Charles BurnhamCharles Burnham was born in 1933 in Detroit, MI to Charles Hubbard and Anne (Wilson) Burnham, he was raised in Winchester, MA. He attended MIT, as did his father and grandfather before him, graduating in 1954. Following two years of service in the USAF, he returned to MIT to earn a PhD in 1961.

He married Mary Sue (Morgan) in 1958. They had two sons Jeffrey Wentworth, born in 1960 and David Wilson, born in 1963. Following graduate school the family moved to Washington, D.C. where he worked for the Geophysical Laboratory, an institution run by the Carnegie Foundation. In 1966 the family returned to the Boston area when he became Associate Professor of Mineralogy at Harvard University in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, retiring as a full Professor in 1996. He was an active volunteer in many ways: Serving on the Planning Board in the town of Acton, Massachusetts, working with the Boy Scouts of America, teaching in the Harvard, Cornell, and Yale Geology Summer Camp in Wyoming, and as a naturalist serving on several committees of the Appalachian Mountain Club, becoming President of the organization 1979-81.

His sons as teenagers became interested in ski racing and soon Charlie found himself working on ski races first as a gate judge, then as a timer and finally as a F.I.S. T.D., the official who oversees the race for the USSA. This activity led him into many years of happily working on USSA ski races all over the East, the West, and culminating in two Olympic assignments; as a gate judge in the 1988 Calgary Olympics and as Head Gate Judge for all downhill events at the Salt Lake 2002 Olympics and ParaOlympics. Charlie also became an expedition naturalist for many trips offered by the Harvard Museum of Natural History and the Harvard Alumni Association. Charlie and Mary Sue retired to Durango, CO in 1996 where Charlie became involved with the Earth Sciences Department at Fort Lewis College, teaching an occasional class.

Both Charlie and Mary Sue helped found Professional Associates at the college and were active in many roles, establishing a host family program and acting as computer “guru” for the group. He also participated in the first years of the Mountain Studies Institute.

Charlie died peacefully in Grand Junction, CO following a fall which occurred earlier in the year. He is survived by his wife, Mary Sue, son Jeffrey and wife Leiah, son David and wife Jenni, and grandchildren, Ryan, Paige, Colby, Emily, Carter, and Oaklee.

There will be a Memorial Picnic held in the White Mountains of New Hampshire in the summer 2022. Please make any contributions in his memory to a non-profit organization of your choice.

1 Comments

  1. Doug Hotchkiss on May 4, 2022 at 2:53 pm

    Charlie was also a strong supporter of the MMVSP and even founded the Colorado Chapter of that august body. He was a great guy and will be missed by us all in the mountains.
    Doug

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