- William Ward Burrows I
Infobox Military Person
name= William W. Burrows
born= birth date|1758|1|16
died= death date and age|1805|3|6|1758|1|16
placeofbirth=Charleston, South Carolina
placeofdeath=Washington, D.C.
caption= 2nd Commandant of the Marine Corps (1798-1804)
nickname=
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Marine Corps
serviceyears= 1798-1804
rank= Lieutenant Colonel
commands=Commandant of the Marine Corps
unit=
battles=
awards=
laterwork=
portrayedby=Lieutenant Colonel William Ward Burrows I (January 16, 1758 – March 6, 1805) was the secondCommandant of the Marine Corps . His son,William Ward Burrows II , was a decorated officer in theUnited States Navy .Biography
Burrows was born in
Charleston, South Carolina . He served in theAmerican Revolutionary War with the state troops ofSouth Carolina , but later become a citizen ofPhiladelphia ,Pennsylvania . On July 12, 1798, the day following the approval of an act of Congress establishing a permanentUnited States Marine Corps , PresidentJohn Adams appointed him as Major Commandant of the newly created organization which consisted of 881 officers, noncommissioned officers, privates and musicians. (Samuel Nicholas was in charge of theContinental Marines and by tradition is considered the first Marine Commandant.)The Marine Corps, as well as the Navy, had had its humble beginning a short time prior to its actual authorization as a Corps and both were formed to meet an impending national crisis. The first Marine units to be organized by Major Burrows were ship detachments for newly acquired vessels of the American Navy, which were being hurriedly placed in commission at Philadelphia and hurried off to sea to fight cruisers and destroy commerce in the
Quasi-War withFrance . During the first several months that he was Commandant, his principal concern was the supplying and keeping up to strength the Marine detachments for the vessels of the Navy.Headquarters of the Corps was in camp near Philadelphia until the national capital began its move to Washington in 1800. A small detachment of Marines was sent to the new capital in March of that year to protect the newly-established navy yard, while Major Burrows, with his staff and headquarters troops, moved to Washington in late July and set up their camp.
Major Burrows was promoted to lieutenant colonel on May 1, 1800. The Quasi-War with France continued until September of that year, when matters were finally adjusted. The insistence of Congress that the cost of the naval establishment be immediately reduced caused considerable embarrassment to Burrows in his effort to establish the Marine Corps on a peacetime basis. The
Barbary Wars broke out soon afterwards and the main concern of the Corps was to supply detachments to naval vessels for duty in theMediterranean .Lieutenant Colonel Burrows is credited with beginning many of the Corps' institutions, including, most notably, the U.S. Marine Band, which he financed in part by levying contributions from his officers. He demanded high standards of professional performance and personal conduct of his officers and these have become hallmarks of the Corps. Ill health forced his resignation on March 6, 1804.
Lieutenant Colonel Burrows died in
Washington, D.C. . He was buried in the Presbyterian Cemetery, Georgetown, in the District of Columbia. His remains were re-interred inArlington National Cemetery on May 12, 1892.ee also
References
:"This article includes text from the
public domain [http://hqinet001.hqmc.usmc.mil/HD/Home_Page.htm Marine Corps History and Museum web site] ."
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