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Frank A. Beach

Frank Ambrose Beach, Jr. (April 13, 1911 – June 15, 1988) was an American ethologist, best known as co-author of the 1951 book Patterns of Sexual Behavior. He is often regarded as the founder of behavioral endocrinology, as his publications marked the beginnings of the field.[1]

Frank A. Beach

(1911-04-13)April 13, 1911

June 15, 1988(1988-06-15) (aged 77)

founder of behavioral endocrinology, co-author of Patterns of Sexual Behavior (1951)

Early education and career[edit]

Frank Ambrose Beach, Jr. was born in Emporia, Kansas, the first of three children to Frank Ambrose Beach and Bertha Robinson Beach.[2] Although he respected his father, a distinguished Professor of Music at Kansas State Teachers College (now Emporia State University), Frank Beach Jr. often rebelled against him.[2] Frank A. Beach Jr. rarely used the Jr. associated with his name. Beach began an English major at Emporia, with the intent to become a high school English teacher. Beach was a poor student, receiving D's and F's at Emporia, so he was sent to Antioch College for his sophomore year to regain his focus.[2]


Beach returned to Emporia, where he took his first psychology course with James B. Stroud, who would prove to be an important influence in his life. Beach graduated in 1932, right in the middle of the Great Depression. Beach was unable to find a job in teaching, so he accepted a fellowship in clinical psychology at Emporia to earn his master's degree. Beach completed a thesis on color vision in rats.[2] After completing his master's degree, he moved to the University of Chicago, to accept a fellowship from psychologist Harvey Carr, who had trained his former mentor, James B. Stroud. In Chicago, Beach met and worked with behaviorist Karl Lashley,[2][3] who had perhaps the strongest influence on Beach's professional life.[2] Financial difficulties forced Beach to leave Chicago, and took a high school teaching position in Yates Center, Kansas,[2] where he married his first wife. The union was short-lived.[2]


Beach returned to the University of Chicago in 1935, and completed, under the supervision of Harvey Carr, a PhD thesis on the role the neocortex on innate maternal behavior in rats.[3] Although Beach completed his dissertation in 1936, he did not receive the degree until 1940 due to his inability to pass the foreign language portion of the degree requirements. During this period, Beach married his second wife, Anna Beth Odenweller, with whom he had two children, Frank and Susan.[2][3] In 1936, Beach accepted a one-year position at Karl Lashley's Cambridge laboratory, where he continued his studies of animal sexual behavior.[3]

Professional career[edit]

In 1937, Beach was employed by the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.[3] Beach was influential in advancing the study of neural and endocrinal influences on animal behavior. Beach remained at the Museum for 10 years. Beach organized an effort to save the department after the death of the former chairman. The department was renamed "The Department of Animal Behavior". In 1946, Beach accepted an academic appointment at Yale University where he would spend the next decade. There his research interest became focused on the reproductive behavior of dogs which he continued for the rest of his life. Beach was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1949.[4] In 1950, he accepted a position as a Sterling Professor of Psychology. A sabbatical at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford began in 1957–58. In 1958, Beach accepted a position as Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. The research program on dogs that was initiated at Yale was expanded at Berkeley. Beach helped found the Field Station for Behavioral Research near the Berkeley campus. Beach was known for being an excellent mentor to graduate students while at Berkeley. Beach became professor emeritus in 1978, but still remained active in his work. Beach was awarded the APA award for Distinguished Teaching in Biopsychology in 1986.


Beach, along with anthropologist Clellan S. Ford, co-authored the book Patterns of Sexual Behavior (1951), considered a "classic" of its field.[5] He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1953[6] and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1961.[7] He also authored an edited version, Human Sexuality in Four Perspectives, in 1977.[2] Beach's second wife, Anna, died in 1971, and he thereafter married Noel Gaustad.[2][3] In the days prior to his death, Beach continued his work from a hospital bed, reading scientific literature and giving advice about a paper on reproductive behavior to be presented at an Omaha conference on June 12, 1988.[3] He died on June 15, 1988.[2][3]


Beach's work in comparative psychology was expansive and influential. Beach studied behavior in rats, dogs, cats, quail, pigeons, dolphins, and hamsters. Beach was particularly interested in the role of endocrinology in behavior. He studied the effects of endocrines on behaviors through methods such as castration, isolation, brain legions, and hormone manipulation. Other behaviors that Beach was interested in include instinct behavior, maternal behavior, and menstruation.

Chairman of the Department of Animal Behavior at the , 1942

American Museum of Natural History

Elected President of the Division of Experimental Psychology, 1949

American Psychological Association

at Yale University, 1950

Sterling Professor of Psychology

President of the , 1951

Eastern Psychological Association

at Harvard University, 1952

William James Lecturer in Psychology

Chair of the Committee for the Study of Problems of Sex, 1957

National Research Council

for Distinguished Scientific Contributions, 1958

American Psychological Association Award

President of the , 1968

Western Psychological Association

President of the , 1977

International Academy of Sex Research

Co-founded the journal , 1979

Hormones and Behavior

for Distinguished Teaching in Biopsychology, 1986

American Psychological Association Award

Major publications[edit]

1937 - The Neural Basis of Innate Behavior, The Pedagogical Seminary and Journal of Genetic Psychology, 53:1 (Dissertation)


1948 - Hormones and Behavior: A Survey of Interrelationship between Endocrine Secretions and Patterns of Overt Response, Oxford: England (First Book)


1950 - The Snark was a Boojum, American Psychologist, 5:4


1952 - Patterns of Sexual Behavior, Oxford: England


1954 - Effects of Early Experience Upon the Behavior of Animals, Psychological Bulletin, 51:3


1955 - The De-scent of Instinct, Psychological Review, 62:6


1969 - Locks and Beagles, American Psychologist, 24:11


1971 - Hormonal Factors in the Ramstergig and Related Species, The Biopsychology of Development


1976 - Sexual Attractivity, Proceptivity, and Receptivity in Female Mammals, Hormones and Behavior, 7:1


1977 - Human Sexuality in Four Perspectives, Johns Hopkins University Press

Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir