Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Frank Chapman (ornithologist)

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Nationality
  
US

Known for
  
Christmas Bird Count

Role
  
Writer


Name
  
Frank Chapman

Fields
  
Ornithology

Frank Chapman (ornithologist) peoplewkueducharlessmithchronobCHAPMANjpg

Born
  
Frank Michler Chapman June 12, 1864 West Englewood, New Jersey (
1864-06-12
)

Institutions
  
American Museum of Natural History

Notable awards
  
Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal (1917) John Burroughs Medal (1929)

Died
  
November 15, 1945, New York City, New York, United States

Institution
  
American Museum of Natural History

Books
  
The warblers of North Am, Handbook of birds of eastern N, Camps and cruises of an ornith, The travels of birds, Bird studies with a ca

Notable students
  
William H. Phelps, Sr.

Birding at the museum frank chapman and the dioramas


Frank Michler Chapman (June 12, 1864 – November 15, 1945) was an American ornithologist and pioneering writer of field guides.

Contents

Frank Chapman (ornithologist) Frank Chapman ornithologist Wikipedia

La senal de frank chapman


Biography

Chapman was born in West Englewood, New Jersey and attended Englewood Academy. He joined the staff of the American Museum of Natural History in 1888 as assistant to Joel Asaph Allen. In 1901 he was made associate Curator of Mammals and Birds and in 1908 Curator of Birds.

Chapman came up with the original idea for the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. He also wrote many ornithological books such as, Bird Life, Birds of Eastern North America, Bird Studies With a Camera, and Life in an Air Castle. For his work, Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia, he was awarded the Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the National Academy of Sciences in 1917.

In the winter seasons, starting from his mother's home in Gainesville, Florida, he made numerous field trips to collect small mammals and birds; thus he went to various localities in Florida, Texas, Cuba, Trinidad, B. W. I., Yucatan and Vera Cruz, Mexico, and later to many countries in South America. The story of his local expeditions in the United States and of his one visit to England is told in his Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist (1908) and much later his many expeditions to Mexico, Central and South America are dealt with in his all too brief, authentic Autobiography of a Bird Lover (1933).

Chapman fathered one child, Frank Chapman, Jr., who first married playwright Elizabeth Cobb and had a daughter, actress and TV personality Buff Cobb, and after divorcing married mezzo-soprano opera singer Gladys Swarthout.

Chapman was interred at Brookside Cemetery.

Publications

As well as numerous papers in scientific journals and magazines such as the National Geographic Magazine, books and major reports authored by Chapman include:

  • (1894). Visitors' Guide to the Local Collection of Birds in the American Museum of Natural History.
  • (1895). Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America.
  • (1897). Bird-Life: A Guide to the Study of Our Common Birds.
  • (1898). Four-Footed Americans and Their Kin.
  • (1899). Descriptions of five apparently new birds from Venezuela. Bull. of the American Museum of Natural History 12 ( 9): 153-156
  • (1900). Bird Studies with a Camera.
  • (1901). The Revision of the Genus Capromys.
  • (1903). Color Key to North American Birds
  • (1903). The Economic Value of Birds to the State.
  • (1907). Warblers of North America.
  • (1908). Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist.
  • (1910). The Birds of the Vicinity of New York City: A guide to the Local Collection.
  • (1915). The Travels of Birds.
  • (1917). The Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia.
  • (1919). Our Winter Birds.
  • (1921). The Habit Groups of North American Birds.
  • (1921). The Distribution of Bird Life in the Urubamba Valley of Peru. A report of the birds collected by the Yale University - National Geographic Society's expedition.
  • (1926). The Distribution of Bird-life in Ecuador.
  • (1929). My Tropical Air Castle.
  • (1931). The Upper Zonal Bird-Life of Mts Roraima and Duida.
  • (1933). The Autobiography of a Bird-Lover.
  • (1934). What Bird is That?.
  • (1938). Life in an Air Castle: Nature Studies in the Tropics.
  • References

    Frank Chapman (ornithologist) Wikipedia