Oscar Terry Crosby

Oscar Terry Crosby (April 21, 1861 – January 2, 1947) was an American engineer, executive, author, and explorer. A West Point graduate, he served as the United States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during World War 1.

Oscar Terry Crosby
Born(1861-04-21)April 21, 1861
DiedJanuary 2, 1947(1947-01-02) (aged 85)
Alma materUnited States Military Academy
TitleUnited States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
Term1917–1918
PredecessorAndrew J. Peters
SuccessorLeo S. Rowe
SpouseJeanne Maria Bouligny
ChildrenMiriam Terry Crosby (b. 1886)
Elizabeth (b. 1894)
Juliette Crosby (b. 1895)
Celeste (b. 1900)
Junior
Parents
  • George Locke Crosby (father)
  • Elizabeth Terry (mother)
AwardsHonorary LL. D., George Washington University (1907)
Order of the Crown
Medal of French Gratitude
Legion of Honour[1]

Biography

Crosby was born April 21, 1861, in Ponchatoula, Louisiana,[2] son of Reverend George Locke Crosby and Elizabeth Terry.[3][4] He grew up during the Reconstruction era,[5] receiving an education at a private school in Brookhaven, Mississippi.[4] At the age of 17, he purchased a one-way ticket to West Point where he passed the United States Military Academy admittance exam.[5] On September 1, 1878, Curtis entered the academy as a cadet.[6] He graduated second in his class[5] on June 13, 1882, and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Army Corps of Engineers. On September 30, he was assigned to the Army installation at Willet's Point, New York. Crosby attained the rank of first lieutenant on July 3, 1883.[6]

He was married to Jeanne Maria Bouligny in 1886.[6] Jeanne was the granddaughter of Dominique Bouligny,[7] who served as a U.S. senator from Louisiana from 1824 to 1829.[8] The couple would have five children, including the socialite Miriam Terry Crosby and actress Juliette Crosby.[9][10] After an extended leave of absence starting on April 23, Crosby resigned his military commission on October 22, 1887.[6]

Business career

He was hired by Frank J. Sprague as an assistant for a project to construct an electric streetcar line in Richmond, Virginia for the Richmond Union Passenger Railway. Despite the hurdles of making this new technology reliable, the line was operational by February 1888, although it took until May before it was operating satisfactorily.[11] Crosby became a general superintendent of the Sprague Electric Railway and Motor Company.[12]

In 1889, Crosby worked with Baltimore inventor David G. Weems to assemble a small experimental electric locomotive on a 28-gauge test track laid down in Laurel, Maryland.[13] Invented by Weems,[14] the goal of this vehicle was to achieve high-speed rail using electrical power. They were able to bring the small locomotive up to a top speed of 115 mph (185 km/h). Crosby's ideas for high-speed rail included regenerative braking, magnetic brakes, all-steel train cars, and streamlining. However, the concept was technologically ahead of its time and would be left for others to develop.[13]

Crosby was a general manager for the railway department of General Electric Company. He served as president of various local public utilities in Chester, Pennsylvania; Wilmington, Delaware; and Washington D. C.[15][16] In 1892, he collaborated with Louis Bell to publish The Electric Railway in Theory and Practice.[2]

Crosby became the first president of the Potomac Electric Power Company (PEPCo) in 1896.[17][2] On March 12, he applied to the city commissioners of Washington, D.C., for an agreement to extend power lines into the city. This was approved June 21 and the company began operations. He then bid on a contract to provide street lighting for the city. This contract was initially awarded to United States Electric Lighting, but Crosby was ultimately successful after a court challenge. This began a commercial contest between the two companies, which came to an end in January 1889 when the stock owners of PEPCO acquired their rival.[5][18]

In 1897, a group of financiers led by Crosby took over the Anacostia & Potomac Railway.[17] Crosby wanted to combine all Washington D.C. power and railway businesses into a single business.[12] In this he was successful, and they merged into the Washington Traction and Electric Company.[17] However, this effort floundered when the company defaulted on interest payments following the 1899–1900 recession, going bankrupt in June 1901. The business was acquired by Washington Railway and Electric Company in February, 1902.[12]

Between February and June 1900, Crosby traveled from Zeila in Somaliland through Ethiopia to Khartoum in the Sudan. He wrote a travelogue about his experiences titled Notes on a journey from Zeila to Khartoum, and this was published in The Geographical Journal in 1901.[19] For his African explorations, he was named a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (F.R.G.S.).[6] In 1903, Crosby began an extended trip to Asia, starting from London, travelling across Russia by railway to Turkistan, then by foot (in sometimes extreme conditions) to Tibet. In Russia, he met Fernand Anginieur, a fellow explorer from France, and the two men traveled together.[20] In 1905 he published his experiences in a book titled, Tibet and Turkestan, journey through old lands and a study of new conditions.[2]

Retirement

In 1904, the Crosby family purchased a large property named the View Tree Farm, which covered 358 acres on top of Watery Mountain to the west of Warrenton, Virginia. Crosby built a 24-room manorial residence on this site in 1906. It would remain in the family until 1950, when it was acquired by the U.S. government. Their daughter Elizabeth drowned in the town's water reservoir in October 1906.[9] Crosby was awarded an honorary Legum Doctor (LL.D.) degree by the George Washington University in 1907.[21] He was considered for the post of minister to China in 1909.[10] Crosby published a book titled, Strikes: when to strike, how to strike, a book of suggestion for the buyers and sellers of labour in 1910.[2] At that time he was President of the Wilmington & Philadelphia Traction Company,[22] but resigned from this position in 1913[23] and retired from the railroad business.[5]

