Background
Lewis, Isaac Newton was born on October 12, 1858 in New Salem, Pennsylvania, United States. Son of James H. and Anne (Kendall) Lewis.
Lewis, Isaac Newton was born on October 12, 1858 in New Salem, Pennsylvania, United States. Son of James H. and Anne (Kendall) Lewis.
He graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1884 and was commissioned second lieutenant in the Second Artillery.
Early in his career he made himself an authority on ordnance. In 1900, then-Captain Lewis was sent by Adjutant General Henry Clarke Corbin to Europe to study that subject, his report resulting in the re-armament of the field artillery. By successive promotions, he rose to the rank of colonel in the Coast Artillery Corps in August 1913, and was retired the next month for disability incurred in line of duty.
Initially the United States Army was not interested in his new gun, but after the British and French had bought more than 100,000 for use in the trenches in France, the United States Army did purchase them.
He declined the royalties - amounting to at least $1,000,000 - on guns made for the United States after it entered the war. His other inventions included a time-interval clock and bell system of signals, a replotting and relocating system for coast batteries, an automatic sight, quick-reading mechanical verniers for use in coast defenses, electric car lighting, and windmill electric lighting systems
Lewis died of a Myocardial infarction at the Lackawanna Railroad terminal in Hoboken, New Jersey while waiting for a train to his home in Montclair. He is interred at Forest Hills Cemetery, located in the Forest Hills section of the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.
Member of the board on regulation of coast artillery fire, New York Harbor, 1894-1898.
Married Mary, daughter; children: Richard Wheatley, Laura Anne, George Fenn, Margaret Kendall.