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E. T. Pollock

Edwin Taylor Pollock (October 25, 1870 – June 4, 1943) was a career officer in the United States Navy, serving in the Spanish–American War and in World War I. He was later promoted to the rank of captain.

E. T. Pollock
Capt. Pollock as Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Observatory
Birth nameEdwin Taylor Pollock
Born(1870-10-25)October 25, 1870
Mount Gilead, Ohio
DiedJune 4, 1943(1943-06-04) (aged 72)
Washington, D.C.
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1893–1927
RankCaptain
Commands heldUSS Virginia
USS Kearsarge
USS Salem
USS Alabama
USS Hancock
USS George Washington
USS Oklahoma
Commandant U.S. Naval Station Tutuila
Superintendent U.S. Naval Observatory
Battles/warsBattle of Santiago de Cuba
AwardsNavy Cross
Other workMilitary Governor of the U. S. Virgin Islands (acting) and American Samoa

As a young ensign, Pollock served aboard USS New York during the Spanish–American War. After the war, he rose through the ranks, served on several ships, and did important research into wireless communication. In 1917, less than a week before the United States entered World War I, he won a race against a fellow officer to receive the U.S. Virgin Islands from Denmark, and served as the territory's first acting governor. During the war, he was promoted to captain and a vessel under his command transported 60,000 American soldiers to France, for which he was awarded a Navy Cross. Afterward, he was made the eighth Naval Governor of American Samoa and then the superintendent of the United States Naval Observatory, before retiring in 1927.

Early career edit

Originally from Mount Gilead, Ohio, Pollock attended the United States Naval Academy and, as a midshipman, was assigned to USS Lancaster and USS Monocacy.[1] He graduated with a rank of ensign in 1893.

After graduation, Pollock returned to Ohio and married Beatrice E. Law Hale on December 5.[2] Two weeks later, he was assigned to the cruiser USS New York during its initial shake-down.[3] He was subsequently assigned to the gunboat USS Machias for an expedition to China.[4] He remained in China for two and a half years as part of the Asiatic Squadron, then transferring to USS Detroit before returning home in 1897.[5] On his return home, the Spanish–American War was heating up and he was reassigned to New York, to see service in Cuba and Puerto Rico, eventually taking part in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba.[6]

In January 1900, he was promoted to lieutenant and assigned to USS Alliance.[7] Over the following year he served on USS Dolphin and USS Buffalo.[8] On board Buffalo, he returned to the Asiatic Squadron near China and was finally transferred to USS Brooklyn, the squadron's flagship.[9] He remained on board Brooklyn, until its return home in May 1902.[10] After a brief leave, Pollock was assigned to the USS Chesapeake (as the watch and division officer), a position he held for more than one year.[11] He was transferred to USS Cincinnati, serving for another year, and then to Cavite Naval Base.[12] At Cavite, he was promoted to lieutenant commander in February 1906.[13]

His first duty as a lieutenant commander was on USS Alabama, as the navigator.[14] In 1910, Pollock was reassigned to USS Massachusetts, where he was promoted to commander in March 1911.[15][16]

On his promotion, Pollock commanded USS Virginia and USS Kearsarge, before being transferred to the United States Naval Observatory.[17] During his command of Kearsarge, Pollock briefly commanded USS Salem for a world-record setting wireless experiment. For this feat, Salem was outfitted with 16 different wireless telegraph technologies and sailed to Gibraltar, with Pollock commanding. On arrival, they tested these technologies and set a world-record for longest wireless telegraph distance, 2,400 miles (3,900 km), using a "Poulsen Apparatus", based on principles by Valdemar Poulsen. Experiments were also conducted to determine wireless characteristics during inclement weather and during both the day and night.[18] In 1916, he was put in command of USS Alabama, the ship on which he had been the navigator.[19]

U.S. Virgin Islands edit

 
"Beautiful Harbor of St. Thomas, West Indies", circa 1900

In the final days before the entrance of the United States into World War I, the U.S. military was concerned that Germany was planning to purchase or seize the Danish West Indies for use as a submarine or zeppelin base.[20] At the time, Charlotte Amalie on Saint Thomas was considered the best port in the Caribbean outside of Cuba, and Coral Bay on Saint John was considered the safest harbor in the area.[21] Although the United States was not yet at war with Germany, the U.S. signed a treaty to purchase the territory from Denmark for 25 million dollars on March 28, 1917. President Woodrow Wilson nominated James Harrison Oliver to be the first military governor.[22] The United States announced plans to build a naval base in the territory to aid in the protection of the Panama Canal.[23]

