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George Dewey

George Dewey (December 26, 1837 – January 16, 1917) was Admiral of the Navy, the only person in United States history to have attained that rank. He is best known for his victory at the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish–American War, with the loss of only a single crewman on the American side.

Admiral Dewey as he appears at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.

Dewey was born in Montpelier, Vermont. At age 15, Dewey's father enrolled him at Norwich University in Northfield, Vermont. Two years later Norwich expelled him for drunkenness and herding sheep into the barracks. Summarily, he entered the United States Naval Academy in 1854. He graduated from the academy in 1858 and was assigned as the executive lieutenant of the USS Mississippi at the beginning of the Civil War. He participated in the capture of New Orleans and the Siege of Port Hudson, helping the Union take control of the Mississippi River. By the end of the war, Dewey reached the rank of lieutenant commander.

After the Civil War, Dewey undertook a variety of assignments, serving on multiple ships (including the USS Constitution) and as an instructor at the Naval Academy. He also served on the United States Lighthouse Board and the Board of Inspection and Survey. He was promoted to commodore in 1896 and assigned to the Asiatic Squadron the following year. After that appointment, he began preparations for a potential war with Spain, which broke out in April 1898. Immediately after the beginning of the war, Dewey led an attack on Manila Bay, sinking or capturing the entire Spanish Pacific fleet while suffering only minor casualties. After the battle, his fleet assisted in the capture of Manila. Dewey's victory at Manila Bay was widely lauded in the United States, and he was promoted to Admiral of the Navy in 1903.

Dewey explored a run for the 1900 Democratic presidential nomination, but he withdrew from the race and endorsed President William McKinley. He served on the General Board of the United States Navy, an important policy-making body, from 1900 until his death in 1917.

Early life Edit

Dewey was born in Montpelier, Vermont, on December 26, 1837, directly opposite the Vermont State House, to Julius Yemans Dewey and his first wife, Mary Perrin.[1][2] Julius was a physician who received his degree from The University of Vermont. He was among the founders of the National Life Insurance Company in 1848,[1] a member of the Episcopal Church, and was among the founders of the Christ Episcopal Church in Montpelier. George was baptized and attended Sunday school there. George had two older brothers and a younger sister.[3]

Dewey attended school in the nearby town of Johnson. When he was fifteen years old he went to the American Literary Scientific and Military Academy.[4] The school, better known as Norwich University, had been founded by Alden Partridge and aimed at giving cadets a well-rounded military education. Dewey attended for two years (1852–1854).[1] Dewey found a military role model when he read a biography of Hannibal.[4]

Naval career Edit

Naval Academy Edit

Dewey entered the United States Naval Academy in 1854 at the age of 16. The conventional four-year course had just been introduced in 1851 and the cadet corps was quite small, averaging about one hundred Acting Midshipmen.[1] Out of all that entered in his year, only fourteen stayed through the course. He stood fifth on the class roll at graduation.[4] He graduated from the Academy on 18 June 1858.[1]

Midshipman Edit

As a midshipman, Dewey first went to sea on a practice cruise aboard USS Saratoga; on this cruise he earned recognition as a cadet officer. As a result, he was assigned to one of the best ships of the old Navy—the steam frigate USS Wabash.[4] Wabash under Captain Samuel Barron was the new flagship of the Mediterranean Squadron. On 22 July 1858, the ship left Hampton Roads for Europe.[1]

Wabash reached her first port of call, Gibraltar, on 17 August 1858. She cruised in the Mediterranean, and the cadet officers visited the cities of the Old World accessible to them, often taking trips inland. Dewey was assigned to keep the ship's log.[4] Wabash returned to the New York Navy Yard on 16 December 1859, and decommissioned there on 20 December 1859. Dewey served on two short-term cruises in 1860.

Civil War service Edit

At the beginning of the American Civil War, Dewey was executive lieutenant on USS Mississippi, a steam paddle frigate assigned to the Union West Gulf Blockading Squadron.

Attack on New Orleans Edit

At the beginning of 1862, Mississippi was attached to David Farragut's fleet for the capture of New Orleans. On the night of 24–25 April 1862, Farragut led his ships up the Mississippi River past the Confederate defenses at Fort St. Philip and Fort Jackson. Mississippi was the third in Farragut's first division, with Dewey at the helm.

The first division (all big ships) kept near the west bank where the current was weaker and the water deeper; but this brought them right under the muzzles of the guns of Fort St. Philip. Dewey steered Mississippi through shallow water where he expected to run aground any moment.[4]

There was a squadron of Confederate gunboats waiting above the forts. This included CSS Manassas, a small ironclad. Manassas tried to ram Mississippi, but Dewey safely maneuvered Mississippi to evade. Manassas then attacked Brooklyn and Hartford in the next division, and then turned back upriver.

Farragut signaled Mississippi to run Manassas down. Dewey steered Mississippi into a ramming attack. Manassas dodged, but ran aground and was abandoned. She was set on fire by a boat from Mississippi, and then shelled.[4] Farragut's fleet then continued upriver and forced the surrender of the city.

This was the first battle in which Dewey distinguished himself. For the remainder of 1862, Farragut's ships (including Mississippi) patrolled the lower river. This was dangerous, as the ships were fired on by Confederate sharpshooters on the banks, and even occasionally by light artillery.[4]

Battle of Port Hudson Edit

 
George Dewey

In spring 1863, Union forces moved to take the Confederate fortress at Port Hudson, Louisiana, where at that time the Red River joined the Mississippi. Farragut attempted to pass the fortress with his fleet and cut it off upriver, thereby completing the Siege of Port Hudson.

The attempt was made on 14 March 1863. In this action, Dewey saw fiercer fighting than he was ever to see again. Mississippi ran aground and was the target of concentrated enemy fire for half an hour, until she had to be abandoned. Dewey was among the last to leave the wreck.[4]

Assignment to USS Agawam Edit

Dewey was highly complimented by his immediate superiors and by Farragut himself, who appointed him executive officer of USS Agawam, a small gunboat the admiral used frequently for dispatches and his personal reconnoitering. This little vessel was frequently under fire by concealed sharpshooters and temporary batteries. In July of that year a small engagement at Donaldsonville, Louisiana, resulted in the death of Captain Abner Read, of USS New London, and the severe wounding of his executive officer. Dewey was present, and was so conspicuous for gallantry that he was recommended for promotion on the strength of it. Meanwhile, he was given temporary command of the frigate.[4]

Assignment to USS Colorado Edit

In the latter part of 1864, after some service in the James River under Commander McComb, Lieutenant Dewey was made executive officer of the first-rate wooden man-of-war USS Colorado, in the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron under command of Commodore Henry Knox Thatcher.

Battles of Fort Fisher Edit

By late 1864, Wilmington, North Carolina, was the only port left to the Confederacy. Its access to the sea was protected by Fort Fisher, at the mouth of the Cape Fear River.

A joint Army-Navy attack in December failed (the First Battle of Fort Fisher, 7–27 December 1864).[4]

A second attack came in January (the Second Battle of Fort Fisher, 13–15 January 1865). Colorado was engaged, and Dewey played a key role in her success.

Colorado, being a wooden ship, was placed in the line outside the monitors and other armored vessels but got a full share of conflict. Toward the end of the second engagement, when matters were moving the right way, Admiral Porter signaled Thatcher to close in and silence a certain part of the works. As Colorado had already received considerable damage, her officers remonstrated. But Dewey, who had now acquired marked tactical ability, was quick to see the advantage to be gained by the move and the work was taken in fifteen minutes. The New York Times, commenting upon this part of the action, spoke of it as "the most beautiful duel of the war". When Admiral Porter came to congratulate Commodore Thatcher, the latter said generously: "You must thank Lieutenant Dewey, sir. It was his move." Nevertheless, Thatcher was promoted to rear admiral. He tried to take Dewey with him as his fleet captain when he went to supersede Farragut at Mobile Bay. This was not permitted, but Dewey was promoted to lieutenant commander.[4]

Post–Civil War life Edit

After the end of the Civil War, then Lieutenant Commander Dewey remained in active service, and was sent to the European station as executive officer of USS Kearsarge — the famous ship that had sunk the Confederate privateer Alabama.

