By John van Willigen
[ant101@uky.edu]
SfAA Oral History Project, Chair
University of Kentucky
Interview by J. Thomas May and Peter K. New.
Charles P. Loomis was one of the small group that founded the Society for Applied Anthropology in 1941. Trained as a sociologist he was awarded the Ph.D. from Harvard in 1933. Loomis served as the president of SfAA, 1949-1950, at other times he was president of the Rural Sociological Association and the American Sociological Association. His research program was focused on rural life, agriculture and resettlement and had a distinct applied focus. He was very much involved in policy research for the United States Department of Agriculture during the early 1940s. Toward the end of World War II he was appointed chair of Michigan State University’s Department of Sociology and Anthropology. He was one of a number of sociologists that were important to the early development of the SfAA.

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