William P. Cronan

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_P._Cronan an entity of type: Thing

William Pigott Cronan (March 6, 1879 – March 18, 1929) was a United States Navy Captain who served as the 19th Naval Governor of Guam. During his tenure in the Navy, he became decorated, commanded a number of ships, and came to be known as "the most popular man in the Navy". He participated in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba during the Spanish–American War. In 1903, he gained some attention for his participation in the rescue of a Venezuelan fisherman off the coast of La Guaira under bad conditions. Both the Venezuelan government and navy command praised him for the way he carried out the operation. He became a national news story in 1907 while serving aboard USS Connecticut during a training operation. When a gun nearly exploded because of leaking powder; he shoved his hand into the gun's rdf:langString
rdf:langString William P. Cronan
rdf:langString William Pigott Cronan
rdf:langString "the most popular man in the Navy"
rdf:langString William Pigott Cronan
rdf:langString San Diego, California, US
xsd:date 1929-03-18
rdf:langString New Haven, Connecticut, US
xsd:date 1879-03-06
xsd:integer 32020439
xsd:integer 1094226380
xsd:integer 1898
xsd:date 1879-03-06
xsd:integer 30
rdf:langString United States Navy
rdf:langString Cronan in 1903
xsd:date 1929-03-18
rdf:langString "the most popular man in the Navy"
rdf:langString Naval Governor of Guam
xsd:integer 19
xsd:integer 20
xsd:date 1916-05-08
xsd:date 1916-04-29
rdf:langString William Pigott Cronan (March 6, 1879 – March 18, 1929) was a United States Navy Captain who served as the 19th Naval Governor of Guam. During his tenure in the Navy, he became decorated, commanded a number of ships, and came to be known as "the most popular man in the Navy". He participated in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba during the Spanish–American War. In 1903, he gained some attention for his participation in the rescue of a Venezuelan fisherman off the coast of La Guaira under bad conditions. Both the Venezuelan government and navy command praised him for the way he carried out the operation. He became a national news story in 1907 while serving aboard USS Connecticut during a training operation. When a gun nearly exploded because of leaking powder; he shoved his hand into the gun's breechblock, preventing the explosion and losing two of his fingers in the process. He served as the first commanding officer of USS Monaghan in 1911. He would later command the Atlantic Fleet Torpedo Flotilla Fifth Fleet from the flagship USS Jouett. During World War I, he first commanded USS Supply and captured German Corvette Captain Adalbert Zuckschwerdt off the coast of Guam. He also commanded during the war, for which he received the Navy Cross. The house he owned with wife Nellie Grant Cronan, granddaughter of President Ulysses S. Grant, is now an historical site in San Diego. He is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
rdf:langString Atlantic Fleet Torpedo Flotilla Fifth Fleet
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 16651

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