Peacetime assignments Edit

Dewey's next tour of duty was in 1867 and 1868 as executive officer of USS Colorado—the same vessel in which he had won his honors at Fort Fisher, and now the flagship of the European Squadron. The admiral in command of the ship and squadron was Louis M. Goldsborough, and one of Dewey's companions was John Crittenden Watson—the same man, who, as rear admiral, relieved Admiral Dewey of his duties at Manila, when he wished to return to the United States in the summer of 1899.[4] Lieutenant Commander Dewey was in charge of the vessels at the Naval Academy in Annapolis from 6 November 1867 through 1 August 1870. This duty included commanding the famous frigate USS Constitution, which was berthed at Annapolis as a training ship.

Some tranquil years followed the end of Dewey's cruise on Colorado. For two years, from 1868 to 1870, he was an instructor at the Naval Academy. The next year he did special surveying work on the steam sloop USS Narragansett. He was then briefly assigned to the Naval Torpedo Station at Newport, Rhode Island. It was during this assignment that his wife died just after the birth of his son. In 1873 Dewey was given command of Narragansett and spent nearly four years on her, engaged in the Pacific Coast Survey.[4]

Lighthouse Board Edit

This entitled him to a period of rest ashore; and he was ordered to Washington, and made lighthouse inspector in 1880, and then secretary of the lighthouse board, a service in which he took great interest. Meanwhile, he had been promoted to the grade of commander. This residence in Washington as a bureau officer of high rank gave him an extensive acquaintance, and he became one of the most popular men in the capital. He was a member of the Metropolitan Club, the leading social club of Washington.[4]

Assignment to USS Dolphin Edit

In 1882, this leave of absence in Washington came to an end when he was sent to the Asiatic station in command of USS Juniata, where he studied the situation with care and acquired information of immense importance ten years later.[4]

He was promoted to the rank of captain in 1884, and he was ordered home and given command of USS Dolphin—one of the first four ships of the original "white squadron", steam-powered ships with steel hulls which formed the basis of the modern United States Navy. Dolphin was officially classed as a dispatch boat, and was often used as the Presidential yacht.[4]

In 1885, Captain Dewey undertook another tour of sea service, and for three years was in command of USS Pensacola, familiar to him in the New Orleans battles, now flagship of the European squadron.[4]

Returning to Washington in 1893, he resumed the life of a bureau officer, being attached to the lighthouse board. In 1896, he was promoted to commodore and transferred to the Board of Inspection and Survey.[4]

Spanish–American War Edit

Commander of Asiatic Squadron Edit

In 1896, Dewey applied for a sea posting as Commander of the Asiatic Squadron. Although Dewey was a long shot for the position, his friend Theodore Roosevelt arranged for President William McKinley to select Dewey over a more senior officer.[5]: 40–41  The Commodore hoisted his pennant on board USS Olympia at Nagasaki in January 1898, and departed for Hong Kong in February to inspect the U.S. warships lying in Hong Kong harbour.[6] Upon arrival, he learned that the Maine had blown up in Havana Harbor.[7] Dewey was skeptical that the country would go to war, writing, "I don't see what we have to gain in a war with Spain."[8] However, he was confident of victory, writing, "I expect to capture the Spanish ships and reduce the defenses of Manila in one day."[9]

As the war clouds loomed, Dewey assembled his squadron at Hong Kong and made preparations. The cruiser USS Baltimore was dispatched to Hong Kong via the Republic of Hawaii. Dewey purchased the merchant colliers Nanshan and Zafiro, retaining their crews. The warships were repainted from white to gray. Upon the outbreak of war between the United States and Spain, the United Kingdom declared its neutrality and Dewey was ordered by Wilsone Black to leave British waters. The Asiatic Squadron moved to the Chinese waters of Mirs Bay.

Battle of Manila Bay Edit

 
Detail of a painting in the Vermont State House depicting Dewey on the USS Olympia during the Battle of Manila Bay

On April 27, 1898, he sailed from China aboard USS Olympia with orders to attack the Spanish at Manila Bay. He stopped at the mouth of the bay late the night of April 30, and the following morning he gave the order to attack at first light, saying the now famous words "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley." True to his word, Dewey defeated the Spanish in a battle lasting just six hours. The Asiatic Squadron sank or captured the entire Spanish Pacific Squadron under Admiral Patricio Montojo y Pasarón and silenced the shore batteries at Manila, with the loss of only one life on the American side from a heart attack.[10]

Didn't Admiral Dewey do wonderfully well? I got him the position out there in Asia last year, and I had to beg hard to do it; and the reason I gave was that we might have to send him to Manila. And we sent him — and he went!

— Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to William Wingate Sewall, May 4, 1898[11]

Philippines Edit

In the early stages of the Spanish-American War in the Philippines, Dewey and the Americans were aided by the Filipino nationalists led by Emilio Aguinaldo who had fought previously the Philippine Revolution and were attacking the Spanish by land after Dewey had defeated the Spanish at sea. There were no U.S. Army ground troops in the Philippines at the time. Dewey and Aguinaldo at first enjoyed a cordial relationship,[according to whom?] and Dewey wrote that the Filipinos were "intelligent" and well "capable of self-government."[12][13] In August after ground troops arrived, Dewey aided U.S. Army General Wesley Merritt in taking possession of Manila on August 13, 1898, during the 1898 Battle of Manila, the "mock Battle of Manila", while Aguinaldo's troops, surrounding Manila, were kept out. In February 1899, the Philippine–American War started.

Hero Edit

 
Dewey on the cover of an 1899 souvenir calendar

Dewey was promoted to rear admiral in May 1898, and full admiral the following year. Returning to the United States on September 27, 1899, Dewey received a hero's welcome. New York City's September 1899 welcome-home celebration for Dewey was a two-day parade. When Boston paid tribute, he was greeted at City Hall by 280 singers from the Handel and Haydn Society who sang the anthem "See the Conquering Hero Comes" from Handel's Judas Maccabaeus.[14] By act of Congress, he was promoted to the special rank of Admiral of the Navy in 1903, with his date of rank retroactive to 1899.[15]

A special military decoration, the Battle of Manila Bay Medal (commonly called the Dewey Medal), was struck in honor of Dewey's victory at Manila Bay. It was awarded to every American officer, sailor, and Marine present at the battle. The medals were designed by Daniel Chester French, sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial, and produced by Tiffany & Co. of New York. Each medal was engraved with the recipient's name, rank, and ship. Since his own image appeared on the obverse of the medal, out of modesty, Dewey wore his medal reversed. Dewey was one of only four Americans in history (the other three being Admiral William T. Sampson, Admiral Richard E. Byrd, and General John J. Pershing) who were entitled to wear a US government-issued medal with their own image on it. Such was his high regard by the public that "Dewey" was the 19th most popular boys' name in 1898, jumping from 111th the year prior.[16]

Shortly after the Battle of Manila Bay, on May 31, 1898, Dewey wrote to the Secretary of the Navy asking that 50 Chinese sailors who had served with the Asiatic Squadron at Manila Bay be allowed to enter the United States. In Dewey's letter he noted that the Chinese had "rendered the most efficient services upon that occasion" and that they had "shown courage and energy in the face of an enemy." At that time an immigration law, the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, prohibited Chinese laborers from landing in the United States.[17] Dewey had enlisted the Chinese sailors against the wishes of the Navy Department and, despite his very public entreatment that they be granted US citizenship, Congress refused to even take up the issue.[18]

On October 3, 1899, Dewey was presented a special sword by President McKinley in a ceremony at the Capitol building. The presentation of the sword was followed by a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue. Congress, by unanimous vote, had authorized $10,000 to fund the gift shortly after the Battle of Manila Bay. The elaborately decorated sword was custom-made by Tiffany & Co. Its hilt and fittings were made of 22 carat gold. The sword is now on display, along with uniforms and medals belonging to Admiral Dewey, at the National Museum of the United States Navy at the Washington Navy Yard.[19]

Politics Edit

Many suggested Dewey run for President on the Democratic ticket in 1900.[20] His candidacy was plagued by public relations missteps. He was quoted as saying the job of president would be easy since the chief executive was merely following orders in executing the laws enacted by Congress and that he would "execute the laws of Congress as faithfully as I have always executed the orders of my superiors." He admitted to never having voted in a presidential election. He drew yet more criticism when he offhandedly, but prophetically, told a newspaper reporter that: "Our next war will be with Germany."[21] Dewey also angered some Protestants by marrying a Catholic and giving her the house that the nation had given him following the war.[22] Dewey withdrew from the race in mid-May 1900 and endorsed William McKinley.

