Biographical dictionary

The Biographical Dictionary of British Coleopterists is compiled and maintained by Michael Darby. The Dictionary can be accessed below, and see also the additional information provide by Michael:

Michael would be pleased to hear from anyone wishing to make corrections or alterations to the Dictionary, which will be fully acknowledged. Email Michael Darby or write to Michael at 33 Bedwin Street, SALISBURY, Wiltshire, SP1 3UT.

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Namesort ascending Dates Biography
CHANT, John d. September 1867

There are many references to Chant in Stephens (1828-). He was a friend of Samouelle and of Bentley, and with the latter published an 'Entomological Tour in south Devon' in Ent. Mag., 1, 1833, 180-185. In his obituary of Chant in Ent., 4, 1868, 106-107, Edward Newman recorded: ‘Mr Chant and his colleague Mr Bentley were among my first entomological acquaintances; and all the older entomologists now living may be reckoned to have made their entomological debut under these auspices of these veterans of our science... [I] was a weekly visitor at their Thursday evening reunions for many years... Mr Chant became a contributor to my ‘Entomological Magazine' about the same period, 1832-36, but his communications were few in number and were soon altogether discontinued... Mr Chant died in September 1867, but I cannot be certain of his exact age: he devoted his spare time of later years to re-setting insects for the British Museum and for Mr Saunders: his collections, consisting of three small cabinets of British Lepidoptera, were sold by Mr Stevens on the 24 April last’. (MD 3/02)

CHANEY, William 1828 - 3 November 1906

Born in Chatham where he subsequently worked at the dockyard. Became interested in entomology, primarily Lepidoptera, at an early age and published various notes in the Entomologist's Weekly Intelligencer and other periodicals on the local fauna. In 1869 he transferred to the Admiralty, and a year or so later he was one of the founder members of the SLENHS.

J.J. Walker in EMM., 43, 1907, 16-17, records that Chaney's interest in Coleoptera and Hemiptera developed later in his life but that he still succeeded in amassing 'good collections of these Orders, which he disposed of a few years ago... Mr Chaney was a man of fine physique and of wide and varied reading, and a genial and hearty companion in the field; and the writer of this notice whose deceased friend was his earliest Entomological instructor, recalls many pleasant days spent with him among the insects of the woods and chalk-downs of the Chatham district'.

Chaney's name appears on Coleoptera in the D.G. Hall collection at Baldock Museum (I thank Trevor James for pointing out these specimens to me) and he was a major contributor to the C.G. Hall collection at Oldham (specimens are dated between 1878 and 1890 and are from Essex, Hants., Kent, London, Suffolk, Surrey, Sussex and Scotland. I am grateful to Simon Hayhow for this information) Apart from the obituary by Walker there is another in ERJV, 19, 1907, 28 (Anonymous). (MD 1/O2)

CHAMPION, Sir Harry G. 1891 - 20 June 1979

Eldest son of George Charles Champion. Educated at the Royal Grammar School Guildford and from 1908 at King's College, London University, before going to New College, Oxford, where he graduated with firsts in chemistry and botany. In 1914 he took a diploma in forestry which he subsequently made his profession serving firstly in the Indian Forestry Service (1914-1940) after a year in the USA, and then as Professor of Forestry at Oxford. During his time at Oxford he continued to travel extensively visiting Burma, Ceylon, Hawaii, Japan, USA, China, Malaya, the Seychelles, Kenya, Tanganyika and Uganda.

Champion's entomological interests centred primarily on Lepidoptera but he did collect beetles too, particularly during his tenure as Central Silviculturalist, and later as Conservator, in the United Provinces, India. The beetles he sent home between 1919 and his father's death in 1927 formed the subject of 24 papers by the latter in which 259 new species were described. His interest in entomology was undoubtedly encouraged by his father, and as a boy in the family home at Woking, he collected on the surrounding heaths with his brother Reginald. By the age of sixteen he had published his first article in the EMM., the magazine with which he was subsequently much involved as an Editor.

