Mortimer Elwyn Cooley
Mortimer Elwyn Cooley (March 28, 1855 – 1944) was an American mechanical and consulting engineer, US Naval officer, and Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan, who served as president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in the year 1919-20.
Biography
Cooley was born in Canandaigua, New York as son of Albert Blake Colle and Achsah (Griswold) Coole. After the local district schools and the Canandaigua Academy he attended the Naval Academy in Annapolis, now United States Naval Academy, where he graduated in 1878. At the academy Hollis had served on two practical cruises at the USS Alert (AS-4) and at the USS Mayflower (1866).[1]
After his graduation in 1878 he first served at the USS Quinnebaug, cruising the North Sea, and Mediterranean, together with Ira Nelson Hollis. In the year 1879-1880 he cruised the North Atlantic on the screw gunboat USS Alliance (1875). In 1880-81 he was assistant at the Bureau of Steam Engineering in the Navy Department, and in 1881 was appointed Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan, lecturing Steam Engineering and Iron Shipbuilding.[1]
Later career
After his resignation from the Navy in 1885, he continued working as Professor of at the University of Michigan. Since 1904 he was also Dean of its College of Engineering and Architecture, until his retirement in 1928.[2] Beside his academic career he also continued to work as mechanical and consulting engineer for various military and civil offices.[1]
Colley was elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,. He served as president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 1919-20, and also as president of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and the Federated American Engineering Societies, later the American Engineering Council.[3] in 1930 he was awarded the Washington Award.
Selected publications
- Cooley, Mortimer E. Annual report[s, and Final report] of the Block Singal and Train Control Board to the Interstate Commerce Commission. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1909-12.
- Cooley, Mortimer E. Report on proposed Belle Isle bridge by the Consulting board, Bell Isle bridge division of engineering and construction, Department of public works. Detroit, 1918.
- Cooley, C. M. E., and Mortimer Elwyn. The Cooley genealogy, the descendants of Ensign Benjamin Cooley, an early settler of Springfield and Longmeadow, Massachusetts; and other members of the family in America. Rutland VT, The Tuttle Pub. Co (1940).
- Mortimer E. Cooley & Vivien B. Keatley. Scientific blacksmith, by Mortimer E. Cooley, with the assistance of Vivien B. Keatley. Ann Arbor, Univ. of Michigan Press, 1947.
References
- ^ a b c Burke A. Hinsdale and Isaac Newton Demmon, "Mortimer Elwyn Cooley," in: History of the University of Michigan. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1906, pp., 263-264.
- ^ "MORTIMER E. COOLEY; 1855-1944," The Michigan Technic, October 1944, p. 16.
- ^ Hillard A. Sutin, "A Tribute to MORTIMER E. COOLEY." The Michigan Technic, March 1935, p. 103-105
External links
- Mortimer Elwyn Cooley, University of Michigan
- Mortimer Elwyn Cooley, University of Michigan library
- MDOT - Cooley, Mortimer E. (1855-1944), State of Michigan
- 1855 births
- 1944 deaths
- American mechanical engineers
- American inventors
- American non-fiction writers
- United States Naval Academy alumni
- University of Michigan faculty
- Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- People from Canandaigua, New York
- Presidents of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers