- William Murray Black
William Murray Black (
December 8 ,1855 –September 24 ,1933 ) was career officer in theUnited States Army , noted for his ability to organize and train young engineers.Black, born in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania , graduated first in theUnited States Military Academy class of 1877 and was commissioned in theCorps of Engineers . From 1886 to 1891 Black headed the Jacksonville District, and in 1897-98 he was the Engineer Commissioner on the governing board of the District of Columbia. In theSpanish-American War , he was Chief Engineer, 3d and 5th Army Corps. As Chief Engineer under GeneralsWilliam Ludlow andLeonard Wood (1899-1901), and six years later as advisor to the Cuban Department of Public Works, he modernized Havana's sanitary system. As Commandant of the Army Engineer School (1901-03), Black moved it fromWillets Point, New York , toWashington Barracks , D.C. After his return from Cuba in 1909, he was Northeast Division Engineer and chairman of a board to raise the battleship "Maine". Devoted to training young engineer officers in the art of war, General Black's greatest responsibility came asChief of Engineers duringWorld War I in mobilizing and training some 300,000 engineer troops for a wide range of military engineering tasks. For this work he was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal. He retired October 31, 1919, and died inWashington, D.C .References
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