Navy Secretary Josephus Daniels

(noun)

Josephus Daniels (May 18, 1862 – January 15, 1948) was a newspaper editor and publisher from North Carolina appointed by President Woodrow Wilson to serve as Secretary of the Navy during World War I. He was also a close friend and supporter of President Franklin Roosevelt and served as his ambassador to Mexico.

Related Terms

  • Preparedness movement
  • Zimmermann Telegram

Examples of Navy Secretary Josephus Daniels in the following topics:

  • Last Efforts for Peace

    • Neither the Army nor the Navy, however, was ready for the war that was engulfing large parts of the globe, especially America’s close European allies.
    • Navy Secretary Josephus Daniels, ignoring the nation's strategic needs and disdaining the advice of experts, suspended meetings of the Joint Army and Navy Board for two years in response to unwelcome advice.
    • Among these were light anti-submarine ships, which were few in number and reflected Daniels’ apparent unwillingness to maintain focus on the German sub menace that had been a key point in U.S. foreign policy for the previous two years.
    • Daniels' tenure would have been even less successful without the energetic efforts of Assistant Navy Secretary Franklin D.
    • Wilson, less fearful of the Navy than other branches of the service, embraced a long-term building program designed to make the U.S. battleship fleet the equal of the Royal Navy by the mid-1920s.
  • War Propaganda

    • Tasked with creating a prolonged propaganda campaign, the group that became known as The Creel Committee consisted of politician and journalist George Creel, the committee chairman; Robert Lansing, Secretary of State; Newton D.
    • Baker, Secretary of War; and Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels.
  • The Anti-German Crusade

    • When war broke out in Europe hundreds of men on two German cruisers, the Prinz Eitel Friedrich and the Kronprinz Wilhelm, were unwilling to face the might of the British Navy in the Atlantic and instead lived for several years on their ships in various Virginia ports and frequently enjoyed shore leave.
    • Eventually they were given a strip of land in the Norfolk Navy Yard in Norfolk, Virginia, on which to erect accommodations.
    • In October 1916, the ships and their personnel were moved to the Philadelphia Navy Yard along with the structures, which became known locally as the "German Village."
    • Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels to transfer the other 750 residents of the village to secure units at Fort McPherson in Georgia and Fort Oglethorpe, separated from the civilian internees there.
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