Chapman was born in the
West Englewood section of present-day
Teaneck, New Jersey, and attended Englewood Academy. He joined the staff of the
American Museum of Natural History in 1888 as assistant to
Joel Asaph Allen. In 1901 he was made associate Curator of Mammals and Birds and in 1908 Curator of Birds. Chapman came up with the original idea for the Audubon
Christmas Bird Count. He also wrote many ornithological books such as,
Bird Life,
Birds of Eastern North America, and
Life in an Air Castle. Chapman promoted the integration of photography into ornithology, especially in his book
Bird Studies With a Camera, in which he discussed the practicability of the
photographic blind and in 1901 invented his own more portable version of a blind using an umbrella with a large 'skirt' to conceal the photographer that could be bundled into a small pack for transport along with the other, at the time very bulky, paraphernalia of the camera gear. For his work,
Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia, he was awarded the
Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the
National Academy of Sciences in 1917. He was elected to both the National Academy of Sciences and the
American Philosophical Society in 1921. Chapman fathered one child, Frank Chapman, Jr., who first married
playwright Elizabeth Cobb and had a daughter, actress and TV personality
Buff Cobb. He later divorced Cobb and married
mezzo-soprano opera singer Gladys Swarthout. Chapman was interred at
Brookside Cemetery. == The Legacy of
Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia ==