In 1929, with Remington Kellogg, he organized the Council for the Conservation of Whales[3] (also involved in the conservation of other marine mammals). Howell was vice-president from 1938 to 1942 and president from 1942 to 1944 of the American Society of Mammalogists.
He married Margaret Gray Sherk in 1914.[4] At the Cooper Ornithological Society, A. Brazier Howell, Harry R. Painton, and Frances F. Roberts have cash awards named after them.[5] He died in Bangor, Maine.
1932: The brachial flexor muscles in primates (Washington).
1939: Gross anatomy (D. Appleton-Century company, New York and London).
1944: Speed in animals; their specialization for running and leaping[6] (University of Chicago press, Chicago — reprinted in 1965 by Hafner Pub. Co., New York).
^von Bloeker Jr., Jack C. (November 1993). "Who were Harry R. Painton, A. Brazier Howell and Frances F. Roberts?". The Condor. 95 (4): 1061–1063. doi:10.2307/1369450. JSTOR1369450.
^Moment, G. B. (March 1945). "Review of Speed in Animals: Their Specialization for Running and Leaping by A. Brazier Howell". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 20 (1). doi:10.1086/394735.