Buy Book Living Again by Captain Felix Risenberg

American maritime officer and writer

Felix Riesenberg

Built-in April ix, 1879

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Died November xix, 1939 (aged 60)

Scarsdale, New York

Nationality American
Occupation
  • United States Merchant Marine
  • explorer
  • ambassador
  • author
Known for writing

Felix Riesenberg (9 April 1879 – 19 Nov 1939) was an American maritime officer and writer of maritime professional, historical, and fictional literature in the early 20th century.

Biography [edit]

External prototype
image icon Felix Riesenberg (1947). Portrait painting past his brother Sidney Riesenberg.

Riesenberg was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He later attended the New York Nautical School graduating in the form of 1897. Subsequently, he secured a position as a deck officer in the merchant marine, being part of the Coast and Geodetic Survey and also serving in the Naval Reserve until 1909. Riesenberg was hired by Walter Wellman to exist a part of the support crew in an unsuccessful effort to accomplish the N Pole past airship in the summer of 1906.[1] He was rehired past Wellman the following yr to be the navigator aboard the three man airship America in a 2nd failed attempt to reach the North Pole in 1907.[1]

After this, Riesenberg enrolled and graduated from the Columbia Schoolhouse of Engineering and Engineering science in 1913.

Riesenberg worked as a civil Engineer for New York State from 1913 to 1915 and then again from 1920 to 1922. In the interim, he was the Primary Officer of the U.s. Shipping Board.

Riesenberg was the superintendent of the New York Nautical School on 2 occasions, from 1917 to 1919 as Commander of the barkentine "Newport" and once again from 1923 to 1924.

Riesenberg was also a prolific author, publishing a textbook, Standard Seamanship for the Merchant Service that became commonly used,[two] as well every bit several maritime historical works and novels. He wrote several articles that appeared in the mag The Nation.[3] Riesenberg published his memoir Living Again in 1937.[4]

Riesenberg died 19 November 1939 in Scarsdale, New York.[1] [5] After a funeral service held in Bronxville his ashes were scattered at bounding main.[half-dozen]

He had 4 children, Felix Jr., William, Margaret (Peggy), and John (Jack). Priscilla was Felix Jr'southward wife. His son Felix Jr. (1913–1962) was likewise an author of numerous maritime books.[seven]

The New York Nautical School is today called "Maritime Higher" and is part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system. Present day cadets are still taught the 'Riesenberg Saying': "The ocean is selective; slow at recognition of endeavor and aptitude, but fast in sinking the unfit."

Selected bibliography [edit]

  • Under Sail: A Male child's Voyage Around Cape Horn - 1918[8]
  • Standard Seamanship for the Merchant Service - 1922
  • Bob Graham at Bounding main - 1925
  • Vignettes of the Body of water - 1926
  • Due east Side, Westward Side - 1927, turned into a moving-picture show of the same name besides released in 1927[9]
  • Red Horses - 1928
  • Shipmates: Sketches of the Sea - 1928
  • Countless River - 1931
  • The Maiden Voyage - 1931
  • Passing Strangers - 1931
  • Skyline - 1931, a pic screenplay also based upon the 1927 novel E Side, West Side [x]
  • Female parent Sea - 1933
  • Log of the Sea - 1933
  • The Left-Handed Passenger - 1935
  • Living Over again : an Autobiography - 1937
  • Cape Horn : the story of the Greatcoat Horn region, including the straits of Magellan, from the days - 1939[11]
  • The Pacific Body of water - 1940 (published posthumously)

Honors [edit]

The SSFelix Riesenberg was a blazon EC2-S-C1 Liberty ship built at Brunswick, Georgia and delivered to the U.s. Merchant Marine 26 December 1944 that was named in Riesenberg's honor.[12] [13] Following World State of war Ii she was sold to a private company in 1947 and finally scrapped in 1972.[12]

In the 1940s, a sail training schooner at the United States Merchant Marine Academy in King's Signal, New York was renamed the Felix Riesenberg, having previously been named the Rhine.[14]

On the campus of State University of New York Maritime College Riesenberg Hall, which houses the able-bodied department, was defended half-dozen May 1965 to laurels Riesenberg.[15] Riesenberg Hall contains a gymnasium and a natatorium, information technology hosts the college's basketball, volleyball, and swimming & diving events.[15]

In 2001, Felix Riesenberg was inducted into the National Maritime Hall of Fame at Kings Point.[sixteen]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c "FELIX RIESENBERG, Sea Writer, DIES; Primary Mariner and Engineer Succumbs Suddenly at His Home in Scarsdale at 60 MADE POLAR Trek Member of the Wellman Party in 1906--Was Navigator of Airship America in 1907". The New York Times. 19 November 1939. p. 38. Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  2. ^ Riesenberg, Felix (1936), Standard Seamanship for the Merchant Service, New York: D. Van Nostrand company, inc., OCLC 1712478, OL 6361757M
  3. ^ "Felix Riesenberg - The Nation". Retrieved 2010-11-26 .
  4. ^ "Living Once more: An Autobiography, past Felix Riesenberg". Neglected Books Page. November 4, 2012. Retrieved Nov 4, 2012.
  5. ^ Felix Riesenberg at IMDb
  6. ^ "PLAN RIESENBERG RITES; Bronxville Services Tomorrow --To Besprinkle Ashes at Sea". The New York Times. 1939-11-20. Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  7. ^ "Felix Riesenberg Jr". LibraryThing. Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  8. ^ Under Sail was published by The Macmillan company in 1918. Run across likewise: Spilman, Richard (8 March 2010). "Under Canvas : A Boy'due south Voyage Around Cape Horn past Felix Reisenberg – A Review". Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  9. ^ East Side, West Side (1927) at IMDb
  10. ^ Skyline (1931) at IMDb
  11. ^ Hutchison, Percy (24 September 1939). "The Stirring History of Grim Greatcoat Horn; Felix Riesenberg's Account of the Region Is a Notable Addition to Literature of the Ocean". The New York Times . Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  12. ^ a b Colton, Tim (April 8, 2008). "Liberty Ships - Part four: EMC #s 2293 thru 3148". Archived from the original on August 10, 2011. Retrieved 2010-xi-26 .
  13. ^ Horodysky, T. (four May 2002). "Liberty Ships congenital past the United States Maritime Commission in World War II". American Merchant Marine at War. Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  14. ^ "History and Photos of Merchant Marine Cadet Corps Life in the 1940s". American Merchant Marine at War. Retrieved 2010-12-04 .
  15. ^ a b "Maritime Athletics - Riesenberg Hall". Retrieved 2010-11-27 .
  16. ^ "National Maritime Hall of Fame". United States Merchant Marine Academy. Archived from the original on 2010-09-xv. Retrieved 2010-12-04 .

External links [edit]

  • Works by Felix Riesenberg at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)

smalldivere.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felix_Riesenberg

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