Oliver was unable to travel immediately to the Islands and the honor of being the first Acting Governor of the United States Virgin Islands was decided in an unusual way. Both Pollock, commanding USS Hancock, and B. B. Blerer's USS Olympia were dispatched to the Islands in a race. The commander of the ship that arrived first would officiate at the transfer ceremony and be acting governor.[22] Pollock arrived first and the transfer ceremony took place on March 31, 1917, on Saint Thomas. Blerer officiated at a smaller ceremony on Saint Croix. Present for the handover was the crew of the Danish station cruiser Valkyrien and the former island legislature.[24] The United States declared war on Germany on April 6, less than a week after securing the islands. Oliver was confirmed by Congress on April 20 and relieved Pollock as governor.

World War I edit

During the war, Pollock was appointed as captain on USS George Washington, a German cruise liner which was seized by the United States government for use as a military transport ship. She was rechristened George Washington in September 1917 and Pollock was given her command on October 1, 1917. That December, she set out with her first load of troops. During the war, Pollock successfully transported 60,000 American soldiers to France in 18 round trips.[25] In 1918, George Washington was tasked to deliver President Woodrow Wilson to the Paris Peace Conference, though Pollock would not make the trip. He was reassigned on September 29, 1918.[26]

While on board George Washington, Pollock and Chaplain Paul F. Bloomhardt edited a daily newspaper. After the war, stories from the paper were assembled and published in 1919 by J. J. Little & Ives co. as Hatchet of the United States Ship "George Washington". A short review of the work by Outlook magazine called the book "readable" and "admirably illustrated". It "abounds in clever bits of fun, queer and notable incidents, and sound and patriotic editorials."[27] After the war, he was eventually reassigned to the battleship USS Oklahoma, to serve in the Pacific fleet.[25] On November 10, 1920, Pollock was awarded a Navy Cross for his services during the war.[28]

American Samoa edit

 
Map of American Samoa

On November 30, 1921, Pollock was transferred from command of Oklahoma to become the Military Governor of American Samoa.[29] Events both personal and political had led to a previous governor, Warren Terhune's, suicide on November 3, 1920, and the appointment of Governor Waldo A. Evans to conduct a court of inquiry into the situation and to restore order. Pollock succeeded Evans, who had successfully restored the government and productivity of the islands after a period of unrest.[30] At this time, American Samoa was administered by a team of twelve officers and a governor, with a total population of approximately 8,000 people. The islands were primarily important due to the excellent harbor at Pago Pago.[31]

Beginning in 1920, a Mau movement, from the Samoan word for "opposition", was forming in American Samoa in protest of several Naval government policies, some of which had been implemented by Terhune but which were not revoked following his death, which natives (and some non-natives) found heavy-handed. The movement itself may have been inspired by a different and older Mau movement in nearby Western Samoa, against the German and then New Zealand colonial powers. Some of the initial grievances of the movement included the quality of roads in the territory, a marriage law which largely forbade natives from marrying non-natives, and a justice system which discriminated against locals in part because laws were not often available in Samoan. In addition, the United States Navy also prohibited an assembly of Samoan chiefs, whom the movement considered the real government of the territory. Surprisingly, the movement had grown to include several prominent officers of former Governor Terhune's staff, including his executive officer. It culminated in a proclamation by Samuel S. Ripley, an American Samoan from an afakasi or mixed-blood Samoan family, with large communal property in the islands, that he was the leader of a legitimate successor government to pre-1899 Samoa. Evans also met with the high chiefs and secured their assent to continued Naval government. Ripley, who had traveled to Washington to meet with Secretary of the Navy Edwin C. Denby, was not permitted by Evans to enter the port at American Samoa and returned to exile in California, where he later became the mayor of Richmond.[30]

After being appointed as governor, Pollock's continued the colonization work started by his predecessor. Prior to traveling to the territory, he met with Ripley in San Francisco, California. Although Ripley maintained that American "occupation" of Samoa was usurpation, he agreed to allow Pollock to govern unfettered and to provide him with copies of his letters. Almost immediately after arriving on the island, Pollock and Secretary of Native Affairs S. D. Hall met with representatives of the Mau, becoming the first governor to do so. Shortly afterwards, some members of the Mau disbanded, though the movement would continue in some form for another 13 years.[30]

Pollock's remaining time as governor was less eventful. While exploring Tonga in May 1923, he discovered a turtle which had been branded by Captain Cook on his expedition there in 1773. The turtle was thus known to have lived more than 150 years.[32] He was ordered home on July 26, 1923.[33]

United States Naval Observatory edit

 
Asaph Hall's telescope at the U.S. Naval Observatory

Immediately on leaving Samoa, Pollock was appointed superintendent of the United States Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., replacing outgoing Rear Admiral William D. MacDougal.[34]

On August 22, 1924, Mars came within 34,630,000 miles (55,730,000 km) of Earth. The U.S. Naval Observatory made no formal observations of the planet, but Pollock and the son of astronomer Asaph Hall ceremonially re-enacted Hall's 1877 discoveries of the moons Phobos and Deimos with his original 17-inch (430 mm) telescope.[35] They also made observations to calculate the masses of the two moons.[36]

On January 24, 1925, Pollock commanded the dirigible USS Los Angeles on a flight from Lakehurst, New Jersey, to photograph a solar eclipse from an altitude of 8,000 feet (2,400 m). This was the first time an eclipse had been photographed from the air.[37]

After retirement edit

Pollock retired from service in 1927 and was replaced as superintendent by Captain Charles F. Freeman.[38] In 1930, Pollock and his wife purchased a summer home in Jamestown, Rhode Island, while continuing to maintain their main residence in Washington, D.C. In 1932, he was made a director of the Jamestown Historical Society.[39] He also became interested in genealogy and published several works on his family's history through the 1930s.[40] He died on June 4, 1943, after a long illness and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery on June 7, 1943.[41]

Works edit

  • Hatchet of the United States Ship "George Washington", edited by Pollock and Paul F. Bloomhardt. A compilation of stories from The Hatchet, a daily printed on board George Washington during the First World War. Published 1919.

