Squier, George Owen, MG

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Major General
Last Service Branch
US
Last Primary MOS
1980-Fixed Wing Aviation Unit Commander
Last MOS Group
Aviation
Primary Unit
1905-1907, HHC, US Army Garrison, Fort Leavenworth, KS
Service Years
1887 - 1924
US
Major General
Four Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 



Home State
Michigan
Michigan
Year of Birth
1863
 
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Contact Info
Home Town
Dryden
Date of Passing
Mar 24, 1934
 
Location of Interment
Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Section 3, Site 4017

 Official Badges 

Army Staff Identification US Army Retired (Pre-2007)


 Unofficial Badges 

Order of the Crown of Italy


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
National Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  1934, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

George Owen Squier was born in Dryden, Michigan, 21 March 1863 and graduated from the Military Academy in 1877. After first entering the Army as an artillery officer, Squier joined the Signal Corps, rising to Major by 1903. 


He also served as Chief of the Army Air Service 1916 to 1918. General Squier was the author of numerous articles and papers on technical subjects, and is credited with several important inventions in the fields of radio and electronics. He took part in his later life in several international conferences on communications and attended the 1921 Washington Conference on Naval Limitations for the War Department. General Squier died 24 March l934.


George Owen Squier's career spanned the Spanish American War and World War I. Because of him, the two most important technological developments of his era, the airplane and the radio, became integral parts of America's military arsenal.

After completing only the eighth grade and working for two years, Squier entered West Point. Graduating seventh in his class in 1887, Squier went on to complete his Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins in 1893.
 

With a first-class education in electrical science, Squier was transferred to Fortress Monroe where he helped found the Artillery Journal and used photography and electromagnetism to measure the velocity of artillery shells. By 1897, Squier had proven the military application of radio through experiments that, for example, fired cannons and detonated mines by remote control.
 

After He commanded cable-ship Burnside during the laying of the Philippine cable from 1900 to 1902., Squier established the first Signal School at Fort Leavenworth in 1905.
 

His interest in aeronautics was evidence by its introduction into the school curriculum. That interest in aviation intensified when Squier came to Washington in 1907 as Assistant Chief Signal Officer. Upon his recommendation, the Aeronautical Division was formed. He not only wrote the specifications for the first military aircraft, but witnessed acceptance trails of the Army's first Wright Flyer.
 

Squier's interest in radio never faltered. During 1909 and 1910, he applied for four patents in multiplex telephony, whereby, several verbal messages could be transmitted and received over a single wire, the basis for modern communications systems.
 

He was appointed Chief Signal Officer of the Army 14 February 1917 during World War I, and was promoted to Major General 6 October. Squier was responsible not only for radio, but also was charged with the entire aviation and communications mission of the United States Army. During the war, Squier succeeded in opening two great Army laboratories one at Fort Monmouth for radio and another at Langley Field, Virginia, for aviation. Squier can be credited with the Army's institutionalization of scientific research and development for military purposes. 
 

   
Other Comments:

Courtesy of the National Academy of Science:

George Owen Squier (1865-1934), was still Chief Signal Officer in the U.S. Army when he was elected to the National Academy of Science in 1919. His invention in 1910 of "multiplexing" allowed telephone wires to carry multiple messages for the first time; the carrier frequency principle involved was later adapted to other types of transmission, including FM radio. After graduation from West Point in 1887, Squier received his Ph.D. from ohns Hopkins University in 1893, making him perhaps the first member of the Army's officer corps to hold that degree.

Assigned to the Army Signal Corps after serving in the Spanish-American War, he worked on improving the Army's wireless telegraphy and telephony. In 1908 he became the first passenger to fly in an airplane, and subsequently helped set up the Air Service, forerunner of today's US Air Force, within the Army's Signal Corps. His 1917 address to the National Research Council on military aviation problems was a virtual blueprint for the work the Research Council eventually performed in that area. Shortly before his retirement in 1924, Squier turned his attention to a new application of the transmission technologies he helped to develop: piped-in music. His idea led to the establishment in 1922 of the music service Wired Radio, which is much better known by its present name, given it by Squier shortly before his death: Muzak. 

   

  1891-1893, Johns Hopkins University
FromYear
1891
ToYear
1893

College
Johns Hopkins University

Major
PhD
   
Patch
 Johns Hopkins University Details


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Last Updated:Nov 3, 2012
   
   
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