Signing the British War Loan, 1917; Crosby is at right

The newly elected President Woodrow Wilson favored Crosby for the post of Governor-General of the Philippines in 1913. However, this was objected to by Manuel L. Quezon because of Crosby's military background. Instead, Crosby's friend Francis B. Harrison was selected.[24] When World War I broke out in Europe, Crosby was in China. He made his way back to the United States by travelling through Siberia and Europe. Herbert Hoover asked him to become the director of relief work in France and Belgium, a post he accepted in March 1915. After six months he returned home, then wrote a book.[1]

The United States joined the war in April 1917, and Crosby was commissioned with the rank of Major of engineers in the Army reserve corps.[6] However, his friend William G. McAdoo requested Crosby for the position of Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. Crosby assumed the post on April 15, 1917, and remained there for a period of six months. At the behest of President Wilson, Crosby was named the United States representative to the Inter-Allied Council on War Purchases in October 1917, and was voted President of this council based on the importance of the United States to their activities.[1] When the war came to an end, Crosby was in poor health and had to remain in Paris for several months.[1]

In 1919, he authored a book titled, International war, its causes and its cure.[2] He was a proponent of the use of an international police force to enforce the rulings of an international tribunal.[15] His book titled Adam and Eve was published in 1926. In 1927, he would resume his international travel, making trips to South West Africa in 1927; Tanganyika, Kenya and the Belgian Congo in 1936; and Romania, Russia, Poland, and Germany in 1937. He died January 2, 1947, in Warrenton.[10]

For his international efforts, Crosby was made a Commander de la Légion d'honneur, and received the Order of the Crown of Italy and Order of the Crown from Belgium. He was a member of the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.[25] His collected papers are held by the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress.[10]

Bibliography

References

  1. Davis, Arthur Kyle, ed. (1926), "War Work and Relief Organizations", Virginia Communities in War Time, Publications of the Virginia War History Commission, vol. 6, pp. 135–136, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  2. "Crosby, Oscar Terry, 1861-1947", Social Networks and Archival Context, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  3. Suter, J. L. (1908), "Crosby, Oscar Terry", District of Columbia, 1908–1909, Washington D. C.: The Potomac Press, p. 101, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  4. Lawrence, Alberta, ed. (1927), Who's who among North American authors, vol. 3, Golden Syndicate Publishing Company, p. 221.
  5. Hamilton, Martha M. (April 26, 1996), "The Company that Stayed Current", The Washington Post, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  6. Cullum, George W. (July 5, 2016), "Oscar T. Crosby", Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, since its establishment in 1802, University of Chicago, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  7. King, Grace (March 1921), Creole Families of New Orleans, The MacMillan Company, p. 302.
  8. "Bouligny, Charles Dominique Joseph, 1773–1833", Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, retrieved 2023-04-13.
  9. Toler, John (February 2, 2021), "The Crosby Estate near Warrenton", View Tree, Fauquier Now, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  10. Oscar Terry Crosby papers, 1878-1947, Library of Congress, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  11. Dalzell, Frederick (2010), Engineering Invention: Frank J. Sprague and the U.S. Electrical Industry, The MIT Press, pp. 80–90, ISBN 978-0-262-04256-7, retrieved 2023-04-13.
  12. Trieschmann, Laura V.; et al. (June 2005), Streetcar and Bus Resources of Washington, D.C., 1862-1962, United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, retrieved 2023-04-14.
  13. Condit, Carl W. (1977), "The Pioneer Stage of Railroad Electrification", Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 67 (7): 1–45, doi:10.2307/1006285, JSTOR 1006285.
  14. Leonard, Kevin (September 6, 2019), "The dream of electric trains has origins in Laurel", Baltimore Sun, retrieved 2023-04-13.
  15. "Ex-Treasury Official Dies at Warrenton", Richmond Times-Dispatch, p. 14, January 3, 1947, retrieved 2023-04-15.
  16. "Crosby, Oscar Terry, 1861–1947 (traveller and writer)", ArchiveSearch, University of Cambridge, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  17. DeFerrari, John (2015), Capital Streetcars: Early Mass Transit in Washington, D.C., Arcadia Publishing, pp. 93–94, ISBN 9781467118835.
  18. Sharpe, C. Melvin (1947), "Brief Outline of the History of Electric Illumination in the District of Columbia", Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C., 48/49: 191–207, JSTOR 40064095.
  19. Crosby, O. T. (1901), "Notes on a journey from Zeila to Khartoum", The Geographical Journal, Royal Geographical Society, 18, doi:10.2307/1775763, JSTOR 1775763.
  20. "Oscar T. Crosby Daring Explorer", The Washington Times, p. 7, July 28, 1913, retrieved 2022-08-18 via Newspapers.com.
  21. Honorary Degree Recipients, 1827-2022, The George Washington University, retrieved 2023-04-12.
  22. "Wilmington properties absorbed by Wilmington & Philadelphia Traction Company", Electric Railway Journal, 36 (3): 125, July 16, 1910.
  23. "Personal Mention", The Street Railway Journal, 41 (3): 134, 1903.
  24. M. Gripaldo, Ronaldo (1984), "The Quezon-Winslow Correspondence: A Friendship Turned Sour", Philippine Studies, 32 (2): 129–162, JSTOR 42632695.
  25. Leopold, Robert S. (August 1994), "Oscar Terry Crosby" (PDF), A Guide to Early African Collections in the Smithsonian Institution, Smithsonian Institution, pp. 27–28, retrieved 2023-04-15.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.