
Raymond Stanton Patton
was born in Degraff, Ohio on December 29, 1882, the son of Oliver
and
Ida
M. (Cloninger) Patton. His early education was obtained in the
public schools at Sidney, Ohio. He received his technical training
at Adelbert College of Western Reserve University, at Cleveland,
Ohio, from which he was graduated in June 1904, with the degree
of Bachelor of Philosophy.
Within a month after his graduation Mr. Patton was appointed
an officer in the Field Corps of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic
Survey. He rose to the position of Director of the Survey in
1929, in which position he served until his death.
Mr. Patton's first field work began in August 1904, on the Atlantic
Coast where he served as a Junior Officer on the Coast and Geodetic
Survey Ship HYDROGRAPHER, engaged in Coast Pilot revision, and
with a shore party carrying on topographic surveys in Virginia.
This was followed in 1906 by assignment to duty on the Survey
Ship GEDNEY, operating in southeastern Alaska.
In the spring of 1907, he began a 3-year tour of duty in the
Philippine Islands, where, as a Junior Officer on the Survey
Ships ROMBLON and RESEARCH, he took part in surveys of various
localities including Tanon Straits, the north coast of Negros
Island, and the southeast coast of Luzon. For a part of this
time he was also a member of several shore parties engaged in
surveys of Mindanao, Bohol, and the Camiguin Islands.
During this period, conditions in the Philippine Islands were
far different from those at present. The Insurrection was not
far in the past and the Filipinos, especially in areas away
from centers of population, were in a state of unrest, and in
many cases were resentful toward Americans. Living conditions,
affecting health, recreation, and even the ordinary comforts,
were far from satisfactory. In this, as well as in his other
early assignments, Mr. Patton's cheerfulness in enduring hardships
and his zeal in the performance of his duties indicated the
pioneering spirit and devotion to the interests of the Service
which characterized his entire career.
Upon his return to the United States in 1910, he was engaged
on various projects along the Atlantic Coast, including triangulation
in Massachusetts and resurveys of Delaware Bay and Albemarle
Sound until the summer of 1911 when, after a brief assignment
as Executive Officer of the Survey Ship BACHE, on the Gulf Coast,
he again went to Alaska as Executive Officer of the Survey Ship
PATTERSON. Later in the same year, this ship operated on the
Pacific Coast of the United States and in the western approaches
to the Panama Canal. In 1912, Mr. Patton was given command of
the Survey Ship EXPLORER, and for the following 3 years was
in charge of the work of that ship in Alaska, of which a survey
of the approaches to the Kuskokwim River was especially important.
Returning to Washington in 1915, Captain Patton was placed in
charge of the compilation of the volumes of the Coast Pilot
published by the Coast and Geodetic Survey to provide mariners
with information required for coastal navigation in addition
to that shown on the nautical charts. In this capacity he had
charge of the field and office work required for the periodic
revision of the Coast Pilots and was the author of two
volumes, the 1916 edition of the Alaska Coast Pilot for
the region from Yakutat Bay to the Arctic Ocean, and the 1917
edition of the Coast Pilot for the Pacific Coast of the
United States.
With the entry of the United States into the World War, Captain
Patton was anxious to join the armed forces, and in September
1917, together with a number of other officers of the Coast
and Geodetic Survey, he was transferred by Executive Order to
the Navy Department and served as a Lieutenant and, later, as
a Lieutenant Commander in the Naval Reserve Force for the duration
of the war.
After the conclusion of this service he returned to the Coast
and Geodetic Survey and, in 1919, was appointed Chief of the
Chart Division. It was during his tenure in this office that
his ability as an organizer and executive began to have considerable
effect on the progress of the Survey's work. For some time prior
to his appointment to this position, it had been realized that
the Bureau's service to maritime interests was impaired by the
rather lengthy period required for the compilation of nautical
charts following the completion of field surveys. This condition,
however, had been regarded as inevitable on account of the careful
and painstaking work which is always required when extreme accuracy
is essential and the arduous nature of many of the processes
involved.
Recognizing the need for improvement in this respect, Captain
Patton immediately applied himself to the problem and met with
marked success. Through a complete re-organization of the Division,
the adoption of a comprehensive production schedule, and his
constant encouragement of those under him in the development
of more efficient methods and equipment, the period necessary
for chart compilation was gradually reduced to about one-third
of the time formerly required, with no impairment in quality.