In 1900, after his withdrawal from the presidential race, he was named president of the newly established General Board of the Navy Department, which was the Navy's major policy‑making body. He remained in active naval service on the board until his death, and played a major role in championing the introduction of new technologies into the expanding U.S. Navy with his support of the development of naval aviation and the submarine.

Marriages and death Edit

 
Mildred Hazen Dewey

In 1866, Dewey was assigned to duty in the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, Maine, and there met the woman who became his first wife:[4] Susan "Susie" Boardman Goodwin (1844–1872), daughter of New Hampshire's war governor, Ichabod Goodwin,[23] a Republican who fitted out troops for the war at his own expense. The Deweys were married on October 24, 1867, and had one son, George. Susie died on December 28, 1872, five days after giving birth.[24]

The longtime widower cut a dashing figure and enjoyed the company of women. In 1893, he was escorting two women aboard a warship when he unexpectedly ran into his son. Thinking on his feet, Dewey introduced his son as his younger brother.[5]: 40–41 

On November 9, 1899, after his triumphal return from the Far East, Dewey was married for the second time to Mildred McLean Hazen (1850–1931),[25] widow of General William Babcock Hazen, in the rectory of St. Paul's Catholic Church in Washington, D.C. Since Hazen was a Roman Catholic and Dewey was not, they were not permitted to have their wedding inside a Catholic church.[26][27] The marriage was criticized by some anti-Catholic voices, as was Dewey's transfer to his wife of the $50,000 Washington mansion given to him by the American public through a fund-raising campaign.[28][29][30][31]

In later life Dewey wore stylish clothes and a handlebar mustache, which was his trademark. His inherited wealth allowed him to live in comfort. He often went horseback riding with President Theodore Roosevelt in Washington's Rock Creek Park, and he was a fellow member of Washington's prestigious Metropolitan Club.

For the last 17 years of his life, he resided at 1730 K Street NW, in Washington. His office was in the State, War and Navy Building adjacent to the White House.

Dewey died in Washington on January 16, 1917. After lying in state at the United States Capitol rotunda,[32] his remains were interred at Arlington National Cemetery. A mausoleum was later built for him in the cemetery. In 1925, his widow had his remains transferred to the Bethlehem Chapel, on the crypt level, at the Washington National Cathedral, Washington, D.C.[33]

Memberships Edit

 
Dewey in 1899 art from Puck, which was the first successful humor magazine in the United States

Admiral Dewey belonged to numerous military, patriotic and hereditary societies.

In 1901, Admiral Dewey was elected as an honorary member of the New York Society of the Cincinnati.

In 1882, Dewey was elected as a First Class Companion of the District of Columbia Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS) and was assigned insignia number 2397.

Dewey was a key leader in the Naval Order of the United States (insignia number 207). He served as Commander of the New York Commandery of the Naval Order of the United States from 1898 to 1900, and as Commander General (i.e., National President) of the Order from 1907 to 1917.

He was also a member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America (state member number 93 and national member number 552) and served as Governor General from 1904 to 1906 and from 1906 to 1908, the New York Society of the Sons of the Revolution (elected as a life member in 1899), the Vermont Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (joined in 1892, state member number 220 and national member number 2920), the Vermont Society of Colonial Wars (insignia number 2663), the New Jersey Society of the General Society of the War of 1812 (state membership number 15), the Society of American Wars (Vice Commander General), and the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order of Foreign Wars (insignia number 363).

Dewey's membership insignia for most of the societies listed above are in the collection of the National Museum of the United States Navy at the Washington Navy Yard.

Dewey was an early member of the board of directors of the Boy Scouts of America, serving until his resignation from that office in late 1910.

Dates of rank Edit

In the mid to late-18th Century, the US Navy had three "ranks" of Midshipmen serving: "acting midshipmen" who were active students at the US Naval Academy, "warranted midshipmen" who had completed most of their studies at the Academy and were serving at sea while holding line authority through a warrant of authority, and "passed midshipmen" who had completed all requirements for commissioning and held warranted line authority similar to ensigns of the modern US Navy. In the era of the Civil War, it was a common practice for officers to serve as a "Master" with a warrant of authority until they were commissioned. It was also common for officers to be granted shipboard commissions based on the need to fill certain jobs or billets. Dewey was therefore made a lieutenant once he "signed on" with David Farragut. He never held the ranks of ensign or lieutenant (junior grade) as those ranks were not created until 1862 and 1883, respectively.[34][35][15] Nor was he appointed to the rank of vice admiral, there being no actively serving vice admirals in the US Navy at that time.

Passed Midshipman Master Lieutenant Lieutenant Commander Commander
O-1 O-2 O-3 O-4 O-5
         
January 19, 1861 February 28, 1861 April 19, 1861 March 3, 1865 April 13, 1872
Captain Commodore Rear Admiral Admiral Admiral of the Navy
O-6 O-7 O-8 O-10 Special Rank
         
September 27, 1884
(Retroactive to July 28, 1884)
February 28, 1896 May 11, 1898 March 8, 1899[36] March 24, 1903[36]
(Retroactive to March 2, 1899)[36]
 
Dewey in special full dress uniform as Admiral of the Navy

Admiral Dewey's final rank was Admiral of the Navy, making him the highest-ranking officer in the history of the United States Navy. He is the only person ever to hold this rank. Admiral of the Navy is equivalent to General of the Armies. General John J. Pershing, US Army, was promoted to General of the Armies in 1919, Lieutenant General George Washington, US Army, was posthumously promoted on the Retired List of the US Army to the rank of General of the Armies of the United States, with an effective date of rank of 4 July 1776, and General Ulysses S. Grant also received a posthumous promotion on December 27, 2022.[37][15]

Admiral Dewey served a total of 62 years on active duty in the U.S. Navy. This was just one year less than Admiral Hyman G. Rickover.

Honors Edit

Medals awarded by the U.S. government Edit

(Dates indicate the year the medal was awarded.)

Note – Although Dewey was entitled to all of the above medals, he is pictured at right wearing only the Battle of Manila Bay Medal. He wore the medal with the reverse side showing because his profile was on the obverse side. (He was one of only four officers in American military history entitled to wear a medal with his own image on it.) He is wearing the special additional gold braid on his sleeves denoting his unique rank as Admiral of the Navy.

Legacy Edit

Namesakes Edit

Other Edit

  • Admiral Dewey March, a patriotic March named after him.
  • Admiral Dewey's service sword (not to be confused with the special presentation sword he received in 1899) is on display in the wardroom of the guided missile destroyer USS Dewey (DDG-105).

