Early life, military service, and school administration
Adams was born January 9, 1874, on a farm near Mount Vernon, Ohio, the youngest child of David Washington Adams and Louisa A. Adams (née McElroy). He attended local public schools in Gambier, and was an undergraduate student at Kenyon College, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree as valedictorian of the class of 1896.[1][2][3]
Both of Adams's parents died in 1893, when he was 19 years old.[4]
In April 1898 the Spanish–American War began. Adams joined Company L of the Fourth Regiment Ohio Volunteers Infantry and was sent as a corporal to fight in the Puerto Rico campaign. The 4th Ohio arrived in Puerto Rico on August 3, captured the town of Guayama, and were set to make another attack when an armistice was signed and hostilities abruptly ended on August 12. By early November the regiment was back home, and in January was disbanded.[5]
In 1915, Adams published a technical manual (about adjusting triangulation networks) for the C&GS, the first of many, for which he earned a Master of Arts degree from Kenyon;[9] in 1922 Kenyon awarded him an honorary Doctor of Science degree.[3]
In September 1917, with the entry of the United States into World War I, Adams and many other C&GS employees were transferred to the military, Adams as a first lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers.[10] While many of the newly minted C&GS Corps officers were sent on field missions overseas, for instance as marine navigators or artillery orienteering officers,[11] Adams stayed in Washington, D.C. and in less than two months was discharged back to the C&GS.[12][13]
Adams rose through the geodesy ranks at the C&GS, from geodetic computer to mathematician, senior mathematician, and finally principal mathematician, one of the top technical positions.[14] During the 1920s–1940s he was one of the top theoretical experts on geodesy and map projections within the U.S. federal government, personally making many decision about the projections used for maps of the United States and various states, and overseeing their computations.
Personal life, retirement and death
On June 20, 1900, Adams, then superintendent of Centerburg, Ohio, married Mary Edna Fuller. The couple had three children together, Catherine, Jane Elizabeth, and George David.[1][6]
In November 1935, Adams's wife Edna died.[15] Two years later, in 1937, Adams married the widow Pauline Gleason Pealer; they had one daughter, Carola Ann.[1]
In July 1944, Adams retired from the C&GS and moved back to Ohio with his wife, to a farm they bought near Mount Vernon.[14] About 18 years later, on March 5, 1962, he died of viral pneumonia, age 88; he was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.[8][16][17]
Geodesy
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Triangulation adjustment
North American Datum
State plane coordinates
Map projections
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Other professional activities
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Adams, Oscar S. (1923), "The Results of the Triangulation Done in California in 1922 to Test the Stability of the Earth's Surface", Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 4: 90–91, doi:10.1029/tr004i001p00090
—— (1924), "Projections as Framework for Maps", The Military Engineer, 16 (88): 320–322, JSTOR44693676
—— (1925), "Projections for Maps: New Conformal World Maps Derived from Elliptic Functions", Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 6: 45–46, doi:10.1029/TR006i001p00045
—— (1926), "The Readjustment of the First-Order Triangulation in the Western Half of the United States", Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 7: 51–53, doi:10.1029/tr007i001p00051
—— (1927), "Loop-Closures Resulting from the Readjustment of the First-Order Triangulation in the Western Part of the United States", Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 8: 62–65, doi:10.1029/TR008i001p00062
—— (1927), "Circuit Closures In Triangulation", The Military Engineer, 19 (104): 153, JSTOR44572751
—— (1928), "Readjustment of the Triangulation in the Western Part of the United States", Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 9: 44, doi:10.1029/TR009i001p00044
—— (1928), アダムス氏蝶々地圖 [Mathematical Theory of the Conformal Butterfly Map], Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan, ser. 2 (in Japanese), 6 (12): 456–458, doi:10.2151/jmsj1923.6.12_456
—— (1929), "Review: The Chequered Career of Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler, First Superintendent of the United States Coast Survey, by Florian Cajori", The American Mathematical Monthly, 36 (5): 283–285, doi:10.1080/00029890.1929.11986955, JSTOR2298514
—— (1931), "Parabolic Equal-Area Projection World Map", The Military Engineer, 23 (129): 264–265, JSTOR44688069
—— (1932), "Geographical centers", The Military Engineer, 24 (138): 586–587, JSTOR44566445
—— (1934), "Plane Coordinate-Systems for Individual States", Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 15 (1): 36–38, doi:10.1029/TR015i001p00036
—— (1934), "Flatland: Not a romance but a necessary expedient", Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, 24 (5): 201–216, JSTOR24522293
—— (1936), "Conformal Map of the World in a Square, Poles in the Middle of Opposite Sides", Bulletin Géodésique, 52: 461–473, doi:10.1007/BF03031271
—— (1937), "Plane Coördinate Systems in Regional Surveys", The Military Engineer, 29 (163): 10–12, JSTOR44555332
^Record of Deaths, Knox County, Ohio, May 1894 – via FamilySearch, Monroe Township: // Adams, David W., date of death: 1893 Dec, cause: Typhoid Fever // Adams, Louisa, date of death: 1893 Nov, cause: Heart Failure
^"Fourth Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Company L", The Official Roster of Ohio Soldiers in the War with Spain, 1898–1899, Columbus, Ohio: Edward T. Miller, 1916, p. 303: Oscar S. Adams, Corporal, Gambier // Age 24. Enrolled as Private. Appointed Corporal July 1, 1898, per R. O.No. 541⁄2. Mustered out with Company.
