Camp attended Pasadena High School, then Throop Polytechnic Institute before transferring to the University of California, Berkeley, to continue studying with Grinnell.[2] He graduated in 1915 with a degree in zoology. He attended Columbia University, studying under William King Gregory, and received his M.A. in 1916, while also working as an Assistant Instructor in Zoology at Columbia and a Research Assistant at the American Museum of Natural History. He was first recruited to the museum's Herpetology Department by Mary C. Dickerson, though his work was also heavily influenced by Henry Fairfield Osborn and Gregory, who guided his doctoral dissertation towards the evolution and osteology of lizards.[5][2] His work and studies were interrupted by World War I in 1917, when he attended the Citizens' Military Training Camp in Plattsburgh, New York. Camp served two years overseas in the American Expeditionary Forces, where he was promoted from a First Lieutenant to a Second Lieutenant.[3] He returned to New York in 1919, where he resumed his dissertation and work at the Museum of Natural History.[5] During this time, he worked alongside Gladwyn Kingsley Noble, Alfred S. Romer, and Karl Patterson Schmidt.[4] In 1923, Camp's dissertation, Classification of the Lizards was published by the AMNH, and he received his Ph.D. from Columbia.[3][4] He had begun teaching in the Zoology Department at UC Berkeley the year prior, but his research interests shifted into paleontology around 1930, and he transferred to the Department of Paleontology, where he would remain until 1960. From 1930 to 1949, he also served as the director of the University of California Museum of Paleontology.[4] While at the Museum of Paleontology, he worked closely with Annie M. Alexander and in 1930, published a definitive study of phytosaurs.[6] In 1935 and 1936, he received a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, which financed field work in Europe, South Africa, and China.[2] In the early 1940s, his research largely took place in California, and he published on mosasaurs as well as the phylogeny of horses.[7] From 1939 to 1949, he also served as the chairman of the Department of Paleontology at Berkeley, before relinquishing the role to focus on the study of anomodont reptiles in South Africa and Arizona.[7][2]
Camp was also an important bibliographer and historian of Western America, first becoming interested in the subject after returning to his studies at Columbia and feeling homesick.[2][3] This aspect of his career is represented most notably by two works. The first is his biography of American pioneerJames Clyman, which Bernard De Voto called "one of the half-dozen classics in the field."[2] The second work was the third edition of The Plains and the Rockies, published in 1953, in which Camp annotated and expanded on the work of Henry R. Wagner.[3] Between 1923 and 1934, Camp was a director of the California Historical Society and a member of its Publications Committee; he frequently contributed to the California Historical Society Quarterly with work on Kit Carson, George Yount, and Benjamin Dore.[3][2] In 1970, he received the Society's Henry Raup Wagner Memorial Award.[2]
Personal life and legacy
In 1924, Camp married Jessie Margaret Pratt, with whom he would have four children. Pratt often accompanied him on his expeditions, and they remained married until her death in 1971.[11] Camp was one of the early members of the historical preservation fraternity and social club, E Clampus Vitus, and was the Noble Grand Humbug of the Yerba Buena Lodge in 1938.[12] He remarried in 1973, to Joanna Bilbrey.[11]
Henry R. Wagner and Charles L. Camp, The Plains and the Rockies: A Bibliography of Original Narratives of Travel and Adventure, 1800–1865 (Columbus, OH: Long's College Book Co., 1953).
James Clyman, Frontiersman, (Portland, OR: Champoeg Press, 1960).