Early education Chorley was born in
Minehead,
Somerset in an area known as the
West Country, with roots in
Exmoor and the Vale of
Taunton Deane. He was a product of a local primary school and Minehead Grammar School. Later on, Chorley began studying
Geomorphology as an undergraduate at the School of
Geography at
Oxford. He served with the
Royal Engineers from 1946 to 1948 and made it Lieutenant. Afterwards he went up to
Exeter College, where he obtained his BA with Honours in 1951. Later in 1954 he also obtained his
MA at Oxford University, and in 1974 his
Sc.D. at Cambridge University. At Oxford he was greatly influenced by R.P. Beckinsale, who advised Chorley to go on to graduate study in the United States. He made a transatlantic move in 1951 as a
Fulbright Scholar to
Columbia University where he was a graduate student in the Geology Department and explored the quantitative approach to land form evolution.
Career development Chorley started his academic career as Instructor in Geography at Columbia University, New York in 1952. In 1954 he moved to
Brown University, Providence, USA, where he was appointed Instructor in Geology. In 1957, Chorley needed to return to Britain for family reasons. In 1958 he was appointed a Demonstrator at
Cambridge University and proceeded to move rapidly up the university hierarchy with a readership in 1970 and ad hominem chair in 1974. During his career Chorley published few geomorphology studies; among them one about comparative
morphometry in 1962 and a review papper dealing with the methods of
Strahler and
Horton in 1966. In the opinion of
Eiju Yatsu, Chorley was more of a science philosopher than a geomorphologist. From 1963 to 1978 he also co-directed the Madingley Geography Conferences. In 1964 was appointed British representative to the Commission on Quantitative Techniques of the
International Geographical Union, where he was nominated chairman in 1968. In the same year he was also appointed Chairman of the Committee on the Role of Models and Quantitative techniques in Geographical Teaching of the
Geographical Association. At Cambridge University from 1970 to 1975 Chorley served as Secretary of the Faculty Board of Geography and Geology. In 1972 he was appointed Deputy Head of the Department of Geography, Cambridge University, for the Lent and Michaelmas terms, and from 1984 to 1989 he was Head of the
Department of Geography, Cambridge University. In 1990 he was elected Vice-Master,
Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge University.
Awards and honours Chorley received a series of Awards and honours, such as: • 1967 Awarded the Gill Memorial of the
Royal Geographical Society for contributions to Physical Geography and quantitative studies. • 1974 Elected first honorary life member of the
British Geomorphological Research Group. • 1981 Honors Award,
Association of American Geographers • 1987 Awarded the
Patron's Medal of the Royal Geographical Society • 1988 Elected an Honorary Member of the Italian Geographical Society • 1988 Elected to the Council of the Royal Geographical Society
Death Chorley died at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, on 12 May 2002 following a heart attack and was buried in Cambridge's Ascension Parish Burial Ground on the 21st; he was survived by his wife, Rosemary, and their two children. He is buried at the
Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge. He married Rosemary More in 1965 and they had one son and one daughter. == Work ==