Letters from his father (1916-25) and a few other letters and miscellaneous notes are in the HDO (Smith (1986), 71), and a collecting notebook in the NHM (Harvey et al.,(1996), 43). Pedersen (2002) lists a letter in the RESL from Oxford d.1914 to C.J. Wainwright and correspondence with the NHM re the gift of his father’s collections. There is an obituary, including photograph, and account of Champion by Gerald Thompson, one of his students, in EMM, 115, 1979, 93-94 (including portrait), and an earlier account, written at the time of his knighthood, in the same magazine (92, 1956,137). (MD 1/O2, 11/09)

CHAMPION, Reginald James 1895 - 1917

The third and youngest son of George Charles Champion. Collected insects as a boy with his brother Harry in the neighborhood of the family home at Horsell, Woking. The close bond which the two brothers shared was broken when Reginald was killed in France during the first World War. British Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera are in the HDO. There are obituaries in EMM., 53, 1917, 215 (by his uncle J.J. Walker) and in Ent. News, 29, 1918, 80. (MD 1/O2)

CHAMPION, John George 5 May 1815 - 30 November 1854

Born in Edinburgh the eldest son of Major John Carey Champion and Elizabeth, nee Herries, the daughter of William Urquhart of Craigstone Castle, Aberdeenshire. Educated at Sandhurst and gazetted an Ensign in the 95th regiment on 2 August 1831. Embarked on foreign service in 1838 after obtaining the rank of Captain. After a stay in the Ionian Islands, his duties took him to Ceylon and thence, in 1847, to Hongkong. He returned to England in 1850 but left again, for the Crimea, in April 1854. He was wounded at Inkermann on 5 November 1854, gazetted Lieutenant Colonel and C.B. for his conduct in the battle, but he died shortly after in Scutari hospital.

Champion was primarily a botanist, but he did collect beetles, and the red longhorn Erythrus championii was named after him. He published a 'Notice on the Coleoptera of Hongkong' in Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 17, 2, 1848, 206-209, and I have a note that he was the author of 'Notes on various insects' which was published under the pseudonym 'Jonicus' in Ent. Mag., 3, 1835, 176-178, 376-379, 460-465. Correspondence between Champion and W. Hooker and J. Lindley exists at Kew, where many of his plants are preserved. There is an account in DNB. with a bibliography. (MD 1/O2)

CHAMPION, George Charles 29 April 1851 - 8 August 1927

Born in Walworth, South London, the eldest son of George Champion. Became interested in insects at least as early as 1862. J.J. Walker records in an obituary notice in EMM., 63, 1927,197-203, 'Encouraged by his friend the late Mr J. Platt Barrett, as well as by the award of a small insect cabinet as a school prize, he began, as is so often the case, by collecting moths and butterflies; but his attention was soon engrossed by the Order to which his life-work was devoted, and the splendid collection of British Coleoptera which he amassed in after years was commenced by him when a youth of not more than sixteen ... It was during this early period of his work that a chance meeting on the sea-wall near Sheerness, one sunny June morning in 1870 - a day marked by the addition of Baris scolopacea to the British Beetle fauna - initiated a friendship which was cemented fifteen years later by a happy marriage into the writer's family, and has endured unbroken and unclouded for upwards of fifty-seven years'.

Champion's initial work was mainly in the Home Counties where he discovered many rare and interesting species, including numerous additions to the British list. The turning point in his entomological studies came in 1878, however, when he gave up being a businessman to accept a post as collector for F. Ducane Godman and Osbert Salvin who had just commenced their monumental Biologia Centrali America. Champion left England early in February 1879 for Guatemala where he arrived on 16 March. Then commenced four years of journeys and intensive collecting which are described in a series of articles he wrote to the EMM., 18, 1882, 226-229; 20, 1884, 72-175, 199-205 and 248-250, and in the introductory volume of the Biologia.

Champion describes first the equipment he used for collecting. He had taken out a lot but soon found that more than half of it was useless because there were insufficient mules, horses, or Indian backs to carry so much weight. 'My usual plan was to stay a few days here and there, at various places on the road, till I came to what appeared a likely place, then I would remain longer and, if necessary, send to my nearest headquarters for more boxes, etc.; in this way I travelled over a large part of Guatemala, and of the northern part of the Columbian state of Panama.' His beating tray he quickly abandoned 'finding that I could manage much better with a large balloon-shaped, jointed cane, butterfly net: a net of this kind will answer very well for all Orders of insects, it can be turned over to beat on to, and at the same time, you have a net ready to catch anything on the wing...'.

