Everything about U S National Geodetic Survey totally explained
The
National Geodetic Survey and the
Office of Coast Survey are the two successor agencies in the
United States to the
U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. It was first established by President
Thomas Jefferson in 1807 as the
Survey of the Coast. Progress moved ahead slowly and haltingly during the first 25 years. Not until
August 29,
1811 did Mr.
F. R. Hassler sail for
Europe to obtain the proper instruments. He remained in
Europe during the
War of 1812, then he returned to the
United States on
August 16,
1815 with the proper instruments.
Mr. Hassler's plans were to employ triangulation to establish his system. Work began in the vicinity of
New York City in 1816. The first base line was measured and verified in
1817. A new
Act of Congress interfered with the work of Mr. Hassler in 1818. The army and navy were placed at the forefront of the Survey which generated a lull in activity which lasted from 1818 to 1832. Little work was produced until another
Act of Congress was passed on
July 10,
1832. It re-empowered the original
Act of 1807. Mr. Hassler was re-appointed as the superintendent, and field work was resumed in April, 1833.
The Coast survey was without a superintendent during the 14 years from 1818 to 1832 when the army was the primary authority. The Navy Department was given the control of the survey from 1834 to 1836, but the Treasury department resumed the administration of the survey on
March 26,
1836. Hassler died in 1843.
Professor
Alexander Dallas Bache became superintendent of the Survey in 1843. Earlier in his life, he'd established the first magnetic observatory. During his years as superintendent, he expanded the Survey southward along the Atlantic coast into the
Florida Keys. He instituted regular and systematic observations of the tides and the
Gulf Stream, and investigated magnetic forces and directions.
As the American continent was progressively explored, inhabited and enclosed, the bureau took responsibility for survey of the interior. In 1878 it reorganized as the
Coast and Geodetic Survey (C&GS). Since 1970, the
National Geodetic Survey has been part of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration within the
United States Department of Commerce.
During the
nineteenth century, the remit of the Survey was rather loosely drawn and it had no competitors in federally funded scientific research. Various Superintendents developed its work in fields as diverse as
astronomy,
cartography,
meteorology,
geodesy,
geology,
geophysics,
hydrography,
navigation,
oceanography,
exploration,
pilotage,
tides and
topography.
From 1836 until the establishment of the
National Bureau of Standards in 1901, the Survey was responsible for
weights and measures throughout the US.
Superintendents of the Survey (after 1919, Directors)
- Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler, (1816–1818 and 1832–1843);
- Alexander Dallas Bache, (1843–1865);
- Benjamin Peirce, (1867–1874);
- Carlile Pollock Patterson, (1874–1881);
- Julius Erasmus Hilgard, (1881–1885);
- Frank Manly Thorn, (1885–1889);
- Thomas Corwin Mendenhall, (1889–1894);
- William Ward Duffield, (1894–1897);
- Henry Smith Pritchett, (1897–1900);
- Otto Hilgard Tittmann, (1900–1915);
- Ernest Lester Jones, (1915–1929);
- Raymond Stanton Patton, (1929–1937);
- Robert Francis Anthony Studds, (1938–1955);
- Henry Arnold Karo, (1955–1965);
- James C. Tison, Jr., (1965–1968);
Ships of the Survey
Hassler
Superintendents of Weights and Measures
Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler (c. 1818-1843) (External Link
)
Joseph Saxton, (1843–1873);Further Information
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