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287:. After the war ended, Burr was mustered out of his unit and reverted to his regular rank of captain. He went on to serve several different assignments with the Corps of Engineers in New York, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Missouri, and Washington, D.C., and was promoted to major in January 1903. From April 1903 to June 1906, Burr served as commandant of the
264:. He was promoted to captain in September 1894, and was transferred to Washington, D.C. two months later. Burr was Assistant to the Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia for four years, during which time he made improvements to the capitol's water system, organized the planting of trees, and supervised construction of the
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and was relieved of command on
January 29, 1919. Burr reverted to his regular rank of colonel after the war was over, and returned to the United States in February 1919. He served in New York for a short time, and retired from military service on May 19, 1923, having reached the mandatory retirement
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From 1910 to 1914, Burr was
Assistant Chief of Engineers in Washington, and received a promotion to colonel on March 2, 1912. Soon after, he transferred to the Philippines to become Department Engineer of the Philippine Department, a position that made him responsible for the construction of
302:'s 166th Field Artillery Brigade. He traveled to France with the brigade in June 1917 and was stationed at the Clermont Ferrand Puy de Dome Artillery Training Center until August 21, 1918, when he was relieved of command and transferred to the
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After his military retirement, Burr was a consulting engineer in New York until
November 1928, during which time he constructed an anti-erosion jetty at Long Island's
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from
September 1882 to October 1884, receiving a promotion to first lieutenant in April 1883. In June 1884, Burr married Katherine Green, the daughter of a prominent
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industrialist. Two months later he was transferred to
Portland, where he remained until 1891. During his time in Portland, Burr supervised the construction of the
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and had two sons, William Edward and John Green. Both went on to graduate from the USMA class of 1914. In 1891, Burr returned to the east for a new assignment at
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when he was one year old so that his father could become president of the Bank of St. Louis. Burr attended primary school in the suburb of
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on April 15, 1952. He had been advanced to brigadier general on the Army retired list in June 1930. Burr was buried in
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Burr was promoted to brigadier general in August 1917 and given command of the newly organized
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Battalion of
Engineers. He was in charge of the beaches during the American landing at
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After graduating from the academy, Burr was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the
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Burr was born on May 19, 1859, to
William E. Burr and Harriet Brand Burr in
172:(May 19, 1859 - April 15, 1952) was an American general and engineer in the
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on July 1, 1878. He graduated at the top of the class of 1882, alongside
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228:. Written above his portrait in the class yearbook was the name of
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500:. Raleigh, North Carolina: Pentland Press, Inc. p. 60.
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American military personnel of the
Spanish–American War
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184:. He is best known for his service to the
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592:19th-century United States Army personnel
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323:and supervised the construction of the
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427:"Norfolk District 135: Edward Burr"
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149:E Company, Battalion of Engineers
562:Military personnel from Missouri
496:Davis, Henry Blaine Jr. (1998).
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547:People from Boonville, Missouri
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262:Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal
218:United States Military Academy
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126:166th Field Artillery Brigade
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124:62nd Field Artillery Brigade
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522:Arlington National Cemetery
337:Arlington National Cemetery
329:Provincetown, Massachusetts
84:Arlington National Cemetery
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271:After the outbreak of the
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16:United States Army general
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139:U.S. Army Engineer School
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465:"Brig. Gen. Edward Burr"
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446:. University of Chicago
308:Meuse–Argonne offensive
246:Willets Point, New York
186:Army Corps of Engineers
200:. His family moved to
210:Washington University
103:Years of service
333:Walter Reed Hospital
289:Army Engineer School
273:Spanish–American War
266:Georgetown Reservoir
198:Booneville, Missouri
178:Spanish–American War
158:Spanish–American War
55:Booneville, Missouri
226:Henry Tureman Allen
472:The New York Times
222:Adelbert Cronkhite
216:, enrolled in the
176:who served in the
174:United States Army
97:United States Army
498:Generals in Khaki
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258:Norfolk, Virginia
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444:"Edward Burr"
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405:. Retrieved
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154:Battles/wars
67:(1952-04-15)
52:May 19, 1859
542:1952 deaths
537:1859 births
311:age of 64.
214:Nathan Cole
182:World War I
170:Edward Burr
162:World War I
27:Edward Burr
531:Categories
478:2023-02-23
450:2023-02-23
407:2016-09-08
397:"Memorial"
343:References
230:Aaron Burr
192:Early life
48:1859-05-19
202:St. Louis
106:1882–1923
281:Daiquiri
206:Kirkwood
121:Commands
91:Service/
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79:Buried
468:(PDF)
502:ISBN
370:ISBN
224:and
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111:Rank
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62:Died
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.