Background
He was born in Jenningsville, Pennsylvania, and educated in Monticello, New New York
He was born in Jenningsville, Pennsylvania, and educated in Monticello, New New York
Cornell University; Cornell University College of Engineering.
He went to Cornell University where he earned a degree in mechanical engineering. He took a job as draughtsman at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, and became chief engineer in 1906, and then general manager in 1912. In 1915 he was made a vice president
After admitting in 1929 to a Senate panel that he was responsible for employing William B. Shearer as an observer at the 1927 Geneva arms control conference, he resigned his position.
In March 1930 he became president of the Primrose Publishing Corporation, which published The Marine Journal. He was also involved with the creation of the Merchant Marine Acting of 1928.
He died of pneumonia on 2 December 1933, at the Rockefeller Research Institute.