Oswald Herbert Ernst Explained
Oswald Herbert Ernst (June27, 1842March21, 1926) was an engineer, military educator, and career officer in the United States Army who became superintendent of the United States Military Academy. Over a forty-year career, Ernst served as an engineer during Sherman's Siege of Atlanta during the American Civil War, commanded U.S. troops at Coamo during the Spanish–American War, and sat on the original commission for the Panama Canal after retirement from active service.
Life
Oswald Ernst was born June 27, 1842, near Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Sarah Otis and Andrew H. Ernst.[1] His mother was descended from Richard Warren, who traveled to Plymouth Colony from Southampton, England, on the Mayflower.[2] Andrew Ernst was himself the son of a recent immigrant, a burgomaster who had fled Germany during the Napoleonic Wars and afterward settled in the Ohio River valley.[2] The younger Ernst was an excellent student, admitted to Harvard in 1858, and left that place of learning to accept an appointment from Ohio to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, in 1860.[3]
Upon his death on March 21, 1926, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia.[4]
Military career
When the American Civil War broke out, plebe Ernst stayed at the academy with the Union-born cadets while most southerners left for the Confederacy.[5] [6] Ernst graduated from USMA just before his twenty-second birthday and was immediately billeted to First Lieutenant, Corps of Engineers.[7] Within the month, Ernst was employed by the Army of the Tennessee as an assistant engineer before Atlanta, took part in the Battle of Ezra Church, and was engaged in siege activities before Atlanta's surrender.[7] In October, 1864, Lt. Ernst was back at West Point as assistant professor of engineering,[8] lecturing about what he'd learned of practical siege engineering in the four months since his graduation.[9]
Ernst married Elizabeth Amory Lee in late 1866,[2] and spent the years immediately after the war working on constructing fortifications on the Pacific coast, and remained so occupied until 1868. He was promoted to captain in March 1867, and had command of an engineer company at Willets Point, Queens, from 1868 until 1871.[8] After detail as "Astronomer of the U.S. Commission to observe in Spain the Solar eclipse of December 22, 1870,"[9] from 1871 until 1878, Ernst was again lecturing USMA cadets about "practical engineering" and commanding the post's elite engineer company. While teaching cadets and writing the Manual of Practical Military Engineering, Ernst found time to author articles for Johnson's Encyclopedia[9] and raise his two daughters Helen Amory and Elizabeth Lee.[10]
From 1878 until 1889, Ernst was chief engineer on Osage and Mississippi River projects, and was responsible for the deepening of shipping routes in Galveston Bay.[9] In 1889, Ernst became military aide-de-camp to President Benjamin Harrison and chief engineer in charge of Washington's public buildings and monuments. In 1893, the Ernst family returned once again to West Point, this time to occupy the superintendent's billet.[2]
After the explosion of the USS Maine in February, 1898, Ernst was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers and put in command of the 1st Division of volunteer troops deployed to the Puerto Rican Campaign.
Selected works by Ernst
- Book: Account of the Eclipse of 1870 in Spain . April 19, 2009 . 1871 . H. Battalion Press.
- Book: A Manual of Practical Military Engineering . April 19, 2009 . 1873 . D. Van Nortstrand . New York . 296.
- Book: An Address Before the Graduating Class of the Engineering School of the Missouri University . April 19, 2009 . 1881 . Statesman Book and Job Printing House.
- Book: Bixby . William Herbert . Casey . Thomas Lincoln . United States Mississippi River Commission . Report Upon Survey, with Plans and Estimates of Cost, for a Navigable Waterway 14 Feet Deep from Lockport, Ill: By Way of Des Planes and Illinois Rivers, to the Mouth of Said Illinois River, and Thence by Way of the Mississippi River to St. Louis, Mo . April 19, 2009 . 1905 . Government Printing Office . Washington, D.C. . 544.
- Book: Mississippi River Improvements: Hearing . April 19, 2009 . March 30, 1906 . Government Printing Office . Washington, D.C. . 22.
- Book: Gibbons, George Christie . Report upon the Chicago Drainage Canal . April 19, 2009 . 2 . March 30, 1906 . Government Printing Office . Washington, D.C. . 54.
- Book: Ernst . Oswald Herbert . Gibbons . George Christie . Report of the International Waterways Commission on the Regulation of Lake Erie: with a discussion of the regulation of the Great Lakes system . April 19, 2009 . 1910 . International Waterways Commission . 169.
- Book: Ernst . Oswald Herbert . Gibbons . George Christie . Regulation of Lake Erie: Message from the President of the United States . April 19, 2009 . 1910 . International Waterways Commission . 158.
References
- Web site: Mark R. . Barnes . The American Army Moves on Puerto-Rico, part 3 . Spanish–American War Centennial website . April 19, 2009.
- Book: Cullum . George Washington . George Washington Cullum . Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the United States Military Academy . April 19, 2009 . 3 . 1891 . 1850 . Houghton, Mifflin . Boston and New York . 17–18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090110215829/http://digital-library.usma.edu/libmedia/archives/cullum/VOL3_PART0001.PDF . January 10, 2009 . dead .
- Book: Dyal . Donald H. . Carpenter . Brian B. . Thomas . Mark A. . Historical Dictionary of the Spanish American War . April 19, 2009. 978-0313288524 . 1996 . Bloomsbury Academic .
- Book: Harvard Class of 1862 . Fiftieth Anniversary Class Report . April 19, 2009 . 1912 . Plimpton Press . 110.
- Book: Harvard Class of 1862 . The Third Report of the Secretary . April 19, 2009 . 1875 . Alfred Mudge & Son.
- Book: Johnson . Rossiter . Brown . John Howard . The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans . April 19, 2009 . 4 . 1904 . The Biographical Society.
- Book: Leonard . John W. . Marquis . Albert Nelson . Who's Who in America . April 19, 2009 . 7. 1913 . Marquis Who's Who . 655–656.
- Book: Men and Women of America: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporaries . Oswald Herbert Ernst . April 19, 2009 . 1909 . L.R. Hamersly & Company . 575.
- Book: Thomas . Joseph . Universal Pronouncing Dictionary of Biography and Mythology . April 19, 2009 . 1 . 1905 . J.B. Lippincott company.
- Web site: Crónica de la guerra hispano-americana en Puerto Rico . Rivero Méndez, Angel . Ángel Rivero Méndez . Wikisource . 17 May 2020 . es . 17 May 2020.
External links
Notes and References
- Leonard & Marquis, Who's Who in America, p. 655
- Men and Women in America, p. 575
- Class of 1862, Fiftieth Anniversary Class Report, p. 86
- Web site: Burial Detail: Ernest, Oswald H. (Section 2, Grave 919) . ANC Explorer. Arlington National Cemetery . (Official website).
- Chambers, John Whiteclay. (1999). The Oxford Companion to American Military History, p. 4. New York: Oxford University Press.
- "America's Civil War Comes to West Point." Accessed Nov 11, 2010. Copyright © 2010 Weider History Group. http://www.historynet.com/americas-civil-war-comes-to-west-point.htm
- Cullum, Biographical Register, V. 3, pt. 1, p. 17
- Ernst, Oswald Hubert. 1900.
- Cullum, Biographical Register, V. 3, pt. 1, p. 18
- Class of 1862, Third Report of the Secretary, p. 28