Chauncy harris biography of william hill
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By the time of his first visit, he was already a well established and respected expert in the field. The son of Academian Franklin S. Harris, he showed an early interest in Geography, declaring to his family at the end of second grade that we was going to become a geographer.[1] He received a B.A. from Brigham Young University (BYU) in 1933.
Fellow Japan Society Promotion of Science.
Member Association American Geographers (secretary 1946-1948, vice president 1956, president 1957, Honors award 1976), American Geography Society (council 1962-1974, vice president 1969-1974.
His dissertation was entitled, "Salt Lake City - a Regional Capital in 1940."
After brief stints at Indiana University and the University of Nebraska, Harris was appointed Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Chicago in 1943. Awarded a Rhodes scholarship in 1934, he studied geography at Oxford and the London School of Economics and then completed his training at the University of Chicago where he received the Ph.D.
Doctor of Philosophy, University Chicago, 1940.
DEcon (honoris causa), Catholic University, Chile, 1956. Soon recognized as a serious and objective scholar, he was well received during his many trips to the USSR and made a persistent effort to bring the work of Soviet geographers to the attention of Western colleagues.
Bachelor, Oxford University, 1936. Vice president International Geography Union,1956-1964, secretary-treasurer, 1968-1976.
Member of advisory committee for international organizations and programs National Academy Sciences, 1969-1973, member board international organizations and programs, 1973-1976. His early work in this area left him well prepared in the late 1950s when the Soviet Union began opening up to foreigners.
The ethnic complexity of the Soviet realm was an additional major subject of investigation. Executive Committee division behavioral science National Research Council, 1967-1970.
Member county of scholars Library.of Congress, 1980-1983, Conseil de la Bibliographie Géographique Internationale, 1986-1994.
Achievements
Chauncy Dennison Harris has been listed as a noteworthy geographer, educator by Marquis Who's Who.
Works
Membership
Life member visiting committee University Chicago Library.
Around this same time he was called into military service with the U.S. Department of State, Office of the Geographer. He served on the University of Chicago faculty from 1943 to 1984 and then continued as the Samuel N. Harper Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in Geography until his death in 2003.
He was survived by his wife of 63 years, Edith Young Harris; a daughter, Margaret Harris Straus, of Philadelphia; her husband, Philip A.
Straus, Jr.; grandchildren Miriam Harris Straus and Peter Harris Straus; and sisters Leah Harris Jensen of Pocatello, Idaho, and Mildred Harris Bradley of Salt Lake City, as well as numerous nieces and nephews.
A memorial service was held at Montgomery Place, 5550 South Shore Drive, in Chicago, on Sunday, January 11, 2003.
The family suggested that contributions in his memory could be made to the University of Chicago Library, Chauncy D.
and Edith Y. Harris Book Fund, 1100 East 57th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637.
In Washington he became intrigued by the mystery surrounding the Soviet Union.
He also received an M.A. from the London School of Economics before returning to the U.S.
He completed his Ph.D. His seminal works in the field of American urban geography ("The Nature of Cities" and "A Functional Classification of Cities in the United States") along with his work on the Soviet Union during and after the Cold War era established him as one of the world's foremost urban geographers.
His dissertation was entitled, "Salt Lake City - a Regional Capital in 1940."
After brief stints at Indiana University and the University of Nebraska, Harris was appointed Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Chicago in 1943. The son of a scientist and academician Franklin S. Harris, he showed an early interest in Geography, declaring to his family at the end of second grade that he was going to become a geographer.
He graduated from Brigham Young High School in Provo in 1930.