Protecting his specimens was a constant problem: 'While mounting beetles, etc. indoors, the ants have often carried off my captures under my very nose'; and 'often I have come in wet or tired... and put my boxes down for a short time only to find on opening them ... that hundreds of ants had already commenced devouring my captures.' But the forests were so rich that he could afford a few losses. He learned to look for new clearings in particular 'then is the time almost before the trees are down, beetles begin to appear - Longhorns (I have taken perhaps 100 species in one clearing, by constant hunting day after day for a fortnight), Elateridae, Anthribidae...'. But many less desirable species abounded too: 'minute ticks are a great pest... frequently swarming all over one... and mosquitoes and other Diptera are sometimes, very troublesome, though fortunately, there are no land-leeches'. Snakes, however, 'are only too common...and ... I have beaten them onto my net several times'.

So successful was Champion as a collector that he managed to return in the summer of 1883 having taken not less than 15,000 species of insects. He at once found employment as Secretary and chief assistant to Godman and Salvin, and in that capacity he saw through the press the fifty two volumes of the Biologia. Champion himself specialised in preparing the Coleopterous material for publication and in writing the volumes and parts covering the Heteromera, the Elateridae and Dascillidae, the Cassididae, and by far the greater part of the Curculionidae. In these groups alone he described more than 4,000 species new to science.

While pursuing this work Champion also found time to collect extensively in Britain, particularly around Woking where he settled in 1892, and on the Continent where he often took his summer holiday. T.A. Chapman was a great friend and often accompanied him on these trips. Many of these captures subsequently formed the subject of notes to the contemporary journals. In the EMM., of which he was one of the editors, alone, he published 426 articles; and he also published frequently in the Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist, of which he was also an editor.

Champion died from heart disease and is buried at Horsell cemetery. His British collections passed to his eldest son and subsequently to the NHM where they joined the 150,000 continental and other foreign beetles which he had bequeathed to the Museum. Another 5,200 beetles selected from his collection was presented to the HDO by his son H.G. Champion in 1936. I have also seen specimens collected by him in a number of other institutions including the Manchester Museum (Blatch, Britten, Taylor, and Spaeth collections); Bolton Museum (Mason collection); and the RSM (Waterhouse collection). Simon Hayhow tells me that there are specimens collected by him in the Isle of Wight and Hants in the C.G. Hall collection at Oldham Museum, and Ashley Kirk-Spriggs that there are specimens from Panama in the Rippon Collection at Cardiff. Sharon Reid at the Central Science Laboratory (DEFRA), York, informs me that there are specimens collected by Champion in the F.Bates collection there (see BATES, F. and WILLIAMS, B.S.) and Tony Irwin has pointed out that there are specimens collected by Champion in E.A.Butler’s foreign collection of Coleoptera and Hemiptera at Norwich Museum. There are also specimens in K.C.Lewis's collection.

There are letters from Champion in the Sharpe volumes at Liverpool Museum; various references in the Janson diary at Cambridge; and a photograph of him (collecting) among the Tomlin papers at Cardiff. Smith (1986) records that diaries of captures (1868-89); notes on localities visited in Colombia; original drawings of beetles and correspondence with Paulton, 1896-1918 are in the HDO.

Gilbert (1977) lists 9 obituaries and other references. J.J. Pino, an entomologist in Galicia, Northern Spain, wrote to me in December 2002 saying that he was doing research into the journey of T.A. Chapman (QV) and G.C. Champion to that area in 1906.

FES from March 1871, Council 1875-77, Vice President 1925, and Librarian 1891-1920. (It was he who compiled the Catalogue and Supplement of the Library.) FLS. FZS. Member of the SLENHS, which he helped to found in 1872. (MD 1/02, 10/03, 12/06)

CHAMPION, F.G.

Son of G.C. Champion. Worked in the Indian Forestry service and is mentioned by G.J. Arrow, Lamellicornia, FBI series, part ii, 1917, as a collector of Rutelinae at Shillong in Assam. (MD 1/O2)

CHAMBERS, J.

Subscribed to Denny (1825) but it is not known whether he was a Coleopterist. (MD 1/O2)

CHAMBERS, Charles The index volume of the 'Extract' of natural history collections from the registers of the College Museum 1813-1869, now in the RSM, lists a 'bottle containing Coleoptera in spirit' given to the Museum in c.1860 by Chambers. (MD 1/O2)
CHAMBERLIN, T.L.B. J.W.Carr, The Invertebrate Fauna of Nottinghamshire, 1916, and Supplement, 1935, state that ‘many good species [of Coleoptera] were found in the extreme north by the late Reverend T.L.B.Chamberlin’.M ick Cooper informs that there is further information about Chamberlin in Nottingham Museum. (MD 10/03)

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