Charles Edward Garman

Charles Edward Garman (December 18, 1850 – February 9, 1907) was professor of philosophy at Amherst College.[1]

Charles Edward Garman

He taught pupils such as Calvin Coolidge and Robert S. Woodworth. He is credited with influencing Woodworth towards a career in psychology.[2]

He was born on December 18, 1850 in Limington, Maine. He died on February 9, 1907 in Amherst, Massachusetts.[1]

Garman married Eliza Miner in 1882. The joint papers of Charles E. Garman and Eliza Miner Garman Family Papers 1862-1932 are housed in the Special Collections Department at Amherst College's Frost Library. The collection contains correspondence, papers, essays, pamphlets, notes, notebooks and diaries relating to the personal and professional life of Charles Edward Garman, Professor of Moral and Mental Philosophy at Amherst College. His teaching career is represented by the printed pamphlets he distributed in his classes and by lecture notes taken by his students.

References

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