Background
Champion grew up in a family of nature lovers. His father was the English entomologist George Charles Champion.
Champion grew up in a family of nature lovers. His father was the English entomologist George Charles Champion.
He was commissioned into the British Indian Army Reserve of Officers (Cavalry branch) as a Second Lieutenant on 21 August 1916, and was promoted temporarily to Captain on 8 March 1917, and to Lieutenant on 21 August 1917. He saw service with the 31st Lancers and then he was appointed Wing Officer with the Kurram Militia on the 8 March 1917, a Frontier Corps unit based on the North West Frontier of India. He retired a Lieutenant but was granted the rank of Captain on 1 May 1922.
After returning from the war, he joined the Imperial Forestry Service in the United Provinces of India and became Deputy Conservator of Forests.
Owing to his experiences during the war, he abhorred shooting and killing and blisteringly criticised sport hunting. He preferred shooting wildlife with a camera in the Sivalik Hills and pioneered camera trapping: in the 1920s he developed cameras triggered by tripwires.
Using a flashlight as well, he obtained dozens of remarkable night-time photographs, which are among the first of wild tigers, leopards, sloth bears, dholes and other wildlife. He recognized that with good photographs of tigers, it was possible to tell individuals apart by their different stripe patterns.
He strongly believed in the protectionist role of the forest department in India.
He championed the idea of limiting gun licenses, stopping motor-cars from entering Reserved Forests and reducing rewards for killing wildlife.
Together with Corbett, he was a founding member of India"s first national park established in 1935, which was renamed to Corbett National Park in 1957.