References edit

  1. ^ "Army and Navy". New York Times. 1891-06-03. p. 6.; "Cadets To Be Examined". New York Times. 1893-04-13. p. 3.
  2. ^ Ulrich, Ron. "Edwin Taylor Pollock/Beatrice E. Law Hale". Retrieved 2007-01-22.
  3. ^ "New-York's Trial Ended". New York Times. 1893-12-15. p. 3.
  4. ^ "Machias Will Sail For China". New York Times. 1894-08-26. p. 5.
  5. ^ "Old Salts Spin Yarns". New York Times. 1897-05-18. p. 3.
  6. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1898-04-28. p. 3.
  7. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1900-01-28. p. 4.
  8. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1900-05-24. p. 5.; "The United Service". New York Times. 1900-11-21. p. 11.
  9. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1901-03-09. p. 5.
  10. ^ "The Brooklyn Home Again". New York Times. 1902-05-02. p. 3.
  11. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1903-05-23. p. 14.
  12. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1904-08-14. p. 13.; "Orders to Naval Officers". Washington Post. 1905-07-01. p. R8.
  13. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1904-08-14. p. 13.; "The United Service". New York Times. 1906-02-03. p. 7.
  14. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1906-09-12. p. 6.
  15. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1907-05-02. p. 9.
  16. ^ "United States Navy". New York Times. 1910-08-25. p. E2.
  17. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1912-06-14. p. 21.; "The United Service". New York Times. 1913-03-27. p. 21.
  18. ^ "Wireless Feat Breaks Record". Los Angeles Times. 1913-03-12. p. I5.
  19. ^ "The United Service". New York Times. 1916-01-08. p. 17.
  20. ^ "Virgin Island Deal Foiled Berlin Plan". Washington Post. 1917-04-10. p. 1.
  21. ^ Wilfred Schoff (1916-08-18). "The Danish West Indies Ought to Pay". Los Angeles Times. p. II4.
  22. ^ a b "Oliver to Govern Our New Islands". New York Times. 1917-03-29. p. 12.
  23. ^ "Pay Danes For Island". Washington Post. 1917-04-01. p. 10.
  24. ^ "U.S. Flag Over Virgin Islands". Washington Post. 1917-04-02. p. 5.
  25. ^ a b "'Gobs' Play Hosts to Navy Officers". New York Times. 1921-06-21. p. 20.
  26. ^ Edwin Taylor Pollock and Paul F. Bloomhardt, ed. (1919). The Hatchet of the United States ship "George Washington" (2nd ed.). New York: J.J. Little & Ives Co. p. 236.
  27. ^ "War Books". Outlook: 581. 1919-08-13.
  28. ^ "Navy War Honors Omit Sims' Name". Washington Post. 1920-11-11. p. 4.
  29. ^ "Denby Appoints Governors". New York Times. 1921-12-01. p. 24.
  30. ^ a b c Gray, J. A. C. (1960). Amerika Samoa: History Of American Samoa And Its United States Naval Administration. Annapolis, Maryland: United States Naval Institute. pp. 194–210.
  31. ^ Overstreet, L. M. (1922-10-18). "Always On Guard". Outlook. pp. 290–294.
  32. ^ "Turtle Branded by Capt. Cook In 1773 Is Now Found Alive". New York Times. 1923-06-28. p. 1.
  33. ^ "Naval Orders". New York Times. 1923-07-28. p. 19.
  34. ^ "News of Army and Navy". Washington Post. 1923-09-02. p. 15.
  35. ^ "Mars to be Photographed". New York Times. 1924-08-20. p. 12.
  36. ^ "Army Radio Force to Listen For Signals from Martians". Washington Post. 1924-08-21. p. 9.
  37. ^ "Scientists on Los Angeles Praise First Dirigible Eclipse Flight". New York Times. 1925-01-25. pp. 1–2.
  38. ^ "Capt. E.T. Pollock Rites Tomorrow". Washington Post. 1943-06-06. p. M15.
  39. ^ "Captain E. T. Pollock Dies In Washington". Newport Mercury And Weekly News. 1943-06-11. p. 3.
  40. ^ Pitoni, Ven (1985-09-20). "What's In a Name?". Fredrick Post. p. A-7.
  41. ^ Sorensen, Stan (13 June 2008). (PDF). Tapuitea. Vol. III, no. 24. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 June 2008. Retrieved 2011-08-16.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by
Henri Konow
(Acting – Final Danish Governor)
Governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands
1917
(Acting)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of American Samoa
1922–1923
Succeeded by

