Charles Sumner Howe (September 29, 1858 – April 18, 1939) was the second president of Case School of Applied Science, now Case Western Reserve University.
Howe served as principal of Longmeadow High School of Massachusetts in 1879. He moved west where he became the principal of the Academy of Albuquerque in New Mexico from 1879 to 1881,[1] and was involved in mineral prospecting serving as an assayer for prospectors in Albuquerque until 1882.
Howe married Abbie A. Waite on May 22, 1882, and together had three children.
From 1883 to 1889, Howe served as the Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at Buchtel College in Akron, Ohio. He went to Case School of Applied Science in 1889 where he was also Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy until 1902. Notably, Howe brought the first German-made Riefler clock, then considered the world's best, to America, with his own modifications making it the most accurate timepiece in the world.[2] He maintained being the Kerr Professor of Mathematics at Case School of Applied Science from 1890 to 1908.