McSherry, Patrick (2009) [2003], "A Brief History of the 4th Ohio Volunteer Infantry", Spanish American War Centennial Website
^ abCattell, J. McKeen & Dean R. Brimhall, eds. (1921), "Adams, Oscar S(herman)", American Men of Science: A Biographical Directory (3rd ed.), Garrison, New York: The Science Press, p. 4
^
Adams, Oscar S. (1931), "Oscar (S)herman Adams, Senior mathematician, Division of Geodesy", Who's Who in the U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey(PDF), Washington, D.C.: U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey
^"Kenyon Alumnus Completes Important Government Work", The Kenyon Collegian, vol. 42, no. 4, November 6, 1915, p. 3: Oscar S. Adams, B. S., '95, is the compiler of a table of United States Coast and Geodetic Survey computations, recently published by the government. The title of the publication is 'Application of the Theory of Least Squares to the Adjustment of Triangulation.' ¶ [...] Last commencement Mr. Adams received his A. M. degree from Kenyon College in recognition of his valuable work.
^Wilson, Woodrow (September 24, 1917), "Executive Order [2707]", Origin and Development of the NOAA Corps, by Nygren, Harley D., Rockville, Maryland: U.S. Department of Commerce (published 1975), NOAA ID No. 14019, p. 15: Also there shall be transferred to the service and jurisdiction of the War Department, and I do hereby appoint and direct that they be commissioned and ordered to active duty as of date of this order in the Officer's Reserve Corps in the grades set opposite their names, the following named persons now part of the personnel of the Coast and Geodetic Survey: [...] Oscar S. Adams, 1st Lieut.U. S. R.
^Colbert, Leo Otis (1939), "The Coast and Geodetic Survey: Its Part in the National Defense", The Military Engineer, 31 (180): 397–400, JSTOR44691576
^Wilson, Woodrow (January 9, 1918), "Executive Order [2782]", Official Bulletin, 2 (218) (published January 26, 1918), p. 16: The following-named persons who were transferred to the service and jurisdiction of the War Department by Executive order of September 24, 1917, are returned to their former status in the service and jurisdiction of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, Department of Commerce, effective on the dates specified after their names: [...] Oscar S. Adams, November 16, 1917
^Military and Naval Service of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1917–1919(PDF) (unpublished manuscript), U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1919, pp. 66½–67: ADAMS, OSCAR S., First Lieutenant, Engineers Reserve Corps, U. S. A.: On September 24, 1917, by Executive Order No. 2707, he was transferred to the service and jurisdiction of the War Department. Previous to his transfer he was with the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey and was employed as a geodetic computer. He served under the Chief of Engineers, U. S. A., in the U. S. Engineers Officers Reserve Corps until November 7, 1917, when he was discharged on account of being physically disqualified for active service. By Executive Order No. 2762, he was returned to the Service and jurisdiction of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, Department of Commerce on November 16, 1917.
^ ab"Dr. O. S. Adams Retires From Geodetic Survey", Washington Evening Star, July 6, 1944, p. A-9: Dr. Adams, a native of Ohio and a graduate of Kenyon College, entered Government service in 1910 as a computer in the office of the Coast and Geodetic Survey in Manila. He has been assigned to the Washington office since 1913.
"Dr. Oscar Adams Quits Geodetic Survey Post", Washington Evening Star, July 7, 1944, p. A-7: Dr. Oscar Sherman Adams, 70, has retired as principal mathematician of the Coast and Geodetic Survey after 34 years' service, it was announced today, and plans to return to Ohio at the end of this month. ¶ Dr. Adams entered the survey as a computer in 1910 and rose through many promotions to his las post, one of the principal technical positions in the organization. ¶ [...] Dr. Adams and his wife [will] leave for a farm they recently purchased near Mount Vernon, Ohio, near the birthplace of both Dr. And Mrs. Adams.
Adams also submitted several solutions which were credited but not published.
^Review: Whittemore, James K. (1920), "General Theory of Polyconic Projections. by Oscar S. Adams", The American Mathematical Monthly, 27 (10): 369–372, doi:10.1080/00029890.1920.11985969, JSTOR2972557