Munoz was captured and shot, and his body was burned. He published a useful " Diccionario Nautico" (Santiago, 1850).
MUNRO, Henry, clergyman, b. in Inverness,
Scotland, in 1780; d. in Edinburgh, 30 May, 1801.
He was graduated at the University of St. An-
drews, studied divinity at Edinburgh university,
and in 1757 was ordained, and appointed chaplain
to the 77th Highlanders, which he accompanied in
•Gen. John Forbes's expedition to Fort Duquesne.
, He was also at the capture of Crown Point, Ticon-
•deroga, and Montreal in 1760, and preached a
thanksgiving sermon to the victorious array on
the hill behind the last-named city. He afterward
served in the West Indies, but returned to this
country in 1762 and settled in Princeton, N. J.
He then took orders in the Church of England,
!ind in the year 1765 became missionary at Yon-
kers, where Col. Frederick Philipse had built a
church. In 1768 he became rector of St. Peter's.
Albany, and also acted, at Sir William Johnson's
request, as missionary to the Mohawk Indians,
whose language he spoke and whom he frequently
visited. As an officer in the old French war, he
acquired 2,000 acres of bounty land in Washing-
ton county, N. Y., and attempted to settle it, but
the Revolution interfered, and it was subsequent-
ly sold by his son. Mr. Munro's church was closed
by the Albany committee of safety in 1777, and he
was imprisoned, but escaped to the British lines,
and returned to Great Britain in 1778. In 1782 the
University of St. Andrews gave him the degree of
D. D. He married in 1762 Miss Stockton, of New
Jersey, and, after her death, married, in 1766, Eve,
only daughter of Peter Jay, who, with their son,
remained in this country after Mr. Munro's flight
to England. — Their only child, Peter Jay, jurist,
b. in Rye, N. Y., 10 Jan., 1707 ; d. in Mamaroneck,
X. Y., 23 Sept., 1833, was educated in New York,
under the direction of his uncle, .John Jay, until
his thirteenth year, when he accompanied the
latter to Europe
on his appoint-
ment by congress
to the mission to
Spain, landing at
Cadiz in Novem-
ber, 1779. Mr. Jay
remained in Spain,
although not for-
mally received as
minister, until
1782, residing at
Madrid. During
this time Mr.
Munro's education
was carried on un-
der Spanish mas-
ters, and he be-
came thoroughly
versed in Spanish
and French. In
June, 1782, Mr.
An image should appear at this position in the text. A high-res raw scan of the page is available. To use it as-is, as a placeholder, edit this page and replace "{{missing image}}" with "{{raw image|Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1900, volume 4).djvu/501}}". If it needs to be edited first (e.g. cropped or rotated), you can do so by clicking on the image and following the guidance provided. [Show image] |
Jay left Spain with his family and went to Paris. During the peace negotiations, as well as after his trouble with Carmichael and Brockholst Livingston, his official secretaries, Mr. Jay committed many matters to his nephew in a similar capacity. Mr. Munro returned to New York with Mr. Jay on 24 July, 1784. He began at once the study of the law, and after a brief period was placed as a stu- dent in the office of Aaron Burr, whom Mr. Jay deemed the best practitioner of the day, and in due time was admitted to the bar. He soon acquired a lucrative practice, and from 1800 till 1826, when his health gave way, was one of the chief lawyers of New York. In 1821, with his cousin, Peter A. Jay. and Jonathan Ward, he was elected from Westchester county, where he had a country-seat, to represent that county in the Constitutional convention of that year. In that body Mr. Munro took an active part, being, by the appointment of its president. Gov. Tompkins, chairman of the ju- diciary committee. In 1826, while he was engaged in active practice, Mr. Munro had an attack of paralysis, and, though he partially recovered and lived for seven years afterward, he spent the resi- due of his life as a country gentleman.
MUNROE, Charles Edward, chemist, b. in
Cambridge, Mass., 24 May, 1849. He was graduated
at the Lawrence scientific school of Harvard in
1871, and, after acting as assistant to Prof. Wolcott
Gibbs, was senior assistant in chemistry there till
1874. In 1872 he conducted the summer course of
instruction in chemistry for teachers at Cambridge,
which was the first of its kind. During 1873-4
he also lectured on chemistry at Boston dental
college, and in 1874 he was called to the chair of
chemistry at the U. S. naval academy in Annapolis,
where he remained until 1886, also lecturing in St.
John's college, Annapolis, in 1883-'4. He then
accepted the appointment of chemist to the U. S.
torpedo corps at Newport, R. I., where he still
(1888) remains. In connection with his appoint-
ment at the U. S. naval academy he was frequently
called on by the national authorities to conduct
special investigations, principally on explosives.
These researches have appeared in scientific jour-
nals both in the United States and Eui'ope, and
have gained for him a reputation as the authority
on that subject in this country. Tiie mineral
cabinet at the naval academy was created by him,
and he devised and carried into execution a course
of post-graduate instruction for naval officers at
the Smithsonian institution. He was employed by
the U. S. coast and geodetic survey to examine the
oyster-bearing waters of Chesapeake bay, and in
1882 was appointed a special agent by the U. S.
census bureau to report on the building-stones of
Maryland and Virginia. Prof. Munroe has been
active in the Naval institute from its inception,
and has held the offices of secretary, treasurer, and
corresponding secretary. He is a member of the
chemical societies of Berlin, London, and New
York, and in 1887 was elected vice-president of the
American association for the advancement of sci-
ence for the chemical section. The titles of his
scientific papers exceed 100 in number, and his
•' Notes on the Literature of Explosives," issued
periodically, now include fifteen numbers. He has
also published an " Index to the Literature of Ex-
plosives " (Baltimore, 1886).
MUNROE, John, soldier, b. in Scotland about
1796; d. in New Brunswick, N. J., 26 April, 1861.
He was graduated at the U. S. military academy
in 1814, and entered the army as 3d lieutenant in
the 1st artillery. He became captain, 2 March,
1825, was brevetted major, 15 Feb., 1838, for ser-
vices against the Florida Indians, and became
major of the 2d artillery, 18 Aug., 1846. He was
chief of artillery to Gen. Zachary Taylor in July,
1846, brevetted lieutenant-colonel for gallantry at
Monterey, and colonel for Buena Vista. He was
military and civil governor of New Mexico from
October, 1849, till 1850, and was promoted lieuten-
ant-colonel in 1856.
MUNSELL, Joel, printer, b. in Northfield, Mass., 14 April, 1808; d. in Albany, N. Y., 15 Jan., 1880. He established himself as a printer in Albany, N. Y., in 1827, was associate editor of the