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Charles Joseph Gahan

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Name
  
Charles Gahan


Charles Joseph Gahan Charles Joseph Gahan by Shannon Amidon Artwork Archive

Died
  
June 1939, Aylsham, United Kingdom

Books
  
Furniture Beetles - Their Life-History and How to Check Or Prevent the Damage Caused by the Worm - British Museum (Natural History) - Economic Series

Education
  
NUI Galway, Royal School of Mines

Charles Joseph Gahan (20 January 1862 – 21 January 1939) was an Irish entomologist.

Charles Joseph Gahan Coleopter Cerambycidae Charles Joseph Gahan Amazoncom Books

He was born on 20 January 1862 at Roscrea County Tipperary, Ireland. His father, Michael Gahan was the Master of Erasmus Smith's School in Tipperary. He was educated first at Queens College Galway, where he achieved distinction, and then at the Royal School of Mines in Kensington. In 1882 he was awarded a medal and prizes as the best biological student of the session. In 1886, he joined the British Museum (Natural History) as an assistant in the Department of Zoology where he became Keeper in the then newly formed Department of Entomology in 1913. An expert on beetles, especially Cerambycidae, he wrote the 1906 volume of The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma on that group. Honorary Secretary of the Entomological Society of London in 1899-1900 and was president 1917-1918. Married Annie Woodward in 1887. He retired in 1920 and lived at Mouth Aylsham in Norfolk and died at Aylsham on 21 January 1939. He became the first person to describe Rosenbergia exigua in 1888.

References

Charles Joseph Gahan Wikipedia