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  • Dates of promotion from The Records of Living Officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, Sixth Edition, 1889, by Lewis Randolph Hamersly.[40]
  • The Dewey slot machine at Arcade-History.com.[41]
  • Yosemite Place Names – The historic background of geographic names in Yosemite National Park by Peter Browning.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Miller, Brian L. "George Dewey". www.spanamwar.com.
  2. ^ Admiral Dewey at Manila and the Complete Story of the Philippines: Life and Glorious Deeds of Admiral George Dewey, Including a Thrilling Account of Our Conflicts with the Spaniards and Filipinos in the Orient. Philadelphia: J.H. Moore. 1899. p. 123. OCLC 6437000.
  3. ^ "Julius Yemans Dewey/Mary Perrin". www.msu.edu.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Lawrence, William J. ] [from old catalog (1899). "A concise life of Admiral George Dewey, U. S. N". Boston, J. F. Murphy – via Internet Archive.
  5. ^ a b Jones, Gregg R. (2013). Honor in the Dust: Theodore Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and the Rise and Fall of America's Imperial Dream. New American Library. ISBN 9780451239181.
  6. ^ Dewey, George (February 1, 1898). "Letter to Secretary of the Navy John D. Long".
  7. ^ Dewey, George (February 18, 1898). "Letter to George Goodwin Dewey". Documentary Histories: Spanish-American War. Naval History and Heritage Command.
  8. ^ Dewey, George (March 15, 1898). "Letter to George Goodwin Dewey".
  9. ^ Dewey, George (March 3, 1898). "Letter to George Goodwin Dewey".
  10. ^ McSherry, Patrick. "The Battle of Manila Bay (Cavite)". spanamwar.com. The Spanish American War Centennial. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
  11. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (May 5, 1898). "Letter to William Wingate Sewall, 5/4/1898". Documentary Histories: Spanish-American War. Naval History and Heritage Command.
  12. ^ "The opinions of Admiral Dewey about the war in the Philippines". Life. Vol. XXXIV, no. 876. John Ames Mitchell. September 7, 1899. p. 184.
  13. ^ Krenn, Michael L. (2020). "Imperialism and The Anglo-Saxon". In Krenn, Michael L. (ed.). The Impact of Race on U.S. Foreign Policy: A Reader. Routledge. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-000-14998-2.
  14. ^ Louis Stanley Young, Life and Heroic Deeds of Admiral Dewey (Boston: James H. Earle, 1899), 546
  15. ^ a b c "Biography of George Dewey". public2.nhhcaws.local. Naval History and Heritage Command. 2018-12-06. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
  16. ^ "Dewey". Behind the Name. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  17. ^ New York Times. February 23, 1899.
  18. ^ "A Navy of Foreigners, Mercenaries, and Amateurs: Naval Enlistment in the Spanish-American War". International Journal of Naval History. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  19. ^ "Dewey Receives the Nation's Gift" (PDF). The New York Times. 3 October 1899. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  20. ^ William P. Leeman, "America's admiral: George Dewey and American culture in the Gilded Age." The Historian 65.3 (2003): 587-614.
  21. ^ Convention Diary at www.nationalreview.com
  22. ^ HarpWeek | Elections | 1900 Medium Cartoons at elections.harpweek.com
  23. ^ Strawbery Banke: "The Goodwin Mansion" 2008-12-27 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ "George Dewey". www.nndb.com.
  25. ^ "Dewey, Mildred McLean Hazen". Gilded Age Collections. Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Library & Museums. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  26. ^ "Admiral Dewey Married" (PDF). The New York Times. 10 November 1899. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  27. ^ Hazen was the widow of General William Babcock Hazen and the daughter of Washington McLean, a prominent Democrat and owner of The Cincinnati Enquirer.
  28. ^ "Personal and Miscellaneous". The Cyclopedic Review of Current History. 9: 910. 1899. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  29. ^ Gates, Merrill E., ed. (1905). Men of Mark in America. Washington, D. C.: Men of Mark Publishing Company. pp. 296–297. Retrieved 8 October 2017. Mildred McLean Hazen.
  30. ^ Stetson, Edith Warren (January 1900). "Admiral Dewey's Home and Its Mistress". Metropolitan Magazine. XI (1): 23–28.
  31. ^ Ware, Susan, ed. (1998). Forgotten Heroes: Inspiring American Portraits from Our Leading Historians. New York: The Free Press/Simon & Schuster. pp. 165–168. ISBN 0684868725.
  32. ^ "Lying in State or in Honor". US Architect of the Capitol (AOC). Retrieved 2018-09-01.
  33. ^ "Dewey Maulsoeum". 11 October 2022.
  34. ^ Navy Traditions and Customs: Ensign at the Naval History & Heritage Command (www.history.navy.mil)
  35. ^ at the Naval History & Heritage Command (www.history.navy.mil)
  36. ^ a b c "Biography: George Dewey (26 December 1837 – 16 January 1917)". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  37. ^ Ulysses S. Grant posthumously promoted to 'General of the Armies'
  38. ^ Dewey, Adelbert Milton (1899). The life and letters of Admiral Dewey. New York: Eaton & Mains. p. 411.
  39. ^ Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. Govt. Print. Off. pp. 105.
  40. ^ The Records of Living Officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. L. R. Hamersly & Company. 28 March 1898 – via Internet Archive.
  41. ^ "The Dewey slot machine by Mills Novelty (1899)". www.arcade-history.com.

Further reading Edit

  • Brody, David. "Celebrating Empire on the Home Front: New York City's Welcome-home Party for Admiral Dewey." Prospects 2000 25: 391–424. ISSN 0361-2333
  • Chadwick, French Ensor. The Relations of the United States and Spain: The Spanish–American War (1911) online edition
  • Grenville, John A. S. and George Berkeley Young. Politics, Strategy, and American Diplomacy: Studies in Foreign Policy, 1873–1917 (1966) pp 297–336 on "The quest for security: Admiral Dewey and the general board, 1900–1917.
  • Graves, Ralph. "When a Victory Really Gave Us a New World Order." Smithsonian 1992 22(12): 88–97. ISSN 0037-7333 Fulltext: Ebsco
  • Leeke, Jim. Manila and Santiago: The New Steel Navy in the Spanish-American War (Naval Institute Press, 2013).
  • Leeman, William P. "America's admiral: George Dewey and American culture in the Gilded Age." The Historian 65.3 (2003): 587-614.
  • Spector, Ronald. Admiral of the New Empire: The Life and Career of George Dewey. 1974. 220 pp. the standard scholarly biography
  • West, Jr., Richard. Admirals of American Empire: The Combined Story of George Dewey, Alfred Thayer Mahan, Winfield Scott Schley, and William Thomas Sampson (1948)
  • Williams, Vernon L. "George Dewey: Admiral of the Navy." in Admirals of the New Steel Navy: Makers of the American Naval Tradition, 1880–1930 (2013): 222-49.

Primary sources Edit

  • Dewey, George. Autobiography of George Dewey, Admiral of the Navy (1913) full text online written in collaboration with journalist Frederick Palmer as ghostwriter using the reports of Dewey's aide, Nathan Sargent.
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer (1899). Lessons of the War with Spain: And Other Articles. Little, Brown Low, Boston. pp. 320. Url

External links Edit

Military offices
Preceded by Commander, Asiatic Squadron
3 January 1898 – 5 June 1899
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Newly created
Member of the Schurman Commission
March 4, 1899 – March 16, 1900
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Persons who have lain in state or honor
in the United States Capitol rotunda

