Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM CROZIER (1855– )

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 520 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM CROZIER (1855– )  ,
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American artillerist and inventor, born at Carrollton, Carroll county,
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Ohio, on the 19th of
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February 1855, was the son of Robert Crozier (1827–1895), chief justice of Kansas in 1863–1866, and a
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United States senator from that state from December 1873 to February 1874, He graduated at West Point in 1876, was appointed a 2nd
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lieutenant in the 4th Artillery, and served on the Western frontier for three years against the
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Sioux and Bannock Indians . From 1879 to 1884 he was instructor in mathematics at West Point, and was superintendent of the
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Watertown (Massachusetts)
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Arsenal from 1884 to 1887 . In 1888 he was sent by the war department to study
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recent developments in artillery in
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Europe, and upon his return he was placed in full charge of the construction of
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gun carriages for the army, and with General Adelbert R . Buffington (1837– ), the chief of ordnance, he invented the Buffington-Crozier disappearing gun
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carriage (1896) . He also invented a wire-wound gun, and perfected many appliances connected with heavy and field ordnance . In 1890 he attained the rank of captain . During the
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Spanish-American War he was inspector-general for the
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Atlantic and Gulf coast defences . In 1899 he was one of the American delegates to the Peace
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Conference at the Hague . He later served in the Philippine Islands on the staffs of Generals John C . Bates and Theodore Schwan, and in 190o was chief of ordnance on the staff of General A . R . Chaffee during the
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Pekin
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Relief Expedition .

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November 1901 he was appointed brigadier-general and succeeded General Buffing-ton as chief of ordnance of the United States army . His Notes on the Construction of Ordnance, published by the war department, are used as text-books in the
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schools for
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officers, and he is also the author of other important publications on military subjects .

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