pollock, edwin, taylor, pollock, october, 1870, june, 1943, career, officer, united, states, navy, serving, spanish, american, world, later, promoted, rank, captain, capt, pollock, superintendent, naval, observatorybirth, nameedwin, taylor, pollockborn, 1870, . Edwin Taylor Pollock October 25 1870 June 4 1943 was a career officer in the United States Navy serving in the Spanish American War and in World War I He was later promoted to the rank of captain E T PollockCapt Pollock as Superintendent of the U S Naval ObservatoryBirth nameEdwin Taylor PollockBorn 1870 10 25 October 25 1870Mount Gilead OhioDiedJune 4 1943 1943 06 04 aged 72 Washington D C AllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1893 1927RankCaptainCommands heldUSS VirginiaUSS KearsargeUSS SalemUSS AlabamaUSS HancockUSS George WashingtonUSS OklahomaCommandant U S Naval Station TutuilaSuperintendent U S Naval ObservatoryBattles warsBattle of Santiago de CubaAwardsNavy CrossOther workMilitary Governor of the U S Virgin Islands acting and American Samoa As a young ensign Pollock served aboard USS New York during the Spanish American War After the war he rose through the ranks served on several ships and did important research into wireless communication In 1917 less than a week before the United States entered World War I he won a race against a fellow officer to receive the U S Virgin Islands from Denmark and served as the territory s first acting governor During the war he was promoted to captain and a vessel under his command transported 60 000 American soldiers to France for which he was awarded a Navy Cross Afterward he was made the eighth Naval Governor of American Samoa and then the superintendent of the United States Naval Observatory before retiring in 1927 Contents 1 Early career 2 U S Virgin Islands 3 World War I 4 American Samoa 5 United States Naval Observatory 6 After retirement 7 Works 8 References 9 External linksEarly career editOriginally from Mount Gilead Ohio Pollock attended the United States Naval Academy and as a midshipman was assigned to USS Lancaster and USS Monocacy 1 He graduated with a rank of ensign in 1893 After graduation Pollock returned to Ohio and married Beatrice E Law Hale on December 5 2 Two weeks later he was assigned to the cruiser USS New York during its initial shake down 3 He was subsequently assigned to the gunboat USS Machias for an expedition to China 4 He remained in China for two and a half years as part of the Asiatic Squadron then transferring to USS Detroit before returning home in 1897 5 On his return home the Spanish American War was heating up and he was reassigned to New York to see service in Cuba and Puerto Rico eventually taking part in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba 6 In January 1900 he was promoted to lieutenant and assigned to USS Alliance 7 Over the following year he served on USS Dolphin and USS Buffalo 8 On board Buffalo he returned to the Asiatic Squadron near China and was finally transferred to USS Brooklyn the squadron s flagship 9 He remained on board Brooklyn until its return home in May 1902 10 After a brief leave Pollock was assigned to the USS Chesapeake as the watch and division officer a position he held for more than one year 11 He was transferred to USS Cincinnati serving for another year and then to Cavite Naval Base 12 At Cavite he was promoted to lieutenant commander in February 1906 13 His first duty as a lieutenant commander was on USS Alabama as the navigator 14 In 1910 Pollock was reassigned to USS Massachusetts where he was promoted to commander in March 1911 15 16 On his promotion Pollock commanded USS Virginia and USS Kearsarge before being transferred to the United States Naval Observatory 17 During his command of Kearsarge Pollock briefly commanded USS Salem for a world record setting wireless experiment For this feat Salem was outfitted with 16 different wireless telegraph technologies and sailed to Gibraltar with Pollock commanding On arrival they tested these technologies and set a world record for longest wireless telegraph distance 2 400 miles 3 900 km using a Poulsen Apparatus based on principles by Valdemar Poulsen Experiments were also conducted to determine wireless characteristics during inclement weather and during both the day and night 18 In 1916 he was put in command of USS Alabama the ship on which he had been the navigator 19 U S Virgin Islands edit nbsp Beautiful Harbor of St Thomas West Indies circa 1900In the final days before the entrance of the United States into World War I the U S military was concerned that Germany was planning to purchase or seize the Danish West Indies for use as a submarine or zeppelin base 20 At the time Charlotte Amalie on Saint Thomas was considered the best port in the Caribbean outside of Cuba and Coral Bay on Saint John was considered the safest harbor in the area 21 Although the United States was not yet at war with Germany the U S signed a treaty to purchase the territory from Denmark for 25 million dollars on March 28 1917 President Woodrow Wilson nominated James Harrison Oliver to be the first military governor 22 The United States announced plans to build a naval base in the territory to aid in the protection of the Panama Canal 23 Oliver was unable to