January 20, 1917
Succeeded by

george, dewey, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources George Dewey news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message George Dewey December 26 1837 January 16 1917 was Admiral of the Navy the only person in United States history to have attained that rank He is best known for his victory at the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish American War with the loss of only a single crewman on the American side Admiral of the NavyGeorge DeweyDewey in 1899Born 1837 12 26 December 26 1837Montpelier Vermont U S DiedJanuary 16 1917 1917 01 16 aged 79 Washington D C U S BuriedWashington National CathedralAllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branchUnited States NavyUnion NavyYears of service1858 1917RankAdmiral of the NavyCommands heldAsiatic SquadronGeneral Board of the United States NavyBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Forts Jackson and St Philip Battle of New Orleans Battle of Port Hudson First Battle of Fort Fisher Second Battle of Fort FisherSpanish American War Battle of Manila BayPhilippine American War Battle of San RoqueVenezuelan crisis of 1902 1903Alma materUnited States Naval Academy Norwich UniversitySignatureAdmiral Dewey as he appears at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington D C Dewey was born in Montpelier Vermont At age 15 Dewey s father enrolled him at Norwich University in Northfield Vermont Two years later Norwich expelled him for drunkenness and herding sheep into the barracks Summarily he entered the United States Naval Academy in 1854 He graduated from the academy in 1858 and was assigned as the executive lieutenant of the USS Mississippi at the beginning of the Civil War He participated in the capture of New Orleans and the Siege of Port Hudson helping the Union take control of the Mississippi River By the end of the war Dewey reached the rank of lieutenant commander After the Civil War Dewey undertook a variety of assignments serving on multiple ships including the USS Constitution and as an instructor at the Naval Academy He also served on the United States Lighthouse Board and the Board of Inspection and Survey He was promoted to commodore in 1896 and assigned to the Asiatic Squadron the following year After that appointment he began preparations for a potential war with Spain which broke out in April 1898 Immediately after the beginning of the war Dewey led an attack on Manila Bay sinking or capturing the entire Spanish Pacific fleet while suffering only minor casualties After the battle his fleet assisted in the capture of Manila Dewey s victory at Manila Bay was widely lauded in the United States and he was promoted to Admiral of the Navy in 1903 Dewey explored a run for the 1900 Democratic presidential nomination but he withdrew from the race and endorsed President William McKinley He served on the General Board of the United States Navy an important policy making body from 1900 until his death in 1917 Contents 1 Early life 2 Naval career 2 1 Naval Academy 2 2 Midshipman 2 3 Civil War service 2 3 1 Attack on New Orleans 2 3 2 Battle of Port Hudson 2 4 Assignment to USS Agawam 2 5 Assignment to USS Colorado 2 6 Battles of Fort Fisher 3 Post Civil War life 3 1 Peacetime assignments 3 2 Lighthouse Board 3 3 Assignment to USS Dolphin 4 Spanish American War 4 1 Commander of Asiatic Squadron 4 2 Battle of Manila Bay 4 3 Philippines 5 Hero 6 Politics 7 Marriages and death 8 Memberships 9 Dates of rank 10 Honors 10 1 Medals awarded by the U S government 11 Legacy 11 1 Namesakes 11 2 Other 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 15 1 Primary sources 16 External linksEarly life EditDewey was born in Montpelier Vermont on December 26 1837 directly opposite the Vermont State House to Julius Yemans Dewey and his first wife Mary Perrin 1 2 Julius was a physician who received his degree from The University of Vermont He was among the founders of the National Life Insurance Company in 1848 1 a member of the Episcopal Church and was among the founders of the Christ Episcopal Church in Montpelier George was baptized and attended Sunday school there George had two older brothers and a younger sister 3 Dewey attended school in the nearby town of Johnson When he was fifteen years old he went to the American Literary Scientific and Military Academy 4 The school better known as Norwich University had been founded by Alden Partridge and aimed at giving cadets a well rounded military education Dewey attended for two years 1852 1854 1 Dewey found a military role model when he read a biography of Hannibal 4 Naval career EditNaval Academy Edit Dewey entered the United States Naval Academy in 1854 at the age of 16 The conventional four year course had just been introduced in 1851 and the cadet corps was quite small averaging about one hundred Acting Midshipmen 1 Out of all that entered in his year only fourteen stayed through the course He stood fifth on the class roll at graduation 4 He graduated from the Academy on 18 June 1858 1 Midshipman Edit As a midshipman Dewey first went to sea on a practice cruise aboard USS Saratoga on this cruise he earned recognition as a cadet officer As a result he was assigned to one of the best ships of the old Navy the steam frigate USS Wabash 4 Wabash under Captain Samuel Barron was the new flagship of the Mediterranean Squadron On 22 July 1858 the ship left Hampton Roads for Europe 1 Wabash reached her first port of call Gibraltar on 17 August 1858 She cruised in the Mediterranean and the cadet officers visited the cities of the Old World accessible to them often taking trips inland Dewey was assigned to keep the ship s log 4 Wabash returned to the New York Navy Yard on 16 December 1859 and decommissioned there on 20 December 1859 Dewey served on two short term cruises in 1860 Civil War service Edit At the beginning of the American Civil War Dewey was executive lieutenant on USS Mississippi a steam paddle frigate assigned to the Union West Gulf Blockading Squadron Attack on New Orleans Edit At the beginning of 1862 Mississippi was attached to David Farragut s fleet for the capture of New Orleans On the night of 24 25 April 1862 Farragut led his ships up the Mississippi River past the Confederate defenses at Fort St Philip and Fort Jackson Mississippi was the third in Farragut s first division with Dewey at the helm The first division all big ships kept near the west bank where the current was weaker and the water deeper but this brought them right under the muzzles of the guns of Fort St Philip Dewey steered Mississippi through shallow water where he expected to run aground any moment 4 There was a squadron of Confederate gunboats waiting above the forts This included CSS Manassas a small ironclad Manassas tried to ram Mississippi but Dewey safely maneuvered Mississippi to evade Manassas then attacked Brooklyn and Hartford in the next division and then turned back upriver Farragut signaled Mississippi to run Manassas down Dewey steered Mississippi into a ramming attack Manassas dodged but ran aground and was abandoned She was set on fire by a boat from Mississippi and then shelled 4 Farragut s fleet then continued upriver and forced the surrender of the city This was the first battle in which Dewey distinguished himself For the remainder of 1862 Farragut s ships including Mississippi patrolled the lower river This was dangerous as the ships were fired on by Confederate sharpshooters on the banks and even occasionally by light artillery 4 Battle of Port Hudson Edit nbsp George DeweyIn spring 1863 Union forces moved to take the Confederate fortress at Port Hudson Louisiana where at that time the Red River joined the Mississippi Farragut attempted to pass the fortress with his fleet and cut it off upriver thereby completing the Siege of Port Hudson The attempt was made on 14 March 1863 In this action Dewey saw fiercer fighting than he was ever to see again Mississippi ran aground and was the target of concentrated enemy fire for half an hour until she had to be abandoned Dewey was among the last to leave the wreck 4 Assignment to USS Agawam Edit Dewey was highly complimented by his immediate superiors and by Farragut himself who appointed him executive officer of USS Agawam a small gunboat the admiral used frequently for dispatches and his personal reconnoitering This little vessel was frequently under fire by concealed sharpshooters and temporary batteries In July of that year a small engagement at Donaldsonville Louisiana resulted in the death of Captain Abner Read of USS New London and the severe wounding of his executive officer Dewey was present and was so conspicuous for gallantry that he was recommended for promotion on the strength of it Meanwhile he was given temporary command of the frigate 4 Assignment to USS Colorado Edit In the latter part of 1864 after some service in the James River under Commander McComb Lieutenant Dewey was made executive officer of the first rate wooden man of war USS Colorado in the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron under command of Commodore Henry Knox Thatcher Battles of Fort Fisher Edit By late 1864 Wilmington North Carolina was the only port left to the Confederacy Its access to the sea was protected by Fort Fisher at the mouth of the Cape Fear River A joint Army Navy attack in December failed the First Battle of Fort Fisher 7 27 December 1864 4 A second attack came in January the Second Battle of Fort Fisher 13 15 January 1865 Colorado was engaged and Dewey played a key role in her success Colorado being a wooden ship was placed in the line outside the monitors and other armored vessels but got a full share of conflict Toward the end of the second