George W. Melville, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

George W. Melville

American admiral and engineer

Date of Birth: 10-Jan-1841

Place of Birth: New York City, New York, United States

Date of Death: 17-Mar-1912

Profession: naval officer, polar explorer, marine engineer

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Capricorn


Show Famous Birthdays Today, United States

👉 Worldwide Celebrity Birthdays Today

About George W. Melville

  • George Wallace Melville (January 10, 1841 – March 17, 1912) was an American engineer, Arctic explorer, and author.
  • As chief of the Bureau of Steam Engineering, he headed a time of great expansion, technological progress and change, often in defiance of the conservative element of the Navy hierarchy.
  • He superintended the design of 120 ships and introduced the water-tube boiler, the triple-screw propulsion system, vertical engines, the floating repair ship, and the "distilling ship." Appointed engineer in chief of the Navy, Melville reformed the service entirely, putting Navy engineers on a professional rather than an artisan footing. Melville also established an engineering experiment station near the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis.
  • As engineer-in-chief of the Navy, he fought hard to get an appropriation of $400,000 for an experiment and testing laboratory to be located at Annapolis.
  • He argued that such a facility would be a dependable means for testing machinery and equipment before its installation in Navy ships and aid training engineering officers.
  • Both, he surmised, would increase the efficiency of the Navy. He made his first trip to the Arctic in 1873, when he volunteered to help rescue 19 survivors of the Polaris expedition.
  • Six years later, he volunteered to accompany Lieutenant Commander George W.
  • De Long on his Jeannette expedition, an arctic expedition on board USS Jeannette to the Bering Strait in search of a quick way to the North Pole.
  • Jeannette became icebound and was eventually crushed; Melville, the 10 others in his small boat, and two from De Long's boat, were the only survivors. Despite the extreme length and hardships of the trip, he returned in search of De Long and others who might possibly still be alive.
  • He found none but retrieved all records of the expedition.
  • Congress awarded Melville the Congressional Gold Jeannette Medal for his gallantry and resourcefulness; the Navy advanced him 15 numbers on the promotion list.
  • He wrote of the De Long expedition in his book, In the Lena Delta, published in 1884.

Read more at Wikipedia