In connection with his work in the Chart Division he became
interested in beach erosion and devoted extensive study and
research to this subject. In 1921, the New Jersey Board of Commerce
and Navigation asked Secretary of Commerce Hoover to designate
a representative of his Department to serve on an engineering
advisory board created to study erosion problems in that State,
for the purpose of devising better means of protecting the highly
improved and valuable sections of the coast. Captain Patton
was named by Secretary Hoover for that duty, and cooperated
actively in the execution of the project. The studies made were
embodied in part in two reports, one published in 1922 and one
in 1924. These reports form the basis for an active participation
by the State of New Jersey in the problem of shore protection.
In 1925, he was appointed a member of the Committee of the National
Research Council on Shoreline Investigations and in the following
year was named its Chairman. Knowledge of the importance to
New Jersey of coast protection suggested to the Committee that
a similar situation might exist in other States to such an extent
as to constitute a national problem in which the Council would
be justified in becoming interested. Inquiry along the Atlantic
and Gulf Coasts revealed that almost every State was struggling
with conditions similar to those in New Jersey, each State or
community groping its way toward solutions independently of
the others.
Since the National Research Council had neither the funds nor
the personnel for a direct attack upon the problem, the obvious
method was to link together all these isolated efforts into
a united one. This was accomplished through the creation of
the American Shore and Beach Preservation Association organized
in December 1926, through joint action by the Committee on Shoreline
Investigations and the Governors of the Atlantic and Gulf Coast
States. Captain Patton took a major part in its formation, was
its Secretary-Treasurer until June 1929, and a Director until
his death. On account of his extensive knowledge of this subject
and of the activities and records of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic
Survey he was frequently called upon to serve as an expert witness
in litigation concerning riparian property boundaries.
He continued as Chief of the Chart Division until April 29,
1929, when he was commissioned by President Hoover as Director
of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, succeeding E. Lester Jones,
M. Am. Soc. C.E., who died on April 9, 1929. At that time he
held the relative rank of Captain in the Navy. In March 1936,
Captain Patton was promoted to the rank of Rear Admiral.
Under the leadership of Admiral Patton the modernization of
survey methods and equipment, which had been initiated by Colonel
Jones, was continued and accelerated. Through his own progressiveness
and the encouragement he constantly gave to his colleagues,
great advances were made in the efficiency of all branches of
the Survey's work. Many of the improvements effected were at
the start highly experimental and their final success was due
in no small measure to his vision of their possibilities and
his unfailing assistance in their development.
An outstanding achievement of this period was the expansion
of the operations of the Coast and Geodetic Survey during the
depression years from 1933 to 1935. From the beginning of the
depression Admiral Patton realized that there was a vast amount
of work of this character which could be carried on to advantage
throughout the country and that it was well adapted to the relief
of unemployment, especially in the case of men with engineering
training. With the effective cooperation of the officers of
the Society and others vitally interested in the conditions
confronting the engineering profession at that time, he was
able to secure substantial allotments of emergency funds which
were utilized to provide employment for a large number of engineers
and, at the same time, to accomplish an extensive amount of
worth-while work much of which had been urgently needed for
some time.
He derived great pleasure from the success of this undertaking
and often expressed his gratification at the receipt of expressions
of appreciation from engineers who were not only provided with
employment during this trying period, but were enabled to utilize
their ability in their chosen profession for the accomplishment
of projects of lasting value to the nation.
Always modes and unassuming, Admiral Patton was a man of high
ideals and integrity. In addition to being an able engineer
and executive, he had to a marked degree the qualities which
brought him the high esteem and affection of all who knew him.
His career is admirably epitomized in the following tribute
by Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper:
"In
the death of Admiral Patton, the Government has lost one of
its most capable officials and the engineering profession one
of its outstanding leaders. He was held in the highest esteem
by his associates and by Members of, and Committees in, the
Congress with whom he came in contact, and was recognized as
an authority in his work throughout the world. The Coast and
Geodetic Survey over which he has been the head for 8½
years is one of the most efficient and progressive bureaus of
our Government. Devotion to service by men of the character,
integrity, and standing of Admiral Patton gives a new assurance
to American citizenship; it gives us greater confidence in the
future of our country. We grieve over his passing, but we are
thankful for his contribution to the service of the Department
of Commerce and to the nation."
