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C. C. Miller : ウィキペディア英語版
C. C. Miller

C(harles) C. Miller (10 Jun. 1831–4 Sept. 1920)〔(Beekeeping For Beginners: CATCH THE BUZZ CC Miller's Home for sale )〕 was an American practical commercial beekeeper that specialized in comb honey production. He was originally a physician, but gave up that profession to keep bees and to write about beekeeping. His books include ''A Thousand Answers to Beekeeping Questions'' and ''Fifty Years Among the Bees''.〔(Bees as business: UMass Amherst, Du Bois Library, SCUA )〕 For many years he was also a popular advice columnist for the ''American Bee Journal''.
==Early life==
Charles C. Miller (generally referred to as C. C.) was born in Ligonier, Pennsylvania on 10 June 1831.〔''History of McHenry County, Illinois'' 1922. Chicago: Munsell Publishing Company.〕 Miller’s father, Johnson J. Miller, died when he was ten years old, leaving a family of six and little money. As a young man, Miller worked his way through grammar school (taking three years off to help support the family) and eventually moved from his native Pennsylvania to Schenectady, New York, where he worked his way through college.
Miller writes〔''Fifty Years Among the Bees'', Dr. C.C. Miller, 1911.〕 “This last undertaking was a bit reckless, for when I arrived at Schenectady I had only about thirty dollars, with nothing to rely on except what I might pick up by the way to help me in college. I had a horror of being in debt, and so was on the alert for any work, no matter what its nature, so it was honest, by which I could earn something to help carry me through.
“I had learned just enough of ornamental penmanship to be able to write German text (mother, Phoebe Miller, was from Germany, and he likely spoke German from childhood. ), and so got $44.00 for filling in the names of 88 diplomas at two commencements. I taught singing school; I worked at Prof. Jackson’s garden at seven and a half cents an hour; raised a crop of potatoes; clerked at a town election; peddled maps; I got $100.00 for teaching a term at an academy. Neither were my studies slighted during my course, which was shown by my taking the highest honor attainable, Phi Beta Kappa, which, however, was equally taken by a number of my class.”
With such sacrifice, hard work, and dedication to become a physician, one assumes Miller would have easily made a career of medicine. Unfortunately, his disposition did not allow him to follow through with a practice.〔''Bad Beekeeping'', Ron Miksha, p 157, 2004.〕 “It did not take more than a year for me to find out that I had not a sufficient stock of health myself to take care of that of others, especially as I was morbidly anxious lest some lack of judgment on my part should prove a serious matter with some one under my care. So with much regret I gave up my chosen profession.”
Soon Miller was married, was teaching voice and instrumental music, and had become principal of a public school. He needed something extra to stimulate his vast intellect, to allow a bit of challenge, and to improve his health with “robust work and fresh air.” A swarm stumbled onto his porch. He became a beekeeper. As a physician, Miller suffered greatly from stress. He wrote that he worried constantly that he would misdiagnose a patient and prescribe an incorrect medicine.

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