TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
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The ‘Pathfinder of the Seas’

There is probably no one individual who is more overlooked in American and Tennessee history than this man. His impact on this nation and the world are still felt to this day and responsible for creating a new field of science that completely revolutionized maritime shipping and weather forecasting. He is often credited as being a Virginian, but his family and home were in Tennessee, where a County is named after his Uncle.
His life is one that few students of Tennessee history ever study, but, to scholars around the world, he is often referred to as one of America’s greatest scientific minds – a man who overcame a devastating injury and rose to international prominence with a discovery that still influences the lives of people to this day.

Following the 1801 Cherokee land treaty in Middle Tennessee, Abram Maury and family relocated from Virginia to the Tennessee country to start a family farm. The rich land provided a good living for the family and soon attracted others to the region. The area grew and, when it became a County of the State in 1807, it was named in honor of its founding family.
Abram Maury excelled in the local community. In addition to his business interests, Maury served as a newspaper editor, lawyer, was elected to the legislature as both a representative and senator, and eventually elected to the U.S. Congress. Maury eventually talked his family in Virginia into moving to the frontier of Tennessee. In 1810, Abram Maury’s brother and his four-year-old nephew Matthew Fontaine Maury moved to the Tennessee county that bore their family’s name.
Young Matthew Maury spent his early years working on the family farm. When he was old enough, Matthew attended the Harpeth Academy in Franklin, Tenn. In the academy, he developed a vivid imagination and excelled at his studies. In 1825, at the age of 19, Abram Maury’s nephew was given a choice. He could remain in Maury County and continue building the family fortunes or he could follow his own path. His older brother had left Maury County years earlier and was doing well in the newly formed United States Navy. Matthew chose to follow in his brother’s footsteps. He took a midshipman’s warrant and began what would he hoped would become a lifelong career in the Naval forces.
Matthew Maury went to sea and dedicated himself to learning everything he could about the sea, ships, and sailing. Maury was a meticulous observer and he kept detailed reports of the things he learned at sea. For nearly ten years, he cruised the world’s oceans and conducted an exhaustive study of navigation.
In 1834, he took a leave of absence from the navy to marry Ann Herndon and look over his reports. The couple made their home in Fredericksburg, Va. where Matthew Maury published his study "A New theoretical and practical treatise on navigation".
The publication impressed Maury’s superiors and he was promoted in 1836 to the rank of Lieutenant. The officer was assigned to survey the harbors and towns along the southeast coast. Over the years, Maury had been appalled at the lack of organized naval administration and education. In 1838, the Tennessean became a vocal advocate of establishing a naval academy similar to the one for the army at West Point. Fellow Tennessean and then President James K. Polk agreed and a naval academy was established at Annapolis, Maryland. His outspoken views and published reports on naval reforms, however, had earned him enemies among his superiors, but Maury was unaffected by them and continued his studies of the winds and the seas.
While ashore in 1839 in Virginia, the naval officer, who had spent his entire career sailing ships and being onboard America’s best vessels, was seriously injured in a stagecoach accident. The injury left him lame and ended his career as an onboard naval officer. Maury was emotionally crushed by the accident. Although not one to give up, his limits were tested when Maury was reassigned in 1842 to the administrative job of heading up the Navy’s Depot of Charts and Instruments.
Maury was not content with simply being the caretaker of the collected volumes of ships logs and charts. He began to study the dusty forgotten records. Maury had sailed in most of the places he was reading about and soon he began to see a pattern among ships that were wrecked and supposedly drifted aimlessly on the ocean’s surface. Maury himself had once been on a ship that was unnavigable in the Atlantic and recorded its movements during that time. The naval officer began to compile hard evidence that hinted at the existence of a continuous current in the ocean.
In 1853, Matthew Maury was promoted to the rank of Commander. His idea of the ocean possessing a continuous current, however, was having a hard time gaining credibility and was laughed at by seasoned sailors and dismissed. When a violent storm stuck the Atlantic that same year, word was brought in that the American merchant ship SS San Francisco had lost her rudder and was sighted foundering 300 miles off of Sandy Hook. Everyone knew that without it, the ship was lost and so was her crew. Maury saw an opportunity to prove the existence of the Gulf Streams to his superiors.
The sailors gave him the last known coordinates of the San Francisco and Maury finally found a captain who gave him the chance to use his new method of charting currents. Maury agreed if he was unsuccessful he would abandon the research.
With unswerving accuracy, however, Maury was able to locate the ship with his formula and credited with saving the San Francisco’s crew.
Maury’s name soon became a household word among sailors around the world. The new fame enabled him to encourage ship’s captains to keep detailed daily reports and soon he was able to incorporate the research into his masterwork "The Wind and Current Charts of the North Atlantic".
His total view of the major movements of wind and water gave him a perspective that was years ahead of his time. The publication cut days and even weeks from the sailing times on the world’s traditional shipping routes and revolutionized sea travel.
His conception of a universal system of oceanography led to his heading up and being the U.S. representative at an international oceanography congress in Brussels, Belgium, where his system amazed the Europeans and earned him the nickname "the pathfinder of the seas".
