Member Directory,
1847 - 1922
Charles P. Echols
Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army/Professor of Mathematics
Centurion, 1907–1940
Edgar W. Bass and John W. Clous
Huntsville, Alabama
New York (Manhattan), New York
Age thirty-nine
West Point, New York
Century Memorial
Appointed to the U.S. Military Academy from Alabama in 1887 and graduated third in his class—as was his father (a colonel in the Confederate army) before him—Charles Patton Echols taught mathematics for thirty-six years at West Point. His nickname among the cadets was “P. Echols.” When he retired with the rank of colonel in 1931, he declined a parade and review, and even a dinner dance in his honor at the Academy on the ground that he had no taste for fuss and feathers. In that year, with four other West Point officers, he played in a chess game against world champion Capablanca. He was a member of the Opera Club of New York and at the time of his death he had in his pocket a baseball season pass to the Polo Grounds.
He commanded a company of engineers in the Philippines during the Spanish-American War and served as an observer with the Allies in the first Great War. Over six feet, and robust and active at seventy-two, he was beaten to death and robbed (except for his West Point class ring) by four thugs in the early hours of a May morning in Bryant Park less than three hundred yards from the Century club-house.
Geoffrey Parsons
1940 Century Memorials