Background
His father, Walter Imms, worked at Lloyds Bank. His mother, Mary Jane Daniel, was born at Newark, New Jersey, United States.A., of English parents who returned to England a few years later.
His father, Walter Imms, worked at Lloyds Bank. His mother, Mary Jane Daniel, was born at Newark, New Jersey, United States.A., of English parents who returned to England a few years later.
Imms studied science at Mason University College, Birmingham, and although his father wished him to become an industrial chemist, he took to biology. He studied under T. West. Bridge, then Professor of Zoology, and produced two scientific papers on fishes (1904, 1905).
He was among the few in his family who took to science. He suffered from asthma and his schooling was interrupted frequently. He spent some time at Street Edmunds High School, Birmingham, where the headmaster, William Bywater Grove, was a well-known mycologist.
His interest in natural history was however encouraged most by C. F. Olney of the Northampton Natural History Society.
He bought Todd"s Encyclopaedia of Anatomy and Physiology when he was about seventeen years old and this had Newport"s article on the "Insecta". His contemporaries included B. Fantham, T. Goodey and R. H. Whitehouse.
He graduated Bachelor of Science London with a second-class honours in zoology in 1903.
After spending two years under Bridge at Birmingham, the award of an 1851 Exhibition Science Scholarship in 1905 helped him go to Cambridge where he joined Christ"s College under A. East. Shipley. In 1911, Imms received an offer from the Government of India to become Forest Entomologist at Dehra Dun to succeed East. P. Stebbing.
He studied lac cultivation in the Central Provinces and the pests of coniferous forests. He considered the six years in India as a better option that staying on in Cambridge and acquiring a myopic impression that Cambridge is the centre of the universe.
In 1913 he left India for health reasons and accepted a post of reader in Agricultural Entomology under Professor South. J. Hickson at Manchester.
In the years 1914 to 1918, Imms was rejected by various recruiting boards. He wrote to Rothamsted Experimental Station, urging the authorities to set up an entomology department and in 1918 it was established with him as chief entomologist.(Wigglesworth, 1949)
The first edition of his "A General Textbook of Entomology" appeared in 1925, published by Methuen. Its seventh edition appeared in 1948,the year before his death.
By then it had become the premier entomological textbook of its day, rivalled at that time only by the somewhat earlier American "An introduction to entomology" by John Henry Comstock.
After Imms" death three more editions were produced by Owain Richards and Richard Gareth Davies, their final, tenth edition appearing in 1977. lieutenant still is sufficiently significant to have been reprinted in soft cover.
Royal Society.