There's lots of (applied) mathematics involved in chemistry. You'll find this true not just of chemistry, but with any hard science; some other examples of which are physics, astronomy and geology. Even softer sciences such as psychology, biology* and sociology require a formidable understanding of statistics (e.g., chi squared distributions), and there's a lot of mathematics involved in that.
There's a reason why those math classes are required in school: it's not just for kicks and giggles. Mathematics has applications in real-world science. (Although there's nothing wrong with pursuing mathematics simply for the love of mathematics.)
On a different note, in the vein of the application of one discipline onto another, one might say that chemistry is really just applied quantum mechanics. But that's not entirely a good picture since (a) you don't need to know quantum mechanics to learn chemistry, (b) quantum mechanics and chemistry originally had separate origins, even though they did eventually meet in the middle, and (c) most of quantum mechanics is greatly approximated in chemistry.
But there is some truth to it in that the "electron shells" of atoms and the bonds that form between atoms -- things which are dealt with all the time in chemistry -- have their modern explanations rooted in quantum mechanics.
*(Biology is somewhere in the middle of hard and soft science depending on one's definitions.)