Background
Charles Abram Ellwood was born January 20, 1873 near Ogdensburg, New York.
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Charles Abram Ellwood was born January 20, 1873 near Ogdensburg, New York.
He was graduated from Cornell University in 1896 and, after a year of graduate study at the University of Berlin, he went to the University of Chicago where he received his Ph. D. degree in 1899.
Between 1900 and 1930 he served as chairman of the department of sociology at the University of Missouriю Thesis and dissertation topics at MU in Ellwood's period were largely focused on social problems including poverty and racial inequality in Columbia and other Missouri towns. Between 1930 and 1944 held the same position at Duke University in North Carolina. Ellwood's elementary textbook, Sociology and Modern Social Problems and his scholarly works gave him an international reputation. He was president of the American Sociological Society (1924). Ellwood was targeted by Ku Klux Klan and public criticism around 1927 for suggesting that there are no pure races. He served as president of the International Congress of Sociology in Brussels (1935), and president of the International Institute of Sociology (1935 - 1936). He died September 25, 1946.
(This book, "Sociology and Its Psychological Aspects", by ...)
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American Sociological Society, International Congress of Sociology, International Institute of Sociology