If you knew or served with this Sailor and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
Contact Info
Home Town Ovid, N.Y.
Last Address Buried in Arlington National Cemetery
Andrew Dunlap was born in Ovid on October 7, 1844, to parents Andrew and Hannah Kinne Dunlap. (His grandfather, Andrew Dunlap, was one of the original settlers of the southern party of what is today Seneca County.) He attended the NYS Agricultural College at Ovid and then entered the U.S. Navy as acting midshipman on April 23, 1862. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1867.
He had an active naval career, rising through the ranks to become a Rear Admiral. He was a midshipman in the European and Pacific stations in 1867-68. He was promoted to the rank of Ensign in 1868, Master in 1870, Lieutenant in 1871, Lt. Commander in 1891, Commander in 1898, and Captain in 1902. He was made a Rear Admiral in 1905. He served on various sea and shore duties.
During the Spanish American War, he was commander of the USS Solace, an ambulance and hospital ship which was part of the Sampson Fleet. On November 5, 1898, the Solace brought officers and men to establish a naval station at San Juan, Puerto Rico. Then the Solace was assigned the duty of transporting officers and men to and from the Philippine Islands. In 1902, Andrew Dunlap was made commandant of the U.S. naval station at San Juan. He was married to the former Ellen Grace Derby Adams of Boston. They had one son, Andrew, who accidentally shot himself while hunting in the Thousand Islands. Rear Admiral Andrew Dunlap died April 11, 1914. All three are buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Other Comments:
Obituary for Rear Admiral Andrew Dunlap
ADMIRAL A. DUNLAP DEAD
Retired Officer Served More Than
43 Years in U.S. Navy.
Rear Admiral Andrew Dunlap, U.S.N., retired, died at the United States Naval Hospital at Washington yesterday afternoon. He returned to Washington six weeks ago from Pinehurst, N.C., where he had been for his health. Admiral Dunlap was born in Ovid, N.Y., on Oct 7, 1844, and graduated from the United States Naval Academy at the age of 23 years. He was made an Ensign in 1868, a Lieutenant in 1871, Lieutenant Commander in 1871, captain in 1902 and Rear Admiral in June, 1905, when he retired at his own request after more than 43 years service.
Admiral Dunlap was in command of the ambulance and hospital ship Solace during the Spanish-American war and afterward commanded that vessel when she did transport work to the West Indies and the Philippines. He was Lighthouse Inspector of the Tenth District with headquarters at Buffalo from 1900 to 1902 and the following four years he was in command of the United States Naval Station at San Juan, Porto Rico. He was a member of the Military Order of Foreign Wars, United States Naval Institute, and the National Geological Society. He is survived by his widow, who was Miss Ellen Grace Derby Adams of Boston.
Chain of Command Solace was built in 1896 and 1897 by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co., Newport News, Virginia, and was operated as the SS Creole by the Cromwell Steamship Lines. The ship was acquired by the United States Navy on 7 April 1898, renamed Solace, and converted into a hospital ship. She was the first Navy ship to fly the Geneva Red Cross flag. Solace was commissioned on 14 April 1898, Comdr. Andrew Dunlap in command.