Charles Joseph Chamberlain (born Feb. 23, 1863, near Sullivan, Ohio, U.S.—died Feb. 5, 1943, Chicago) was a U.S. botanist whose research into the morphology and life cycles of the cycads, a primitive gymnosperm family possessing structural features found in both ferns and conifers, enabled him to postulate a course of evolutionary development for the spermatophyte (seed plant) ovule and embryo and led to speculation about a cycad origin for angiosperms (flowering plants).
Chamberlain organized and directed the botanical laboratories at the University of Chicago (1897–1931), where he became professor of plant morphology and cytology (1915). With plants collected in Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Cuba, he created in the university greenhouses the world’s foremost collection of living cycads, which remained unsurpassed until a decade after his death. With the U.S. botanist John Coulter he prepared textbooks on the morphology of spermatophytes (1901), angiosperms (1903), and gymnosperms (1910). He also wrote The Living Cycads (1919) and Gymnosperms, Structure and Evolution (1935).