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Arnold Buffum Chace

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Name
  
Arnold Chace

Alma mater
  
Brown University

Parents
  
Elizabeth Buffum Chace


Spouse(s)
  
Eliza Chace Greene

Education
  
Brown University

Relatives
  
Oliver Chace

Children
  
Malcolm Greene Chace

Arnold Buffum Chace image1findagravecomphotos250photos200848247

Born
  
November 10, 1845 (
1845-11-10
)
Cumberland, Rhode Island

Occupation
  
Mathematician, banker, businessman

Died
  
February 28, 1932, Providence, Rhode Island, United States

Books
  
The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, British Museum 10057 and 10058, V1: Free Translation and Commentary, and Bibliography of Egyptian Mathematics

People also search for
  
Elizabeth Buffum Chace, Raymond Clare Archibald, Henry Parker Manning

Resting place
  
Swan Point Cemetery

Arnold Buffum Chace (November 10, 1845 – February 28, 1932) was a textile businessman, mathematics scholar, and eleventh chancellor of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

Contents

Family

Arnold was born November 10, 1845 in Cumberland, Rhode Island. His grandfather Oliver Chace was founder of the Valley Falls textile company, which later became Berkshire Hathaway. His parents Samuel Buffington Chace and Elizabeth Buffum Chace were Quakers and prominent Anti-Slavery activists.

Arnold married Eliza Chace Greene, daughter of Christopher A. and Sarah A. Greene on October 24, 1871. Their three children were: Malcolm Greene Chace, Edward Gould Chace, cotton manufacturer, and Margaret Chace, wife of Russell S. Rowland, M.D. of Detroit, MI.

Academics

Arnold Buffum Chace received his bachelor's degree from Brown University in 1866 and a Doctor of Science from Brown in 1892. He also studied for one year at the École de Médecine in Paris. Chace taught physics and mathematics for one term at Brown (1868–69), before having to interrupt his career to handle the family textile business. He remained involved in leadership at Brown for most of his life. In 1876 he was elected trustee; in 1882 he became treasurer; and in 1907 he was elected Chancellor.

Chace's lifelong passion was mathematics. He wrote many articles on mathematical subjects, including one called "A Certain Class of Cubic Surfaces Treated by Quaternions" in the Journal of Mathematics. He attended the International Mathematical Congress at Cambridge, England in 1912. Chace published his work on the Egyptian Rhind Papyrus in 1927 and 1929, at age 87.

Business and banking

His academic career was interrupted in 1869, when he became responsible for his family's cotton mill on the death of a family member. In 1871 he became a director of Westminster Bank, and in 1894 he became its president. He was also a director of the National Bank of North America. During this time he managed to attend mathematics classes at Harvard once a week.

Death and burial

Chace died in Providence, Rhode Island, on February 28, 1932 and is buried at Swan Point Cemetery.

References

Arnold Buffum Chace Wikipedia


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