Background
Clench was born in Brooklyn, but was largely raised in Massachusetts.
entomologist malacologist Zoologist
Clench was born in Brooklyn, but was largely raised in Massachusetts.
Harvard University; University of Michigan. Michigan State University.
In 1913 he entered the Huntington School in Boston. While there he often engaged in bug collecting, and would show his collections to Charles Johnson at the Boston Society of Natural History. Johnson introduced Clench to such men as William F. Clapp, who was the curator of mollusks at the Museum of Comparative Zoology (MCZ).
Clench received his undergraduate education at Michigan State College (now Michigan State University), graduating in 1921.
He spent the summer studying mollusks on Sanibel Island and then began study at Harvard under William Morton Wheeler. He received his master"s degree in entomology in 1923.
He then went on to pursue his Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, in mollusk study, with a Hinsdale Fellowship. In 1924 Clench married Julia Helmich, a resident of East Lansing, Michigan whom he had met while attending Michigan Agricultural College.
Their eldest son, Harry Kendon Clench (1925–1979), would become a well-known lepidopterist at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.
Clench left Ann Arbor in 1925, to take a position at the Kent Scientific Museum. In 1926 he joined the Museum of Comparative Zoology, where he remained until 1966. He did not actually finish work on his Doctor of Philosophy until 1953.
Much of Clench"s work was done with Ruth Doctorate. Turner.
Jointly they introduced about 70 new taxa, and the two of them (together and independently) introduced a total of approximately 500 new taxa.
He was a long-serving Mayor of Wanganui, and a member of the New Zealand Legislative Council from 1940 until its abolition in 1950.