- George W. Melville
Infobox Military Person
name = George Wallace Melville
born =10 January 1841
died =17 March 1912
placeofbirth =
placeofdeath =
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allegiance = United States of America
serviceyears = 1861–1903
rank = Rear Admiral
branch =United States Navy
commands =
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battles =
awards =Congressional Gold Medal
laterwork =George Wallace Melville (
10 January 1841 –17 March 1912 ) was an engineer of theUnited States Navy who eventually rose to the rank of rear admiral.Civil War
Melville was born in
New York City on10 January 1841. After graduating fromBrooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute , he entered the U.S. Navy on29 July 1861 and became an officer of the Engineer Corps, with the rank of Third Assistant Engineer. His first year afloat was spent on theGreat Lakes 'gunboat "Michigan", during which time he was promoted to Second Assistant Engineer. Melville served in the sloops of war "Dacotah" and "Wachusett" from mid-1862 until late in 1864, taking part in the capture of CSS "Florida" in October 1864. He finished the Civil War in theHampton Roads, Virginia , area working withtorpedo boat s and as an engineer on the gunboat "Maumee".In the years after the Civil War's conclusion, First Assistant Engineer Melville served aboard several ships, among them the experimental
cruiser "Chattanooga", gunboat "Tacony", steam sloop "Lancaster" andAsiatic Squadron flagship "Tennessee".Arctic exploration
In 1873 he volunteered for duty as Chief Engineer of "Tigress" for her rescue in
Baffin Bay of 19 survivors of the "Polaris" expedition to the Arctic.In the summer of 1879, he was an eager and daring volunteer when an
Arctic expedition under Lieutenant CommanderGeorge W. DeLong left San Francisco onboard the "Jeannette"7 August 1879 to seek an ocean passage to theAtlantic by way ofSiberia . "Jeannette" became icebound in September and, after two years of effort to save her, was crushed by ice floes in theLaptev Sea and sank12 June 1881 — leaving the crew stranded on the ice floes in mid-ocean with three small boats and scanty provisions. Melville was the only boat commander to bring his crew to safety inLena Delta, Siberia. Later, he set out in search of DeLong and his men, traveling over a thousand miles in the deadly cold of the Arctic winter only to find them dead. However, he was able to recover and bring back all the records of the expedition. Congress rewarded Melville for his gallantry and resourcefulness by advancing him 15 numbers on the promotion list and awarding him theCongressional Gold Medal . The incredible hardships of the expedition are described in his book, "In the Lena Delta", published in 1884.Melville was promoted to the rank of Chief Engineer during his time in the "Jeannette" and again went to the Arctic in "Thetis" in 1884 for the Greely Relief Expedition.
Bureau of Steam Engineering
Melville was an Inspector of Coal in 1884–1886, then performed his final seagoing duty in the new
cruiser "Atlanta". PresidentGrover Cleveland appointed Melville Chief of theBureau of Steam Engineering 9 August 1887 , with the relative rank of Commodore. During more than a decade and a half in that post, he was responsible for the Navy's propulsion systems during an era of remarkable force expansion, technological progress and institutional change. Melville superintended the design of 120 ships of the "New Navy". Among the major technical innovations that he helped introduce, often in defiance of the conservative opinion within the naval establishment, were the water-tube boiler, the triple-screw propulsion system, vertical engines, the floating repair ship, and the "distilling ship."Promoted to Rear Admiral
3 March 1899 , he was appointed Engineer in Chief of the Navy6 December 1900 . Melville entirely reformed the service, putting Navy engineers on a professional rather than an artisan footing.The Annapolis laboratory was a brainchild of Melville. As Engineer-in-Chief of the Navy, he fought hard to get an appropriation of $400,000 for an experiment and testing laboratory to be located at Annapolis. In 1903, he finally was successful in obtaining the appropriation for the Engineering Experiment Station (EES).
His primary argument for the establishment of an experiment station was that it would increase the efficiency of the Navy. His idea was to establish a dependable means for testing — before installation — machinery and equipment designed for Navy ships. His secondary argument was that it could aid in training engineering officers, and therefore, it should be located in Annapolis near the Naval Academy. With characteristic modesty, Melville refused to have EES named in his honor.
Prior to his retirement, Melville headed a committee tasked with studying how to use
fuel oil in Navy boilers instead ofcoal . They strongly recommended that a testing plant be developed to test methods of burning fuel in Navy boilers. On18 November 1910 , the Secretary of Navy authorized "... the construction and equipment, at an estimated cost of $10,000.00, of a structure simulating a naval fireroom, for the purpose of instigating the subject of fuel oil burning in connection with the design of proposed oil burningbattleship s" in an existing building (Bldg. 47) at thePhiladelphia Navy Yard . This facility, the Fuel Oil Testing Plant, grew into NAVSSES.Leaving active duty on
10 January 1903 , Rear Admiral Melville spent his last years inPhiladelphia ,Pennsylvania , where he died on17 March 1912.The U.S. Navy has named two ships in honor of George W. Melville: "Melville" (Destroyer Tender #2, later AD-2), 1915–1948; and the oceanographic research ship "Melville" (AGOR-14), 1969–present.
Melville Award
The Navy's
George W. Melville Award recognizes outstanding engineering contributions in the applications of knowledge toward research and development of materials, devices, and systems or methods; including design, development, and integration of prototypes and new processes.For further reading
*Sachs, Aaron, "The Humboldt Current: Nineteenth Century Exploration and the Roots of American Environmentalism," (Viking, 2006), Melville is one of four Americans the author focuses on who were influenced by
Alexander von Humboldt .References
* [http://history.navy.mil/danfs/m8/melville-i.htm DANFS biography of George Melville]
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/pers-us/uspers-m/g-melvil.htm history.navy.mil/photos: George Melville]
* [http://www.dt.navy.mil/pao/excerpts%20pages/2000/divawardsJune.html Navy PAO biography of George Melville]
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