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Myers, Charles Samuel, 1873-1946 (psychologist)

 Person

Biography

Charles Samuel Myers (1873-1946), psychologist, was born in London on 13 March 1873. He attended the City of London School, and entered Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, in 1891, becoming a Fellow in 1919. In 1898 he joined the Cambridge anthropological expedition to the Torres Straits, where he carried out experimental studies on the sensory reactions of the natives and studied their music. He returned to Cambridge in 1902, and was demonstrator in experimental psychology, 1904-1907, and university lecturer and reader, 1907-1930. He was also Professor of Experimental Psychology at King's College, London, 1906-1909. Myers moved to London in 1922, becoming principal of the National Institute of Industrial Psychology, which he had founded with H.J. Welch in 1921, and devoted himself to its development. He died at Winsford Glebe, Somerset, on 12 October 1946.

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

 Item

Letter to Myers from the Rev. W. R. Sorley of St Giles, Cambridge, 19140127

 Item
Reference Code: GBR/3377/CSMyers/1/8
Scope and Contents

There is discussion of a forthcoming meeting and who will be present: someone called Balfour cannot attend but Sorley is hoping that someone called Jackson will be involved.

Dates: 19140127

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