairies, forests and lakes. He began his professional career as an assistant entomologist at Illinois State Laboratory of Natural History (1896-1898). In 1903, he was appointed curator of the University of Michigan Museum. He served there until 1906, when he became the director of the Cincinnati Society of Natural History. In 1908 he was appointed an associate professor at the University of Illinois. He became an assistant professor of forest zoology at the New York State College of Forestry in 1914 and was subsequently appointed to a full professorship in 1916.
In 1919, Dr. Adams became the first director of the Roosevelt Wildlife Experimental Station in the Adirondacks. During his tenure, he was an instrumental force in the development of the Allegany State Park in Western New York. He left the Roosevelt Station in 1926 and assumed the directorship of the New York State Museum until his retirement in 1943. While serving as the director of the Museum, he began the development of its internationally acclaimed Shaker collection housed and worked to develop its art and history collections.
Dr. Adams was a charter member of the American Association of Museums and a founding member of the American Ecological Society. In addition, he was a member of the American Society of Naturalists, the Association of American Geographers, the History Science Society and Sigma Xi. He is the author of Guide to the Study of Animal Ecology (1913).
Charles Adams died on May 22, 1955 in Albany, New York and was buried in Burlington, Wisconsin. His two sisters, Katherine and Grace Adams, and his daughter, Harriet, survived him.
[Bio from New York State Library - http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/msscfa/sc22108.htm ]
Found in 17 Collections and/or Records:
The ecological succession of birds, 1908
Adams, Charles C
The ecological succession of birds
Charles C. Adams
From 'The Auk,' Vol. XXV, No. 2, April, 1908
S.l.: s.n.
The importance of establishing natural history reservations for research and education, 1931
Adams, Charles C
The importance of establishing natural history reservations for research and education
Charles C. Adams, Ph.D
From New York State Museum Bulletin 288, pages 71-83 Twenty-fourth Report of the Director
Albany: The University of the State of New York
The importance of preserving wilderness conditions, 1929
Adams, Charles C
The importance of preserving wilderness conditions
Charles C. Adams
From New York State Museum Bulletin 273 Twenty-second Report of the Director
Albany: The University of the State of New York
The New York State wild life memorial to Theodore Roosevelt, 1919
Adams, Charles C
The New York State wild life memorial to Theodore Roosevelt
by Charles C. Adams
Reprinted from Natural History, Vol. XIX, No. 6, pp. 726-729, 1919
S.l.: s.n.
The postglacial dispersal of the North American biota, 1905
Adams, Charles C
The postglacial dispersal of the North American biota
Chas. C. Adams
Reprinted from Biological Bulletin, Vol. IX., No. 1, June, 1905
S.l.: s.n.
The relation of general ecology to human ecology, 1935
Adams, Charles C
The relation of general ecology to human ecology
Charles C. Adams
Reprinted from Ecology, Vol. XVI, No. 3, July, 1935
Lancaster, Pa.: Lancaster Press
Variation in Io, 1900
Adams, Charles C
Variation in Io
Charles C. Adams
From Proceedings American Association for the Advancement of Science. Vol. 49, 1900
S.l.: s.n.