- John F. Winslow
John Flack Winslow (1810 - 1892) was a nineteenth century businessman and iron manufacturer who was the fifth president of
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute .He was born on
November 10 ,1810 inBennington, Vermont , and was a descendant ofEdward Winslow , a "Mayflower " colonist and a governor ofPlymouth Colony . John Winslow worked as a clerk in a commission house until he was 21. In 1831, he joined the New Jersey Iron Company as a manager in the Boston office. In 1933, he started his own business, making pig iron in Bergen and Sussex counties in New Jersey. In 1837, he andErastus Corning started a partnership to produce iron. Their partnership lasted for about thirty years. They owned the Rensselaer Iron Works and the Albany Iron Works, which were the largest producers of iron in the United States. In 1863, they sentAlexander Lyman Holley to learn more about theBessemer process and they also obtained the US rights to the Bessemer patents. They started the production of Bessemer steel in 1865.Starting in 1861, Winslow and his business partner John Griswold worked with
John Ericsson to build theUSS Monitor . After the naval board had not approved Ericsson's proposal for the ironclad warship, Griswold and Winslow met with President Lincoln personally to advocate for its construction. Lincoln then arranged a meeting with them in the office of the Secretary of the Navy. During subsequent meetings, the Navy resisted the project but finally approved but without funding onOctober 4 ,1861 . Largely out of frustration, Winslow arranged to finance the project himself, at a cost of $275,000.cite web|url=http://www.johnflackwinslow.com/|title=John Flack Winslow and the USS Monitor : The Untold Story of the Union's Forgotten Benefactor|accessdate=2008-09-06]After the signing of the contract, construction began rapidly. Interim reimbursements were made by the Navy during construction but by the time of the battle the final payments had not been made. Therefore, the Monitor remained the property of the de facto lien holder, John Flack Winslow. Some of the iron for the Monitor was produced at the Albany Iron Works in Troy. The ship was launched 101 days from the signing of the contract, in time to defend the Union blockade during the
Battle of Hampton Roads . Along with John Ericsson, Griswold and Winslow received much praise for their efforts in producing the Monitor. They also received contracts for additional ironclad warships. [Wheeler, Francis B. "Building of the Monitor", "The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries", January 1885, page 58-65]In 1865, he was appointed president of Rensselaer. He continued in this position until 1868. Unlike the previous university presidents, he did not have a background as a pastor. He was also a director of several banks and the director and president of the
Poughkeepsie and Eastern Railroad . The Winslow Chemical Laboratory, built in 1866, was named in honor of his donation of half the construction cost and his enterprise on behalf of the Institute. [cite web|url=http://www.rpi.edu/about/hof/winslow.html|title=John Flack Winslow|date=2001|publisher=Rensselaer Hall of Fame] The building was added to the US National Register of Historic Places in 1994. Winslow died onMarch 10 ,1892 inPoughkeepsie, New York .s-start s-aca s-bef|before=
Nathan S.S. Beman s-ttl|title=President ofRensselaer Polytechnic Institute |years=1865 – 1868 s-aft|after=Thomas C. Brinsmade endReferences
* Nason, Henry B., ed. "Biographical Record of the Officers and Graduates of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1824-1886." D.H. Jones & Co.: Troy, NY (1855). [http://www.lib.rpi.edu/archives/e-collections/Nason,HB_1887/Part_1_bio_record_rens_officers_and_grads.pdf]
* John Flack Winslow. "Dictionary of American Biography Base Set. American Council of Learned Societies, 1928-1936." Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008.
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