Admiral Patton was a Past-President of the Washington Society
of Engineers; Life Trustee of the National Geographic Society;
Trustee of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute; and a member
of the National Research Council, Association of American Geographers,
American Geophysical Union, and the American Astronomical Society.
He was also a member of the Cosmos Club of Washington. He was
buried at Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors.
He was married on November 7, 1912, to Virginia Mitchell of
Seattle, Washington, who survives him. He also left a son, Raymond
S. Patton; two daughters, Helen M. and Virginia M. Patton; his
mother, Mrs. Oliver Patton; a sister, Mrs. J.C. Custenborder;
and a brother, Paul C. Patton. Admiral Patton was elected a
Member of the American Society of Civil Engineers on July 11,
1921.
To the members of the Coast and Geodetic Survey: It is my sad
duty to announce the death of our Director, Rear Admiral Raymond
Stanton Patton, at his home in Washington, D.C. on the morning
of November 25, 1937.
No eulogy of Admiral Patton need be addressed to members of
this Service for all who knew him need no written word to remind
them how richly he was endowed with the qualities which bring
forth wholehearted allegiance to a trusted leader and love for
a true friend. We all know how inspiring was his leadership
in the progress which in recent years has enabled our Bureau
to increase so materially the quality and volume of the service
which it is our mission to render to our country.
Admiral Patton's career can be epitomized in no better way than
by quoting the following tribute by Secretary of Commerce Daniel
C. Roper:
"In
the death of Admiral Patton the Government has lost one of its
most capable officials and the engineering profession one of
its outstanding leaders. He was held in the highest esteem by
his associates and by Members of and committees in the Congress
with whom he came in contact, and was recognized as an authority
in his work throughout the world. The Coast and Geodetic Survey,
over which he has been the head for 8½ years, is one
of the most efficient and progressive bureaus of our Government.
Devotion to service by men of the character, integrity, and
standing of Admiral Patton gives a new assurance to American
citizenship; it gives us greater confidence in the future of
our country. We grieve over his passing, but we are thankful
for his contribution to the service of the Department of Commerce
and to the Nation.
signed
J.H. Hawley, Acting Director
OBITUARY
Rear Admiral Raymond S. Patton, Director of the United States
Coast and Geodetic Survey for the past 8½ years, died
at his home, 3920 McKinley Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., at
6 o'clock Thursday morning, November 5, 1937.
Born December 29,1882, in Degraff, Ohio the son of Oliver and
Ida M. (Cloninger) Patton, he was educated in the public schools
in Sidney, Ohio, and received the Degree of Ph. B. from Adelbert
College of Western Reserve University in June 1904. He entered
the Coast and Geodetic Survey on July 2, 1904, serving as a
Junior Officer in the field and later as chief of party and
Commanding Officer of survey vessels engaged on field surveys
on the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts of the United States, as
well as in Alaska and the Philippine islands, until his appointment
as Chief of the Coast Pilot Section in the Washington Office
of the Survey in 1915. He was Chief of the Chart Division in
charge of chart production from 1919 until he was appointed
Director by President Hoover on April 29, 1929. He was reappointed
by President Roosevelt in 1933 and 1937. He served as Lieutenant
and Lieutenant Commander in the Navy during the World War.
Admiral Patton was recognized as one of the country's foremost
authorities on questions involving beach erosion and beach protection.
He was a member of the National Research Council Committee on
Shoreline Investigations, and in 1926, as Chairman of the Committee,
took an active part in organizing the American Shore and Beach
Preservation Association and served as Secretary of the Association
until June 1929.
He was endowed with an unusually brilliant mind. An engineer
by profession, he was well informed on a great many subject
and was the author of numerous publications of the Coast and
Geodetic Survey and articles for scientific and engineering
journals.
He was past president of the Washington Society of Engineers;
life trustee of the National Geographic Society; trustee of
the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute; Director of the American
Shore and Beach Preservation Association; and a member of the
Engineering Advisory Committee on Coast Erosion to the New Jersey
Board of Commerce and Navigation, National Research Council,
Association of American Geographers, American Society of Civil
Engineers, American Geophysical Union, and the American Astronomical
Society. He was a member of the Cosmos Club.
Funeral services were conducted at the residence on the morning
of Saturday, November 27, followed by burial in Arlington National
Cemetery, with full military honors.
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS BULLETIN, ?
COAST & GEODETIC SURVEY BULLETIN, 11/30/1937