travel immediately to the Islands and the honor of being the first Acting Governor of the United States Virgin Islands was decided in an unusual way Both Pollock commanding USS Hancock and B B Blerer s USS Olympia were dispatched to the Islands in a race The commander of the ship that arrived first would officiate at the transfer ceremony and be acting governor 22 Pollock arrived first and the transfer ceremony took place on March 31 1917 on Saint Thomas Blerer officiated at a smaller ceremony on Saint Croix Present for the handover was the crew of the Danish station cruiser Valkyrien and the former island legislature 24 The United States declared war on Germany on April 6 less than a week after securing the islands Oliver was confirmed by Congress on April 20 and relieved Pollock as governor World War I editDuring the war Pollock was appointed as captain on USS George Washington a German cruise liner which was seized by the United States government for use as a military transport ship She was rechristened George Washington in September 1917 and Pollock was given her command on October 1 1917 That December she set out with her first load of troops During the war Pollock successfully transported 60 000 American soldiers to France in 18 round trips 25 In 1918 George Washington was tasked to deliver President Woodrow Wilson to the Paris Peace Conference though Pollock would not make the trip He was reassigned on September 29 1918 26 While on board George Washington Pollock and Chaplain Paul F Bloomhardt edited a daily newspaper After the war stories from the paper were assembled and published in 1919 by J J Little amp Ives co as Hatchet of the United States Ship George Washington A short review of the work by Outlook magazine called the book readable and admirably illustrated It abounds in clever bits of fun queer and notable incidents and sound and patriotic editorials 27 After the war he was eventually reassigned to the battleship USS Oklahoma to serve in the Pacific fleet 25 On November 10 1920 Pollock was awarded a Navy Cross for his services during the war 28 American Samoa edit nbsp Map of American SamoaOn November 30 1921 Pollock was transferred from command of Oklahoma to become the Military Governor of American Samoa 29 Events both personal and political had led to a previous governor Warren Terhune s suicide on November 3 1920 and the appointment of Governor Waldo A Evans to conduct a court of inquiry into the situation and to restore order Pollock succeeded Evans who had successfully restored the government and productivity of the islands after a period of unrest 30 At this time American Samoa was administered by a team of twelve officers and a governor with a total population of approximately 8 000 people The islands were primarily important due to the excellent harbor at Pago Pago 31 Beginning in 1920 a Mau movement from the Samoan word for opposition was forming in American Samoa in protest of several Naval government policies some of which had been implemented by Terhune but which were not revoked following his death which natives and some non natives found heavy handed The movement itself may have been inspired by a different and older Mau movement in nearby Western Samoa against the German and then New Zealand colonial powers Some of the initial grievances of the movement included the quality of roads in the territory a marriage law which largely forbade natives from marrying non natives and a justice system which discriminated against locals in part because laws were not often available in Samoan In addition the United States Navy also prohibited an assembly of Samoan chiefs whom the movement considered the real government of the territory Surprisingly the movement had grown to include several prominent officers of former Governor Terhune s staff including his executive officer It culminated in a proclamation by Samuel S Ripley an American Samoan from an afakasi or mixed blood Samoan family with large communal property in the islands that he was the leader of a legitimate successor government to pre 1899 Samoa Evans also met with the high chiefs and secured their assent to continued Naval government Ripley who had traveled to Washington to meet with Secretary of the Navy Edwin C Denby was not permitted by Evans to enter the port at American Samoa and returned to exile in California where he later became the mayor of Richmond 30 After being appointed as governor Pollock s continued the colonization work started by his predecessor Prior to traveling to the territory he met with Ripley in San Francisco California Although Ripley maintained that American occupation of Samoa was usurpation he agreed to allow Pollock to govern unfettered and to provide him with copies of his letters Almost immediately after arriving on the island Pollock and Secretary of Native Affairs S D Hall met with representatives of the Mau becoming the first governor to do so Shortly afterwards some members of the Mau disbanded though the movement would continue in some form for another 13 years 30 Pollock s remaining time as governor was less eventful While exploring Tonga in May 1923 he discovered a turtle which had been branded by Captain Cook on his expedition there in 1773 The turtle was thus known