engagement when matters were moving the right way Admiral Porter signaled Thatcher to close in and silence a certain part of the works As Colorado had already received considerable damage her officers remonstrated But Dewey who had now acquired marked tactical ability was quick to see the advantage to be gained by the move and the work was taken in fifteen minutes The New York Times commenting upon this part of the action spoke of it as the most beautiful duel of the war When Admiral Porter came to congratulate Commodore Thatcher the latter said generously You must thank Lieutenant Dewey sir It was his move Nevertheless Thatcher was promoted to rear admiral He tried to take Dewey with him as his fleet captain when he went to supersede Farragut at Mobile Bay This was not permitted but Dewey was promoted to lieutenant commander 4 Post Civil War life EditAfter the end of the Civil War then Lieutenant Commander Dewey remained in active service and was sent to the European station as executive officer of USS Kearsarge the famous ship that had sunk the Confederate privateer Alabama Peacetime assignments Edit Dewey s next tour of duty was in 1867 and 1868 as executive officer of USS Colorado the same vessel in which he had won his honors at Fort Fisher and now the flagship of the European Squadron The admiral in command of the ship and squadron was Louis M Goldsborough and one of Dewey s companions was John Crittenden Watson the same man who as rear admiral relieved Admiral Dewey of his duties at Manila when he wished to return to the United States in the summer of 1899 4 Lieutenant Commander Dewey was in charge of the vessels at the Naval Academy in Annapolis from 6 November 1867 through 1 August 1870 This duty included commanding the famous frigate USS Constitution which was berthed at Annapolis as a training ship Some tranquil years followed the end of Dewey s cruise on Colorado For two years from 1868 to 1870 he was an instructor at the Naval Academy The next year he did special surveying work on the steam sloop USS Narragansett He was then briefly assigned to the Naval Torpedo Station at Newport Rhode Island It was during this assignment that his wife died just after the birth of his son In 1873 Dewey was given command of Narragansett and spent nearly four years on her engaged in the Pacific Coast Survey 4 Lighthouse Board Edit This entitled him to a period of rest ashore and he was ordered to Washington and made lighthouse inspector in 1880 and then secretary of the lighthouse board a service in which he took great interest Meanwhile he had been promoted to the grade of commander This residence in Washington as a bureau officer of high rank gave him an extensive acquaintance and he became one of the most popular men in the capital He was a member of the Metropolitan Club the leading social club of Washington 4 Assignment to USS Dolphin Edit In 1882 this leave of absence in Washington came to an end when he was sent to the Asiatic station in command of USS Juniata where he studied the situation with care and acquired information of immense importance ten years later 4 He was promoted to the rank of captain in 1884 and he was ordered home and given command of USS Dolphin one of the first four ships of the original white squadron steam powered ships with steel hulls which formed the basis of the modern United States Navy Dolphin was officially classed as a dispatch boat and was often used as the Presidential yacht 4 In 1885 Captain Dewey undertook another tour of sea service and for three years was in command of USS Pensacola familiar to him in the New Orleans battles now flagship of the European squadron 4 Returning to Washington in 1893 he resumed the life of a bureau officer being attached to the lighthouse board In 1896 he was promoted to commodore and transferred to the Board of Inspection and Survey 4 Spanish American War EditMain article Spanish American War Commander of Asiatic Squadron Edit In 1896 Dewey applied for a sea posting as Commander of the Asiatic Squadron Although Dewey was a long shot for the position his friend Theodore Roosevelt arranged for President William McKinley to select Dewey over a more senior officer 5 40 41 The Commodore hoisted his pennant on board USS Olympia at Nagasaki in January 1898 and departed for Hong Kong in February to inspect the U S warships lying in Hong Kong harbour 6 Upon arrival he learned that the Maine had blown up in Havana Harbor 7 Dewey was skeptical that the country would go to war writing I don t see what we have to gain in a war with Spain 8 However he was confident of victory writing I expect to capture the Spanish ships and reduce the defenses of Manila in one day 9 As the war clouds loomed Dewey assembled his squadron at Hong Kong and made preparations The cruiser USS Baltimore was dispatched to Hong Kong via the Republic of Hawaii Dewey purchased the merchant colliers Nanshan and Zafiro retaining their crews The warships were repainted from white to gray Upon the outbreak of war between the United States and Spain the United Kingdom declared its neutrality and Dewey was ordered by Wilsone Black to leave British waters The Asiatic Squadron moved to the Chinese waters of Mirs Bay Battle of Manila Bay Edit Main article Battle of Manila Bay nbsp Detail of a painting in the Vermont State House depicting Dewey on the USS Olympia during the Battle of Manila BayOn April 27 1898 he sailed from China aboard USS Olympia with orders to attack the Spanish at Manila Bay He stopped at the mouth of the bay late the night of April 30 and the following morning he gave the order to attack at first light saying the now famous words You may fire when you are ready Gridley True to his word Dewey defeated the Spanish in a battle lasting just six hours The Asiatic Squadron sank or captured the entire Spanish Pacific Squadron under Admiral Patricio Montojo y Pasaron and silenced the shore batteries at Manila with the loss of only one life on the American side from a heart attack 10 Didn t Admiral Dewey do wonderfully well I got him the position out there in Asia last year and I had to beg hard to do it and the reason I gave was that we might have to send him to Manila And we sent him and he went Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to William Wingate Sewall May 4 1898 11 Philippines Edit In the early stages of the Spanish American War in the Philippines Dewey and the Americans were aided by the Filipino nationalists led by Emilio Aguinaldo who had fought previously the Philippine Revolution and were attacking the Spanish by land after Dewey had defeated the Spanish at sea There were no U S Army ground troops in the Philippines at the time Dewey and Aguinaldo at first enjoyed a cordial relationship according to whom and Dewey wrote that the Filipinos were intelligent and well capable of self government 12 13 In August after ground troops arrived Dewey aided U S Army General Wesley Merritt in taking possession of Manila on August 13 1898 during the 1898 Battle of Manila the mock Battle of Manila while Aguinaldo s troops surrounding Manila were kept out In February 1899 the Philippine American War started Hero Edit nbsp Dewey on the cover of an 1899 souvenir calendarDewey was promoted to rear admiral in May 1898 and full admiral the following year Returning to the United States on September 27 1899 Dewey received a hero s welcome New York City s September 1899 welcome home celebration for Dewey was a two day parade When Boston paid tribute he was greeted at City Hall by 280 singers from the Handel and Haydn Society who sang the anthem See the Conquering Hero Comes from Handel s Judas Maccabaeus 14 By act of Congress he was promoted to the special rank of Admiral of the Navy in 1903 with his date of rank retroactive to 1899 15 A special military decoration the Battle of Manila Bay Medal commonly called the Dewey Medal was struck in honor of Dewey s victory at Manila Bay It was awarded to every American officer sailor and Marine present at the battle The medals were designed by Daniel Chester French sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial and produced by Tiffany amp Co of New York Each medal was engraved with the recipient s name rank and ship Since his own image appeared on the obverse of the medal out of modesty Dewey wore his medal reversed Dewey was one of only four Americans in history the other three being Admiral William T Sampson Admiral Richard E Byrd and General John J Pershing who were entitled to wear a US government issued medal with their own image on it Such was his high regard by the public that Dewey was the 19th most popular boys name in 1898 jumping from 111th the year prior 16 Shortly after the Battle of Manila Bay on May 31 1898 Dewey wrote to the Secretary of the Navy asking that 50 Chinese sailors who had served with the Asiatic Squadron at Manila Bay be allowed to enter the United States In Dewey s letter he noted that the Chinese had rendered the most efficient services upon that occasion and that they had shown courage and energy in the face of an enemy At that time an immigration law the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act prohibited Chinese laborers from landing in the United States 17 Dewey had enlisted the Chinese sailors against the wishes of the Navy Department and despite his very public entreatment that they be granted US citizenship Congress refused to even take up the issue 18 On October 3 1899 Dewey was presented a special sword by President McKinley in a ceremony at the Capitol building The presentation of the sword was followed by a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue Congress by unanimous vote had authorized 10 000 to fund the gift shortly after