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{{succession box | title=Head of the [[Office of Naval Intelligence]]<br/>(Chief Intelligence Officer)| before=[[Charles H. Davis]] | after=[[Frederick Singer]] | years=September 1892&ndash;June 1893}}
{{succession box | title=Head of the [[Office of Naval Intelligence]]<br/>(Chief Intelligence Officer)| before=[[Charles Henry Davis]] | after=[[Frederick Singer]] | years=September 1892&ndash;June 1893}}
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Revision as of 22:15, 26 June 2009

French Ensor Chadwick commanding the USS New York, 1899

Rear Admiral French Ensor Chadwick, USN (February 28, 1844-January 27, 1919) was a United States Navy officer who became prominent in the naval reform movement of the post-Civil War era. He was particularly noted for his contributions to naval education, and served as President of the Naval War College from 1900-1903.

A native of Morgantown, West Virginia, he attended the United States Naval Academy from 1861-1864. During the Civil War years, the Academy was relocated from Annapolis, Maryland to Newport, Rhode Island, due to concerns about secessionist sympathy in Maryland, a border state.

Major sea commands included the gunboat USS Yorktown, commissioned in 1889. He served in the Spanish-American War, fighting at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba, and as commander of the South Atlantic Squadron he played a major part in the Perdicaris incident of 1904 in Morocco.

He was also a noted historian who wrote several published books, including a noted work on The Causes of the Civil War.

He was portrayed by Roy Jenson in the film The Wind and the Lion (1975).

In 1881, Lt Commander Chadwick led the investigation into the fog signals at Little Gull Island Light in Long Island Sound after the Galatea ran around in the fog during the evening of May 12, 1881.[1][2]

External links

References

  1. ^ NY Times, "Don't Believe your Ears", Feb 22, 1891
  2. ^ History of American Steam Navigation, John H. Morrison, W. F. Sametz & CO., New York, 1908, pg 587
Preceded by Head of the Office of Naval Intelligence
(Chief Intelligence Officer)

September 1892–June 1893
Succeeded by