to have lived more than 150 years 32 He was ordered home on July 26 1923 33 United States Naval Observatory edit nbsp Asaph Hall s telescope at the U S Naval Observatory Immediately on leaving Samoa Pollock was appointed superintendent of the United States Naval Observatory in Washington D C replacing outgoing Rear Admiral William D MacDougal 34 On August 22 1924 Mars came within 34 630 000 miles 55 730 000 km of Earth The U S Naval Observatory made no formal observations of the planet but Pollock and the son of astronomer Asaph Hall ceremonially re enacted Hall s 1877 discoveries of the moons Phobos and Deimos with his original 17 inch 430 mm telescope 35 They also made observations to calculate the masses of the two moons 36 On January 24 1925 Pollock commanded the dirigible USS Los Angeles on a flight from Lakehurst New Jersey to photograph a solar eclipse from an altitude of 8 000 feet 2 400 m This was the first time an eclipse had been photographed from the air 37 After retirement editPollock retired from service in 1927 and was replaced as superintendent by Captain Charles F Freeman 38 In 1930 Pollock and his wife purchased a summer home in Jamestown Rhode Island while continuing to maintain their main residence in Washington D C In 1932 he was made a director of the Jamestown Historical Society 39 He also became interested in genealogy and published several works on his family s history through the 1930s 40 He died on June 4 1943 after a long illness and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery on June 7 1943 41 Works editHatchet of the United States Ship George Washington edited by Pollock and Paul F Bloomhardt A compilation of stories from The Hatchet a daily printed on board George Washington during the First World War Published 1919 References edit Army and Navy New York Times 1891 06 03 p 6 Cadets To Be Examined New York Times 1893 04 13 p 3 Ulrich Ron Edwin Taylor Pollock Beatrice E Law Hale Retrieved 2007 01 22 New York s Trial Ended New York Times 1893 12 15 p 3 Machias Will Sail For China New York Times 1894 08 26 p 5 Old Salts Spin Yarns New York Times 1897 05 18 p 3 The United Service New York Times 1898 04 28 p 3 The United Service New York Times 1900 01 28 p 4 The United Service New York Times 1900 05 24 p 5 The United Service New York Times 1900 11 21 p 11 The United Service New York Times 1901 03 09 p 5 The Brooklyn Home Again New York Times 1902 05 02 p 3 The United Service New York Times 1903 05 23 p 14 The United Service New York Times 1904 08 14 p 13 Orders to Naval Officers Washington Post 1905 07 01 p R8 The United Service New York Times 1904 08 14 p 13 The United Service New York Times 1906 02 03 p 7 The United Service New York Times 1906 09 12 p 6 The United Service New York Times 1907 05 02 p 9 United States Navy New York Times 1910 08 25 p E2 The United Service New York Times 1912 06 14 p 21 The United Service New York Times 1913 03 27 p 21 Wireless Feat Breaks Record Los Angeles Times 1913 03 12 p I5 The United Service New York Times 1916 01 08 p 17 Virgin Island Deal Foiled Berlin Plan Washington Post 1917 04 10 p 1 Wilfred Schoff 1916 08 18 The Danish West Indies Ought to Pay Los Angeles Times p II4 a b Oliver to Govern Our New Islands New York Times 1917 03 29 p 12 Pay Danes For Island Washington Post 1917 04 01 p 10 U S Flag Over Virgin Islands Washington Post 1917 04 02 p 5 a b Gobs Play Hosts to Navy Officers New York Times 1921 06 21 p 20 Edwin Taylor Pollock and Paul F Bloomhardt ed 1919 The Hatchet of the United States ship George Washington 2nd ed New York J J Little amp Ives Co p 236 War Books Outlook 581 1919 08 13 Navy War Honors Omit Sims Name Washington Post 1920 11 11 p 4 Denby Appoints Governors New York Times 1921 12 01 p 24 a b c Gray J A C 1960 Amerika Samoa History Of American Samoa And Its United States Naval Administration Annapolis Maryland United States Naval Institute pp 194 210 Overstreet L M 1922 10 18 Always On Guard Outlook pp 290 294 Turtle Branded by Capt Cook In 1773 Is Now Found Alive New York Times 1923 06 28 p 1 Naval Orders New York Times 1923 07 28 p 19 News of Army and Navy Washington Post 1923 09 02 p 15 Mars to be Photographed New York Times 1924 08 20 p 12 Army Radio Force to Listen For Signals from Martians Washington Post 1924 08 21 p 9 Scientists on Los Angeles Praise First Dirigible Eclipse Flight New York Times 1925 01 25 pp 1 2 Capt E T Pollock Rites Tomorrow Washington Post 1943 06 06 p M15 Captain E T Pollock Dies In Washington Newport Mercury And Weekly News 1943 06 11 p 3 Pitoni Ven 1985 09 20 What s In a Name Fredrick Post p A 7 Sorensen Stan 13 June 2008 Historical Notes PDF Tapuitea Vol III no 24 p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 18 June 2008 Retrieved 2011 08 16 External links editWorks by or about E T Pollock at Internet Archive Political offices Preceded byHenri Konow Acting Final Danish Governor Governor of the U S Virgin Islands1917 Acting Succeeded byJames Harrison Oliver Preceded byWaldo A Evans Governor of American Samoa1922 1923 Succeeded byEdward Stanley Kellogg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title E T Pollock amp oldid 1190747538, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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