Harold G. Bowen Sr. Explained

Harold Gardiner Bowen Sr.
Birth Date:1883 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Providence, Rhode Island
Death Place:Providence, Rhode Island
Placeofburial:Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia
Allegiance:United States of America
Branch: United States Navy
Rank: Vice admiral
Commands:
Office of Naval Research
Battles:World War I
World War II
Awards:Distinguished Service Medal
Spouse:Edith Brownlie Bowen (1890–1968)
Relations:VADM Harold G. Bowen Jr. (1912–2000)

Harold Gardiner Bowen Sr. (6 November 1883 – 1 August 1965) was a United States Navy Vice admiral, former head of the Office of Naval Research and a mechanical engineer. He was the recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal and he was the namesake of . His son Harold G. Bowen Jr. also became a Vice Admiral, known for his involvement in the inquiry into the Pueblo incident.

Early life and education

Harold Gardiner Bowen was born 6 November 1883 in Providence, Rhode Island, to Amos Miller Bowen and Eliza Rhodes Henry.[1] His father had been a Union officer during the Civil War and served in the Rhode Island House of Representatives for six years. Bowen graduated from the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland in January 1905.[2]

Bowen married Edith Brownlie of Vallejo, California, 27 September 1911 at the First Presbyterian Church in Vallejo.[3] He earned a Master's degree in mechanical engineering from Columbia University in 1914.[4]

Naval career

Commission and early career

Upon graduation in 1905, Bowen was assigned to and then to in 1906. He received his commission as ensign upon passing his final examinations as a midshipman in the spring of 1907, after which he was assigned to during the first leg of the Great White Fleet. He transferred to in the spring of 1908 and eventually became the Chief Engineer's first assistant.[5]

In 1910, Bowen's request for a transfer to as the executive officer was granted.[6] Aboard Hopkins he learned a great deal about engineering due to the poor condition of the ship and eventually became the engineering officer as well as the executive officer, with only two officers aboard. Hopkins suffered a boiler accident and two sailors were killed, but Bowen was away from the ship that day taking a promotions exam. After the commanding officer departed, Bowen was the only officer left on Hopkins and became commanding officer as a lieutenant.[7]

Bowen went on to serve as Chief Engineer on several ships and was attached to in 1914, followed by (ex-Pennsylvania) in late 1915[8] and in late 1918.[9]

Bowen spent three years ashore ending July 1922, part of it as a shop superintendent and later as Engineer officer of the Mare Island Navy Yard.[10] He became Assistant Fleet Engineer under Admiral Edward Walter Eberle, Commander of the Battle Fleet, embarked on . He was later the Fleet Materiel Officer for the Battle Fleet under Admiral Samuel Robison, aboard . Bowen returned to shore as Production Manager of Puget Sound Navy Yard, prior to 1930.[11]

Bureau of Engineering

Bowen was the Assistant Chief of the Bureau of Engineering from 1931 to 1935 and then the Chief of the Bureau of engineering from 1935 to 1939.[12] While there Bowen was a champion for research and development (R&D) of high pressure, high temperature steam propulsion. This technology was said radically to have changed maritime steam turbine operation, increasing the speed and range of Navy ships in World War II.

Naval Research Laboratory

Bowen was Director of the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) from 1939 to 1941. According to Amato, in "Pushing the Horizon", a history of the Naval Research Laboratory, Bowen's leadership of NRL was mixed. He championed vital research, such as Radar, yet his personality conflicts with key figures like Vannevar Bush and Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox ultimately excluded the Navy and NRL from the Manhattan Project. Similar conflicts with William Sterling Parsons, Rickover and others also prevented Bowen from being involved post war nuclear development handing development of the Nuclear navy to Admiral Hyman G. Rickover at the Bureau of Ships instead. Although Bowen and NRL were excluded from the Manhattan project, NRL's work starting in 1939 on thermal separation of uranium isotopes at the Philadelphia Navy Yard steam plant did become a part of the project to build the atomic bomb. The S-50 facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory was based on that concept as well.

Strike breaking

One of Bowen's duties during the war was to seize and operate corporations for federal government under Presidential executive orders. His and the Navy's first corporate seizure of World War II was Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in Kearny, New Jersey. The large shipyard near New York City had shut down due to a strike for the better part of August 1941 with no work being done on $493 million ($ today) in defense contracts. As the Navy's Officer-in-charge, Bowen operated the yard for 134 days meeting many of the originally scheduled deadlines returning operation back to the company in early January 1942. He was also the officer in charge during the seizure of Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. He would seize and operate a half dozen other major industrial plants, among others, for the Navy during the war.[13]

Later career

In 1942, Bowen was made Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of the Navy, James V. Forrestal (1942–1944) and after Secretary Knox's death, Bowen became Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy, Forrestal (1944–1947). In 1946, Forrestal made Bowen the first leader of the Office of Research and Invention (ORI) which would eventually become the Office of Naval Research. In January 1947, Bowen made a six-point policy proposal to Navy leadership pushing for comprehensive R&D into nuclear propulsion, munitions, nuclear medicine and nuclear science, but he failed and those activities went to the Bureau of Ships under Admiral Rickover instead of Bowen's ORI. Bowen retired on 1 June 1947, a week short of 46 years of service.[14]

Death

Bowen died 1 August 1965, at Our Lady of Fatima Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island.[15] His residence was in Cranston, Rhode Island at the time of his death.[16] He was interred 4 August 1965 at Arlington National Cemetery, section 4, grave 3188-B.[17] He was survived by his wife Edith Brownlie-Bowen and his son Harold G. Bowen Jr.

Awards and honors

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Ancestry.com. U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889–1970. Volume 333, Applicant 66567. Date 27 March 1946.
  2. Bowen 1954, p. 6.
  3. News: Vallejo Girl is Married... . The San Francisco Call . 28 September 1911 .
  4. Book: Amato, Ivan . Pushing the Horizon . 154 . Washington, D.C. . Naval Research Laboratory . 1998 . 39501632 . 978-0-16-049579-3 .
  5. Bowen 1954, p. 7.
  6. Bowen 1954, p. 7.
  7. Bowen 1954, p. 9.
  8. Bowen 1954, p. 30.
  9. Bowen 1954, p. 32.
  10. Bowen 1954, pp. 34–36.
  11. Bowen 1954, pp. 36–37.
  12. Bowen 1954, p. 44.
  13. Bowen 1954, pp. 207–223.
  14. Bowen 1954, p. 360.
  15. News: Admiral Bower, Engineer, 81 . Newport Mercury And Weekly News . Newport, RI . 6 August 1965 . 3.
  16. Issue State: Rhode Island; Issue Date: 1951–1952. Ancestry.com. U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935–2014 [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2011.
  17. Web site: Burial Detail: Bowen, Harold G . ANC Explorer . 21 December 2020 .
  18. Web site: Harold Gardiner Bowen Sr. . Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame . 17 May 2015 .
  19. Web site: Vice Admiral Harold G. Bowen Award . Naval Research Laboratory . 17 May 2015 .
  20. Bowen 1954, p. 230.
  21. Bowen 1954, p. 359.