In 1855, Maury published "The Physical Geography of the Sea" and prepared a report that showed the practicality and assured the success of the first trans-Atlantic cable between North America and Europe.
His career seemed unstoppable and the Tennessee Commander rose to prominence throughout the world as one of America’s most noted scientists.
When the South seceded from the Union in 1861,however, the 36-year-naval-officer resigned his commission and volunteered his services to the Confederacy, where he was commissioned as a commander. His international fame led to him becoming an unofficial ambassador and spokesman for the Confederate cause in Europe, but Maury was never one to stay away long from the sea.
His ingenuity proved itself over and over to Confederate command. He aided Sumner County, Tenn. native Horace L. Hunley in designing the C.S.S. Hunley, aided in southern harbor defense by designing one of the first exploding electric mines, and procured war ships for the Confederate Navy. He was still on "special service" assignment in England when the War Between the States ended.
In the following negotiations that provided amnesty to former Confederate soldiers, there was a catch that would alienate the Tennessean from his roots – a stipulation stating that anyone representing the Confederate States of America overseas was banned from reentering the country.
Although exiled, Maury traveled to Mexico where he served in Emperor Maximilian’s government as Imperial Commissioner of Immigration. With former Confederates fleeing the South, Maury worked with other former southern leaders in an attempt to colonize them in Mexico. When the effort collapsed, Maury returned to England where he wrote geography textbooks for the British schools.
In 1868, then-President U.S. Grant lifted the exile order and Maury was finally permitted to return home.
He took a job as professor of meteorology at the Virginia Military Institute. In this position at the Institute, he became one of the first in the scientific field to illustrate its importance to everyday society. His study of the depths of the sea, its currents, and temperatures led him to develop one of the most accurate methods of weather forecasting known. In addition, it laid foundations for many other disciplines of atmospheric sciences. In addition, Maury saw the importance his discoveries could have on agriculture and published "A physical survey of Virginia" - illustrating how farming could benefit from weather observation.
In 1872, during one of his lectures in Lexington, Va., Maury fell ill and was incapacitated for several months. The "pathfinder of the seas" finally gave in to his illness and passes away in Lexington on Feb. 1, 1873 and buried in a nearby cemetery.
Seven months later an honor guard of VMI cadets marched to Lexington to retrieve the remains of their pioneering professor. The cadets took up position in the cemetery and from that point forward in their journey never left his side. Matthew Maury’s casket was escorted by the Cadets along the North River to Richmond. When the cadets reached his favorite retreat at the mountainous Goshen Pass, they covered it with mountain laurel and rhododendron and placed it on the train to Richmond.
Amid a proper VMI ceremony suitable to a distinguished military officer and beloved alumni of the university, the body of Matthew Fontaine Maury was committed to Richmond’s Hollywood Cemetery.
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No other American had quite the impact on modern science as did Matthew Maury. His research and theories proved themselves as the most accurate ever devised. It was information that set the standard for weather forecasting and serves us today from the reaches of space. Weather satellites circling the earth still use Maury’s forecasting formulas.
There are numerous books available on Matthew Maury and his numerous inventions and discoveries. Most can be easily found in the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond or by special order at local bookstores. He has been long considered by scholars as one of the most overlooked scientists and discoverers in world history.
"While it is hardly an excuse", said a military historian, "Maury’s accomplishments are as overlooked as Tesla’s in electrical engineering. His service to the Confederacy is probably responsible for it, but no excuse. While a big deal is made about Admiral Farragut, he only stayed in Tennessee for four years and had no real family ties to the state. Maury on the other hand had numerous relatives and ties to the state. Tennessee and other Confederate states were so driven to prove themselves as "loyal Americans" to the government that they hardly recognized anyone who had once supported the Confederate government."
Although Tennessee is landlocked with no ocean or sea touching it, the state has historically produced some of the world’s most recognized naval pioneers and officers.
Virginia eventually renamed the North River near Lexington "Maury River" and a VMI building was named in his honor. In 1923, during a resurgence of popularity, Virginia named Highway 39 out of Goshen the "Maury Highway" and a monument to Maury was unveiled at Goshen Pass and, six years later, his likeness was sculptured and dedicated on Monument Avenue in Richmond.
Special thanks for this story has to go to the Virginia Military Institute for their providing the information of Maury’s tenure at the Institute and his removal from Lexington to Richmond, Va. In addition to its long tradition, the Virginia Military Institute is still regarded today as one of the best educational facilities of its kind.
Other contributor to this story include Greg Cina of The Mariners’s Museum in Newport News, Va. for helping digging out some lost facts on Maury’s career before the War Between the States. The facility is regarded as one of the best Maritime Museums in the nation and one of the leading tourist attractions of coastal Virginia.
The Harpeth Academy in Franklin,Tenn. mentioned earlier in this story was a prominent institution in its day in Middle Tennessee. While little is known about it except through the writings of its alumni, numerous state and national leaders attended it.
Other than Maury County being named for his Uncle, no monument of Matthew Maury exists in Tennessee nor is he mentioned in state historical texts. Many historians, especially those in Maury County, want to see that changed and proper recognition finally given to the Tennessean.