Kenneth Armitage was born April 18, 1925 in Steubenville, Ohio. He served in the US Army from 1943-1956. After his discharge, he attended Bethany College in West Virginia from 1946-1949. He received his Masters in 1951 and his Ph.D in 1954, both from the University of Wisconsin. Armitage joined the KU faculty in 1956 as an Assistant Professor in Zoology and became a full Professor in 1966. He was Chair of Undergraduate Biology from 1968 to 1975, and then Director of Undergraduate Programs from 1975 to 1982; he became Chair of the Department of Systematics and Ecology, serving from 1982 to 1988. Armitage founded the Enviromental Studies Program in 1976 and served as director until 1982; he also founded and directed the Experimental and Applied Ecology Program, overseeing all land resources available for KU ecological and environmental research. Armitage built this program from no budget in 1973 to a program that collected annual grant funds of over $1.6 million in 1994. He was a trustee of the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory for 17 years and is a member or Fellow in numerous scientific societies. In his spare time, Dr. Armitage was a member of the Douglas County Chapter of Zero Population Growth and its Coordinator from 1969 to 1971. He was also a manuscript reviewer for numerous scientific publications. In 1987 he was named to the first William J. Baumgartner Distinguished Professorship in Biological Sciences. He was also professor emeritus of ecology and evolutionary biology. Over his career, Dr. Armitage published over 150 papers, 16 book chapters, and 29 abstracts and reviews and conducted research in South America, Russia, and Antarctica; he had almost continous research funding for social behavior and population studies in marmots from the National Science Foundation from 1962 to his retirement in 1996.
From the guide to the Personal Papers of Kenneth B. Armitage, 1956-1996, (University of Kansas Kenneth Spencer Research Library University Archives)