went to the isthmus to decide on the canal project. Later he went to Venezuela, where he was engaged in the survey of a railroad, and he afterward be- came consulting engineer of the Panama railroad.
TOTTEN, James, soldier, b. in Pittsburg, Pa.,
11 Sept., 1818 ; d. in Sedalia, Mo., 1 Oct., 1871. He
was graduated at the U. S. military academy in
1841, became 1st lieutenant in 1847, engaged in
the Florida war against the Seminole Indians in
1849-50, and became captain in 1855. He aided
in quelling the Kansas disturbances in 1857-'8, and
in expelling intruders from the Indian reserves in
Kansas and Arkansas in 1860. While in com-
mand of Little Rock arsenal in February, 1861, he
was compelled to evacuate that post by a superior
Confederate force under Gov. Henry M. Rector.
He served under Gen. Nathaniel Lyon and Gen.
John C. Fremont in the military operations in
Missouri as chief of artillery, was engaged at Camp
Jackson, Booneville, and Wilson's Creek,' and in
June was brevetted major in the U. S. army for
Camp Jackson, and lieutenant-colonel in August,
, for "gallant and meritorious service" in all
these actions. He became major in the 1st Mis-
souri volunteers, 19 Aug., 1861, lieutenant-colonel
the next month, and assistant inspector-general,
with the rank of major, in November. On 12 Feb.,
, he became brigadier-general of Missouri
militia, in command of the central district of the
state. He then engaged in several actions on the
frontier and in pursuit of the enemy beyond Bos-
ton mountains, Ark., became inspector-general of
the Department of the Missouri in May, 1863, and
chief of artillery and chief of ordnance in 1864.
He was brevetted colonel, U. S. army, on 13 March,
1865, " for gallant and meritorious conduct during
the siege of Mobile, Ala.," and on the same day
brigadier-general in the U.S. army "for gallant
and meritorious service in the field " during the
civil war. He was inspector-general of the Mili-
tary division of the Atlantic from 15 Aug., 1865,
till 27 Aug., 1866, and became lieutenant-colonel,
U. S. army, and assistant inspector-general, 13 June,
1867. In 1870 he was retired. — His son, Charles
Adiel Lewis, inventor, b. in New London, Conn.,
3 Feb., 1851, was graduated at the U. S. military
academy in 1873, was professor of military science
and tactics in the Massachusetts agricultural col-
lege at Amherst in 1875-'8, and occupied a similar
chair in St. Paul's cathedral school, Garden City,
N. Y., in 1883-'6. He is now 1st lieutenant in the
4th artillery. He served in the Bannock campaign
in 1878, and in the Chiricahua campaign in 1881.
In 1877 he patented an improvement in explosives,
one in collimating sights, one in signal-shells, and
several minor inventions. He patented " Strate-
gos," a war-game, in 1880, a system of weights and
measures in 1884, and improvements in linear and
other scales in 1885. Trinity gave him the degree
of A. M. in 1885. He has written extensively on
pyramid explorations, lectured in favor of Prof.
Piazzi Smyth's pyramid theories, and for several
years was chairman of the committee on pyramid
exploration in the International institute for pre-
serving Anglo-Saxon weights and measures. His
publications include "Strategos, the American
War-Game " (2 vols., New York, 1880) ; " An Im-
portant Question in Metrology," a plea for the
Anglo-Saxon against the metric system (1883) ; and,
under the pen-name of Ten Alcott, " Gems, Talis-
mans, and Guardians, the Facts, Fancies, Legends,
and Lore of Nativity" (1887).
TOTTEN, Joseph Gilbert, soldier, b. in New
Haven, Conn., 23 Aug., 1788; d. in Washington,
D. C, 22 April, 1864. He received his earliest
education under the direction of his maternal uncle,
Jared Mansfield, by whom he was brought up after
the death of his mother. After his uncle's occu-
pation of the chair of mathematics at the U. S.
military academy the boy received an appointment
from Connecticut
as cadet. In 1805
he was graduated
and promoted 2d
lieutenant in the
corps of engineers.
Meanwhile Capt.
Mansfield, having
been made survey-
or-general of Ohio
and the western ter-
ritories, obtained
the services of his
nephewas secretary
of the first syste-
matic survey of any
of the new states of
the Union. While
holding this place
he resigned in 1806
from the army, but
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returned to the engineering corps two years later, and began his career as a military engineer under Col. Jonathan Williams. His first work was on the construction of Castle Williams and Fort Clin- ton in New York harbor, of which he had special supervision in 1808-'12 ; and in July, 1810, he was promoted 1st lieutenant. During the war of 1812 he served as chief engineer of the army under Gen. Stephen Van Rensselaer on the Niagara frontier, and participated in the battle of Queenstown. Sub- sequently he was chief engineer of the army under Gen. Henry Dearborn in 1813, and of that under Gen. Alexander Macomb in 1814. His services gained for him promotion to captain, and the brevets of major in 1813 and lieutenant-colonel for his conduct at Plattsburg in 1814. At the close of the war he returned to duties in connec- tion with the National coast defences and served chiefly at Newport, R. I., where he had charge of the construction of Fort Adams until 7 Dec, 1838, when, having passed through the grades of major in 1818 and lieutenant-colonel in 1828, he was ap- pointed colonel and chief engineer of the U. S. army. In connection with the labors incidental to this office, he was intrusted with the inspector- ship and supervision of the U. S. military academy, which duties he filled until his death. At the be- ginning of the Mexican war he was called by Gen. Winfield Scott to take charge of the engineering operations of the army that was to invade Mexico. In this capacity he directed the siege of Vera Cruz, for which he was brevetted brigadier-general. He then returned to his official duties in Washington, and, in addition to his regular work, was a member of the light-house board in 1851-8 and 1860-'4, also serving in 1855 as a state commissioner for the preservation of the harbor of New York, and later in similar capacity in Boston. In 1859-61 he made a reconnoissance of the Pacific coast of the United States to determine the requisites for its defence, and inspecting fortifications. After the beginning of the civil war he had charge of the engineer bureau in Washington, and acted on various military commissions. When the corps of engineers and that of topographical engineers were consolidated in 1863, he was made brigadier-general on 3 March, and for his long, faithful, and eminent services was brevetted major-general on 21 April, 1864. He was one of the regents of