the Battle of Manila Bay The elaborately decorated sword was custom made by Tiffany amp Co Its hilt and fittings were made of 22 carat gold The sword is now on display along with uniforms and medals belonging to Admiral Dewey at the National Museum of the United States Navy at the Washington Navy Yard 19 Politics EditMany suggested Dewey run for President on the Democratic ticket in 1900 20 His candidacy was plagued by public relations missteps He was quoted as saying the job of president would be easy since the chief executive was merely following orders in executing the laws enacted by Congress and that he would execute the laws of Congress as faithfully as I have always executed the orders of my superiors He admitted to never having voted in a presidential election He drew yet more criticism when he offhandedly but prophetically told a newspaper reporter that Our next war will be with Germany 21 Dewey also angered some Protestants by marrying a Catholic and giving her the house that the nation had given him following the war 22 Dewey withdrew from the race in mid May 1900 and endorsed William McKinley In 1900 after his withdrawal from the presidential race he was named president of the newly established General Board of the Navy Department which was the Navy s major policy making body He remained in active naval service on the board until his death and played a major role in championing the introduction of new technologies into the expanding U S Navy with his support of the development of naval aviation and the submarine Marriages and death Edit nbsp Mildred Hazen DeweyIn 1866 Dewey was assigned to duty in the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery Maine and there met the woman who became his first wife 4 Susan Susie Boardman Goodwin 1844 1872 daughter of New Hampshire s war governor Ichabod Goodwin 23 a Republican who fitted out troops for the war at his own expense The Deweys were married on October 24 1867 and had one son George Susie died on December 28 1872 five days after giving birth 24 The longtime widower cut a dashing figure and enjoyed the company of women In 1893 he was escorting two women aboard a warship when he unexpectedly ran into his son Thinking on his feet Dewey introduced his son as his younger brother 5 40 41 On November 9 1899 after his triumphal return from the Far East Dewey was married for the second time to Mildred McLean Hazen 1850 1931 25 widow of General William Babcock Hazen in the rectory of St Paul s Catholic Church in Washington D C Since Hazen was a Roman Catholic and Dewey was not they were not permitted to have their wedding inside a Catholic church 26 27 The marriage was criticized by some anti Catholic voices as was Dewey s transfer to his wife of the 50 000 Washington mansion given to him by the American public through a fund raising campaign 28 29 30 31 In later life Dewey wore stylish clothes and a handlebar mustache which was his trademark His inherited wealth allowed him to live in comfort He often went horseback riding with President Theodore Roosevelt in Washington s Rock Creek Park and he was a fellow member of Washington s prestigious Metropolitan Club For the last 17 years of his life he resided at 1730 K Street NW in Washington His office was in the State War and Navy Building adjacent to the White House Dewey died in Washington on January 16 1917 After lying in state at the United States Capitol rotunda 32 his remains were interred at Arlington National Cemetery A mausoleum was later built for him in the cemetery In 1925 his widow had his remains transferred to the Bethlehem Chapel on the crypt level at the Washington National Cathedral Washington D C 33 Memberships Edit nbsp Dewey in 1899 art from Puck which was the first successful humor magazine in the United StatesAdmiral Dewey belonged to numerous military patriotic and hereditary societies In 1901 Admiral Dewey was elected as an honorary member of the New York Society of the Cincinnati In 1882 Dewey was elected as a First Class Companion of the District of Columbia Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States MOLLUS and was assigned insignia number 2397 Dewey was a key leader in the Naval Order of the United States insignia number 207 He served as Commander of the New York Commandery of the Naval Order of the United States from 1898 to 1900 and as Commander General i e National President of the Order from 1907 to 1917 He was also a member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America state member number 93 and national member number 552 and served as Governor General from 1904 to 1906 and from 1906 to 1908 the New York Society of the Sons of the Revolution elected as a life member in 1899 the Vermont Society of the Sons of the American Revolution joined in 1892 state member number 220 and national member number 2920 the Vermont Society of Colonial Wars insignia number 2663 the New Jersey Society of the General Society of the War of 1812 state membership number 15 the Society of American Wars Vice Commander General and the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order of Foreign Wars insignia number 363 Dewey s membership insignia for most of the societies listed above are in the collection of the National Museum of the United States Navy at the Washington Navy Yard Dewey was an early member of the board of directors of the Boy Scouts of America serving until his resignation from that office in late 1910 Dates of rank EditActing Midshipman United States Naval Academy September 23 1854 Warranted Midshipman June 11 1858In the mid to late 18th Century the US Navy had three ranks of Midshipmen serving acting midshipmen who were active students at the US Naval Academy warranted midshipmen who had completed most of their studies at the Academy and were serving at sea while holding line authority through a warrant of authority and passed midshipmen who had completed all requirements for commissioning and held warranted line authority similar to ensigns of the modern US Navy In the era of the Civil War it was a common practice for officers to serve as a Master with a warrant of authority until they were commissioned It was also common for officers to be granted shipboard commissions based on the need to fill certain jobs or billets Dewey was therefore made a lieutenant once he signed on with David Farragut He never held the ranks of ensign or lieutenant junior grade as those ranks were not created until 1862 and 1883 respectively 34 35 15 Nor was he appointed to the rank of vice admiral there being no actively serving vice admirals in the US Navy at that time Passed Midshipman Master Lieutenant Lieutenant Commander CommanderO 1 O 2 O 3 O 4 O 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp January 19 1861 February 28 1861 April 19 1861 March 3 1865 April 13 1872Captain Commodore Rear Admiral Admiral Admiral of the NavyO 6 O 7 O 8 O 10 Special Rank nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp September 27 1884 Retroactive to July 28 1884 February 28 1896 May 11 1898 March 8 1899 36 March 24 1903 36 Retroactive to March 2 1899 36 nbsp Dewey in special full dress uniform as Admiral of the NavyAdmiral Dewey s final rank was Admiral of the Navy making him the highest ranking officer in the history of the United States Navy He is the only person ever to hold this rank Admiral of the Navy is equivalent to General of the Armies General John J Pershing US Army was promoted to General of the Armies in 1919 Lieutenant General George Washington US Army was posthumously promoted on the Retired List of the US Army to the rank of General of the Armies of the United States with an effective date of rank of 4 July 1776 and General Ulysses S Grant also received a posthumous promotion on December 27 2022 37 15 Admiral Dewey served a total of 62 years on active duty in the U S Navy This was just one year less than Admiral Hyman G Rickover Honors EditMedals awarded by the U S government Edit Dates indicate the year the medal was awarded Civil War Campaign Medal 1908 Battle of Manila Bay Medal aka Dewey Medal 1899 Spanish Campaign Medal 1908 Philippine Campaign Medal 1908 Note Although Dewey was entitled to all of the above medals he is pictured at right wearing only the Battle of Manila Bay Medal He wore the medal with the reverse side showing because his profile was on the obverse side He was one of only four officers in American military history entitled to wear a medal with his own image on it He is wearing the special additional gold braid on his sleeves denoting his unique rank as Admiral of the Navy Legacy EditNamesakes Edit Dewey International Elementary School Saint Louis Missouri Dewey Point Yosemite National Park California appeared on the first edition of the Yosemite Valley map in 1907 Dewey Hall an academic building at Norwich University was constructed in 1899 in honor of his victory at Manila Bay In 1898 the Borough of Hellertown Pennsylvania formed its fire department naming it Dewey Fire Company No 1 in honor of George Dewey Also in 1898 the city of Boston Massachusetts named the square besides the nearly complete South Central Station as Dewey Square in his honor 38 Four vessels of the United States Navy have borne the name Dewey including the Arleigh Burke class destroyer Dewey laid down on 4 October 2006 launched on 26 January 2008 and commissioned on 6 March 2010 Dewey Hall and Dewey Field at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland Dewey Field at Naval Station Newport in Newport Rhode Island Thomasville Georgia contains the Dewey City subdivision an area settled in the late 1880s by former slaves The Dewey Monument column in the center of San Francisco s Union Square is dedicated to Dewey s victory