Henry Minett

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Henry Minett
May 7, 1857December 20, 1952
Place of birth Louisville, Kentucky
Place of death Asheville, North Carolina
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service 1876–1906
Rank Captain
Commands held USS Viking
Midshipman - June 20, 1877
1877–1878 USS Swatara
Ensign - November 1, 1880
1879–1871 USS Jamestown
1882 USS New Hampshire
1882–1883 USS Hartford
1883–1884 USS Lackawanna
1885–1886 Naval Torpedo Station
Lieutenant, JG - May 23, 1886
1886–1887 USS Minnesota
1888 USS Pensacola[1]
1888–1891 USS Omaha
1891 USS Vermont
Lieutenant - December 11, 1891
1894–1897 USS Marblehead
1897–1898 USS Wabash
1898 USS Viking
1898 League Island Naval Yard
1898 USS Yorktown[2]
1899–1900 USS Adams[3]
Lieutenant Commander
1901–1902 USS Concord[4]
1902–1903 USS Wheeling
1903–1905 USS Wabash[5]
1905 Naval War College
Commander - June 28, 1905
Captain
1906–1908? Norfolk Naval Yard

Henry Minett (May 7, 1857December 20, 1952) was a career officer of the United States Navy who served during the Spanish-American War. Prior to retirement in 1905, he achieved the rank of captain. He is best remembered as one of the first acting-Governor of American Samoa. Minett Islet in Alaska is named for him.

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[edit] Spanish-American War

At the beginning of the Spanish-American War, Minett was serving on board the USS Wabash off the coast of Boston, Massachusetts. He was transferred to New York and given his first command, the newly-purchased USS Viking.[6] The Viking had been a private yacht, but was pressed into service in for the war. For two months, Minett was part of the harbor patrol, stationed off Sandy Hook, New Jersey, defending New York from potential Spanish threats.[7] On July 12, the Viking was transferred to Cuba to assist in the blockade of Santiago de Cuba. Minett's duties in Cuba included transporting passengers, orders, and supplies to the larger ships of the blocklade. On August 16, Minett and the Viking were transferred to Norfolk, Virginia where she was decommissioned. Although a participant in the blockade, Minett saw no combat during the war.[8]

[edit] American Samoa

On January 16, 1903, Minett was acting-Governor when the formal reply to the deed of secession arrived from President Theodore Roosevelt. A full military ceremony was held where Minett presented each of the tribal chiefs who had signed the deed with an engraved silver watch and chain. Minett also presented a letter from the president acknowledging his acceptance of the territory. Using Navy officers as a color guard, Minett also formally presented the gift of an American flag to the members of the Fita Fita Guard, the local militia created by Governor Tilley three years earlier.[9]

While Minett was acting as governor, the territory was visited by German Samoa Governor Wilhelm Heinrich Solf, perhaps the first such visit from a governor's eastern counterpart. In this meeting, the two governors discussed maintaining friendly relations, but also restricting travel between the two territories. Some natives had been ignoring the partition and going on extended "visiting parties" between the zones. Both governors agreed to attempt to curb this practice.[10]

Minett's time as governor was also marked by the improving of roads in the territory and by hunger problems.

[edit] Retirement

After retirement, Minett remained at Norfolk Naval Yard on the court-martial board of inquiry. By 1908, he was president of that board.[11]

In 1880, an islet was named in his honor: Minett Islet. Minett was serving at Sitka Sound aboard the USS Jamestown when the islet was named.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Army and Navy News", The New York Times, 1888-03-10, p. 2. 
  2. ^ "The United Service", The New York Times, 1898-10-11, p. 4. 
  3. ^ "The United Service", The New York Times, 1900-01-13, p. 5. 
  4. ^ "Gunboat at Wrong Station", Chicago Daily Tribune, 1901-07-17, p. 9. 
  5. ^ "Orders to Naval Officers", The Washington Post, 1903-08-07, p. 7. 
  6. ^ "The United Service", The New York Times, 1898-05-10, p. 3. 
  7. ^ "Patrolling the Harbor", The New York Times, 1898-05-18, p. 3. 
  8. ^ USS Viking I. MultiEducator, Inc. Retrieved on 2008-06-04. (from DANFS)
  9. ^ "Red-Letter Day for People of Samoa", Los Angeles Times, 1903-02-10, p. 10. 
  10. ^ "Affairs in Tutuila", The Washington Post, 1903-02-18, p. 4. 
  11. ^ "Society", The Washington Post, 1908-08-13, p. E5.