Charles E. Vreeland Explained

Charles Edward Vreeland
Birth Date:10 March 1852
Birth Place:Newark, New Jersey, US
Death Place:Atlantic City, New Jersey, US
Branch:United States Navy
Serviceyears:1870–1914
Rank:Rear admiral
Commands:
  • Head of the Office of Naval Intelligence
Battles:Spanish–American War

Charles Edward Vreeland (March 10, 1852September 27, 1916) was an officer of the United States Navy who reached the rank of rear admiral.

Early life

Born in Newark, New Jersey, Vreeland enlisted in the Navy as a naval apprentice early in 1866. After a brief service in the he was given a presidential appointment soon afterwards to enter the United States Naval Academy on July 27, 1866, graduating from that institution on June 7, 1870, as a passed midshipman. He received his commission as an ensign in November 1873 after a series of cruises aboard screw sloops.

Naval career

Vreeland was further promoted to master and then lieutenant after successive tours of duty on board the screw steamer, the gunboat and the sloop-of-war . He then was assigned to the Nautical Almanac Office of the United States Naval Observatory in November 1881 after a brief period ashore awaiting orders. In March 1884, hebegan a three-year tour at sea aboard the sloop-of-war, after which he was assigned for two years at the U.S. Navy Bureau of Navigation. He then was assigned briefly (from July to September 1889) to the Office of Naval Intelligence and reported to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey late in October 1889, a posting he took until the spring of 1893. He then was assigned a series of tours as naval attaché, first to the Kingdom of Italy in Rome, then to Austria-Hungary in Vienna, and finally to the German Empire in Berlin.

After returning to the United States late in 1896, Vreeland was posted to the battleship in mid-January 1897, and served aboard her until he was transferred to the gunboat at the end of June 1897. He was named executive officer of the dispatch vessel in April 1898, but the Spanish-American War broke out that month, and he remained aboard Helena. Aboard Helena, he served on wartime blockade duty off the port of Manzanillo, Cuba, remaining on that duty until the end of July 1898. He finally assumed duty as Dolphin′s executive officer on August 24, 1898.

Vreeland was detached from Dolphin to serve aboard the protected cruiser on November 6, 1898, but was ordered to the gunboat instead on December 30, 1898, due to a change in orders. Vreeland was promoted to lieutenant commander, and served aboard various vessels in the Asiatic Squadron. He returned to the United States aboard the hospital ship in March 1900. From April 1900 to sometime before August 1902 he was a member of the Board of Inspection and Survey, during which time he was promoted to full commander in mid-August 1901. After his duty on the Board, he supervised the fitting-out of the new monitor and assumed command upon her commissioning on October 28, 1902.

Two years later, Vreeland relinquished command of the monitor (by then renamed USS Ozark)> He served ashore in a series of special assignments for the United States Department of the Navy for the next few years, during which he received a promotion to captain on April 13, 1906. After finishing his assignments ashore on April 17, 1907, with the end of a tour in Washington, D.C., he went to the New York Shipbuilding Corporation in Camden, New Jersey, the next day to commission the new . He commanded the battleship for the next two years, which was an auspicious time, for Kansas was picked to be part of the "Great White Fleet" that sailed around the world between December 1907 and February 1909. Soon after the fleet returned to Hampton Roads on February 22, 1909, he gave up his command of Kansas and returned home to await orders. On May 10, 1909, he succeeded Captain Raymond P. Rodgers as Chief Intelligence Officer, the head of the Office of Naval Intelligence, until December 8, 1909, when he in turn was succeeded by Captain Templin M. Potts.

As his promotion to rear admiral was imminent, Vreeland broke his flag aboard the battleship as Commander, 4th Division, United States Atlantic Fleet. On December 27, 1909, he was promoted to rear admiral.

On April 19, 1911, Vreeland reported ashore for further duty in Washington, D.C. In the newly devised aide system for managing the U.S. Navy, he became one of the four principal advisors of the United States Secretary of the Navy, George von Lengerke Meyer. As Aide for Inspections, he reached the pinnacle of naval command. During his tenure, he represented the Navy at the coronation of King George V of the United Kingdom, as well as heading the so-called "Vreeland Board" which reinvestigated the sinking of the armored cruiser (often called "battleship") in an explosion in the harbor at Havana, Cuba, in February 1898, the controversial report of which—now widely regarded as erroneous—concluded that an external explosion sank Maine.

On December 12, 1911, Vreeland tour of duty as Aide for Inspections ended and he succeeded Rear Admiral Richard Wainwright as the second Aide for Operations. While in that position, Vreeland struggled to improve the defenses in the Philippine Islands, agitated for increased naval construction, particularly of battlecruisers, and supported the development of U.S. naval aviation. It was also during his tenure that naval aviation found a permanent home in Pensacola, Florida. On February 11, 1913, he was succeeded by Bradley A. Fiske as Aide for Operations, and Vreeland finished his naval career as a member of both the General Board of the United States Navy and the Joint Army and Navy Board. He retired on March 10, 1914.

Vreeland died in Atlantic City, New Jersey, after a brief retirement marked by illness.

Namesake

The was named after Vreeland.

External links