at Manila Bay Dewey Beach Delaware is named in honor of Admiral Dewey Dewey Street in St Paul Minnesota was renamed in his honor Dewey Avenue in Norman Oklahoma was named in his honor City of Dewey Oklahoma was named in his honor Founded in 1889 by Jacob A Bartles Dewey County Oklahoma was named in his honor 39 In 1899 Mills Novelty released a slot machine named The Dewey in honor of Admiral Dewey The main town of Culebra Puerto Rico was named in his honor however it is known by many locals simply as Pueblo The Dewey School in the Castle Rock Business Corridor in Castle Rock Colorado was named after Admiral Dewey The Admiral wrote a warm letter of thanks to the school children that was framed and on the wall of the school for many years until the school closed Dewey Avenue in Wharton New Jersey is named in honor of Admiral Dewey Dewey Blvd now known as Roxas Blvd a major seaside thoroughfare in Manila Philippines was named after him George Dewey High School at the former U S Naval Base Subic Bay in the Philippines was named after him A settlement in Newton County Texas was established as a sawmill site by the Sabine Tram Company in 1898 It was named Deweyville after George Dewey Dewey Lake a lake in St Louis County Minnesota is named after Admiral Dewey The tugboat Admiral Dewey was named for him Dewey Road at the former Naval Training Center San Diego in the heart of San Diego s new Civic Arts and Cultural District is named for him George Dewey Elementary School located near the former Naval Training Center San Diego was named in his honor Over the years it has served a student body largely made up of children of Navy and Marine personnel Dewey Humboldt Arizona is named in honor of Admiral Dewey George Dewey Junior High School was in Bremerton Washington until 1977 when it was razed and replaced by Mountain View Middle School The World War II Liberty Ship SS George Dewey was named in his honor George Dewey Medical and Wellness Center Morong Bataan Philippines Other Edit Admiral Dewey March a patriotic March named after him Admiral Dewey s service sword not to be confused with the special presentation sword he received in 1899 is on display in the wardroom of the guided missile destroyer USS Dewey DDG 105 See also Edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp American Civil War portal nbsp New England portalFive star rankNotes EditDates of promotion from The Records of Living Officers of the U S Navy and Marine Corps Sixth Edition 1889 by Lewis Randolph Hamersly 40 The Dewey slot machine at Arcade History com 41 Yosemite Place Names The historic background of geographic names in Yosemite National Park by Peter Browning References Edit a b c d e f Miller Brian L George Dewey www spanamwar com Admiral Dewey at Manila and the Complete Story of the Philippines Life and Glorious Deeds of Admiral George Dewey Including a Thrilling Account of Our Conflicts with the Spaniards and Filipinos in the Orient Philadelphia J H Moore 1899 p 123 OCLC 6437000 Julius Yemans Dewey Mary Perrin www msu edu a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Lawrence William J from old catalog 1899 A concise life of Admiral George Dewey U S N Boston J F Murphy via Internet Archive a b Jones Gregg R 2013 Honor in the Dust Theodore Roosevelt War in the Philippines and the Rise and Fall of America s Imperial Dream New American Library ISBN 9780451239181 Dewey George February 1 1898 Letter to Secretary of the Navy John D Long Dewey George February 18 1898 Letter to George Goodwin Dewey Documentary Histories Spanish American War Naval History and Heritage Command Dewey George March 15 1898 Letter to George Goodwin Dewey Dewey George March 3 1898 Letter to George Goodwin Dewey McSherry Patrick The Battle of Manila Bay Cavite spanamwar com The Spanish American War Centennial Retrieved 18 October 2022 Roosevelt Theodore May 5 1898 Letter to William Wingate Sewall 5 4 1898 Documentary Histories Spanish American War Naval History and Heritage Command The opinions of Admiral Dewey about the war in the Philippines Life Vol XXXIV no 876 John Ames Mitchell September 7 1899 p 184 Krenn Michael L 2020 Imperialism and The Anglo Saxon In Krenn Michael L ed The Impact of Race on U S Foreign Policy A Reader Routledge p 82 ISBN 978 1 000 14998 2 Louis Stanley Young Life and Heroic Deeds of Admiral Dewey Boston James H Earle 1899 546 a b c Biography of George Dewey public2 nhhcaws local Naval History and Heritage Command 2018 12 06 Retrieved 2019 06 21 Dewey Behind the Name Retrieved 31 January 2019 New York Times February 23 1899 A Navy of Foreigners Mercenaries and Amateurs Naval Enlistment in the Spanish American War International Journal of Naval History Retrieved 10 November 2019 Dewey Receives the Nation s Gift PDF The New York Times 3 October 1899 Retrieved 4 August 2012 William P Leeman America s admiral George Dewey and American culture in the Gilded Age The Historian 65 3 2003 587 614 Convention Diary at www nationalreview com HarpWeek Elections 1900 Medium Cartoons at elections harpweek com Strawbery Banke The Goodwin Mansion Archived 2008 12 27 at the Wayback Machine George Dewey www nndb com Dewey Mildred McLean Hazen Gilded Age Collections Rutherford B Hayes Presidential Library amp Museums Retrieved 8 October 2017 Admiral Dewey Married PDF The New York Times 10 November 1899 Retrieved 4 August 2012 Hazen was the widow of General William Babcock Hazen and the daughter of Washington McLean a prominent Democrat and owner of The Cincinnati Enquirer Personal and Miscellaneous The Cyclopedic Review of Current History 9 910 1899 Retrieved 8 October 2017 Gates Merrill E ed 1905 Men of Mark in America Washington D C Men of Mark Publishing Company pp 296 297 Retrieved 8 October 2017 Mildred McLean Hazen Stetson Edith Warren January 1900 Admiral Dewey s Home and Its Mistress Metropolitan Magazine XI 1 23 28 Ware Susan ed 1998 Forgotten Heroes Inspiring American Portraits from Our Leading Historians New York The Free Press Simon amp Schuster pp 165 168 ISBN 0684868725 Lying in State or in Honor US Architect of the Capitol AOC Retrieved 2018 09 01 Dewey Maulsoeum 11 October 2022 Navy Traditions and Customs Ensign at the Naval History amp Heritage Command www history navy mil Navy Traditions and Customs Lieutenant at the Naval History amp Heritage Command www history navy mil a b c Biography George Dewey 26 December 1837 16 January 1917 Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved October 31 2020 Ulysses S Grant posthumously promoted to General of the Armies Dewey Adelbert Milton 1899 The life and letters of Admiral Dewey New York Eaton amp Mains p 411 Gannett Henry 1905 The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States Govt Print Off pp 105 The Records of Living Officers of the U S Navy and Marine Corps L R Hamersly amp Company 28 March 1898 via Internet Archive The Dewey slot machine by Mills Novelty 1899 www arcade history com Further reading EditBrody David Celebrating Empire on the Home Front New York City s Welcome home Party for Admiral Dewey Prospects 2000 25 391 424 ISSN 0361 2333 Chadwick French Ensor The Relations of the United States and Spain The Spanish American War 1911 online edition Grenville John A S and George Berkeley Young Politics Strategy and American Diplomacy Studies in Foreign Policy 1873 1917 1966 pp 297 336 on The quest for security Admiral Dewey and the general board 1900 1917 Graves Ralph When a Victory Really Gave Us a New World Order Smithsonian 1992 22 12 88 97 ISSN 0037 7333 Fulltext Ebsco Leeke Jim Manila and Santiago The New Steel Navy in the Spanish American War Naval Institute Press 2013 Leeman William P America s admiral George Dewey and American culture in the Gilded Age The Historian 65 3 2003 587 614 Spector Ronald Admiral of the New Empire The Life and Career of George Dewey 1974 220 pp the standard scholarly biography West Jr Richard Admirals of American Empire The Combined Story of George Dewey Alfred Thayer Mahan Winfield Scott Schley and William Thomas Sampson 1948 Williams Vernon L George Dewey Admiral of the Navy in Admirals of the New Steel Navy Makers of the American Naval Tradition 1880 1930 2013 222 49 Primary sources Edit Dewey George Autobiography of George Dewey Admiral of the Navy 1913 full text online written in collaboration with journalist Frederick Palmer as ghostwriter using the reports of Dewey s aide Nathan Sargent Mahan Alfred Thayer 1899 Lessons of the War with Spain And Other Articles Little Brown Low Boston pp 320 UrlExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Dewey Dewey biography on Spanish American War Centennial Website includes links to some of Dewey s letters Dewey biographical information on Naval Historical Center website nbsp Texts on Wikisource Dewey George Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 United States v Dewey 1902 1903 Dewey George Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 To the Returning Brave a poem by Florence Earle Coates Works by or about George Dewey at Internet Archive Works by George Dewey at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Military officesPreceded byFrederick V McNair Sr Commander Asiatic Squadron3 January 1898 5 June 1899 Succeeded byJohn C WatsonPreceded byNewly created Member of the Schurman CommissionMarch 4 1899 March 16 1900 Succeeded byLuke Edward Wright Taft Commission Honorary titlesPreceded byPierre Charles L Enfant Persons who have lain in state or honorin the United States Capitol rotundaJanuary 20 1917 Succeeded byUnknown Soldierof World War I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Dewey amp oldid 1179400026, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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