Bureau of Steam Engineering

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Bureau of Steam Engineering was set up by act of 5 July 1862, receiving some of the duties of the former Bureau of Construction, Equipment and Repair. It became, by the Naval Appropriation Act of 4 June 1920, the Bureau of Engineering. In 1940 it combined with the Bureau of Construction and Repair and became the Bureau of Ships.

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[edit] Historical background

"Engineering, both in operating the shipboard machinery and in the design and construction of ships, became critically important with the outbreak of the Civil War. The Navy had to blockade a ‘coastline stretching over 3, 000 miles from the Potomac to the Mexican border. It had to support the Army on the rivers; it had to search out and destroy Confederate raiders. For all these purposes, the steam engine and the engineer were indispensable. On the day of battle, steam engines drove the Monitor and the Merrimack, the Kearsarge and the Alabama, as well as the gunboats which supported Grant before Fort Donelson and Vicksburg. In 1862, Congress recognized the importance of engineering by creating the Bureau of Steam Engineering.

" When Lee surrendered, the United States Navy was the most effective sea power in the world. That position depended upon engineering which, in turn, was based on the skill of Benjamin F. Isherwood, first Chief of the Bureau of Steam Engineering. He designed and built engines rugged enough to withstand the shock of combat, as well as ill-treatment by poorly trained operating engineers. He also designed and constructed a well-armed cruiser which was faster than any abroad. En addition, American naval leadership rested upon ingenious civilian engineers and inventors such as John Ericsson, who designed and built the Monitor."(Admiral Rickover, in a speech before the National Society of Former Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of nvestigation, Seattle, Washington, August 30, 1974. [1])

[edit] Commanding officers

Commanding and senior officers of the Bureau of Steam Engineering were:

  1. 1862-1869 EIC* Benjamin F. Isherwood
  2. 1869-1873 EIC James W. King
  3. 1873-1877 EIC William W. Wood
  4. 1878-1883 COMMO William H. Shock
  5. 1883-1887 COMMO Charles H. Loring
  6. 1888-1903 RADM George W. Melville
  7. 1903-1908 RADM Charles W. Rae
  8. 1908-1908 RADM John K. Barton
  9. 1909-1913 RADM Hutch I. Cone
  10. 1913-1921 RADM Robert S. Griffin
  11. 1921-1925 RADM John K. Robison
  12. 1925-1928 RADM John Halligan, Jr.
  13. 1928-1931 RADM Harry E. Yarnell
  14. 1931-1935 RADM Samuel M. Robinson
  15. 1935-1939 RADM Harold G. Bowen
  16. 1939-1940 RADM Samuel M. Robinson

[edit] See also

[edit] References

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.

[edit] External links