Enoch Barton Garey

Enoch Barton Garey (August 7, 1883 – September 24, 1957) was a Maryland native who served as a major in World War I, and as a commander in the Maryland State Police force. Garey was also a military expert and author the book The Plattsburg Manual: A Handbook for Federal Training Camps.. Garey was born on a small farm in Tuckahoe Neck Maryland in Caroline County Maryland. Young Garey attended St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland (a member of the class of 1903), and then West Point Military Academy, graduating in 1908. After graduating, Enoch Garey served in the army from 1908–1923. His service included the First World War, in which he led a combat patrol that penetrated enemy lines and returned with four prisoners without losing any casualties. Major Garey collected valuable information while being exposed to machine-gun fire and grenade fire from a superior number of enemies. In 1923 Garey became president of St. John's College in Annapolis, narrowing the military scope of the college so students could concentrate energy on the bachelor's degree. He abolished compulsory military training, replacing the cadet corps with a voluntary ROTC. In September 1924 Garey brought the nation's first Naval Reserve program to St. John's as a pilot program to test the scheme for the Navy (ironically, the US Naval Academy in Annapolis would not begin issuing bachelors degrees until 1933!). Program graduates were appointed as ensigns in the Naval Reserve. This initial program's success was enough to convince the Navy to establish six full-scale NROTC programs at Northwestern, Harvard, Yale, UC-Berkeley, University of Washington and Georgia Institute of Technology in 1926. Thus, the 1924-25 catalogue was correct in saying, "This is the only college at which such a unit is maintained. In the future there will be many other colleges having such a course, but St. John's has the honor of being the first." In 1926, though, Garey left St. John's and the voluntary ROTC program folded. By 1929 the Naval Reserve unit and Department of Naval Science had also disappeared due to lack of interest, despite the longevity of the six regular programs that had succeeded the St. John's College experiment (which all exist in 2013, albeit with significant historical gaps at Harvard and Yale). After St. John's, Garey became involved in the Maryland Police Force. One of his most memorable expeditions was on February 8, 1936. He and some other members of his police force attempted to deliver food to the people of Tangier Island during a terrible ice and snow storm. While attempting to deliver the food, a fellow Sergent named William V. Hunter got stuck in the frozen ice of the Chesapeake Bay and died of frostbite and exposure. After retiring from the State Police force, Garey settled down in his Towson home off of Joppa road with his wife Alice and four sons and two daughters.