From October 1890 to October 1893, Parker was aboard the gunboatUSS Alert, operating in the Bering Sea and in the Asiatic Squadron, and he was promoted to lieutenant on 25 January 1893 while aboard her. He returned to the Naval Academy to serve as an instructor from October 1893 to 1896, then reported aboard the new monitorUSS Monadnock in the Pacific Squadron in July 1896. After the outbreak of the Spanish–American War in April 1898, Monadnock was ordered to the Philippine Islands to reinforce the Asiatic Squadron there, and departed San Francisco, California, on 23 June 1898 for a voyage across the Pacific Ocean, stopping in Hawaii in early July before arriving in Manila Bay on 16 August 1898 at the close of the war and commencing blockade duty there.[1][2][4]
Leaving Monadnock in December 1898, Parker transferred to the gunboat USS Petrel in January 1899, seeing action against Filipino insurgents during the Philippine–American War. He left Petrel in August 1899 and was assigned to the hospital shipUSS Solace in September 1899, on which he returned to the United States in October 1899. He began another tour as an instructor at the Naval Academy on 19 October 1899 and was promoted to lieutenant commander on 30 June 1900.[1][2][5][6][7]
Parker retired from the Navy as a commodore on 30 June 1912.[15]
After the United States entered World War I in April 1917, Parker was recalled to active duty. He served as acting president of the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, from 21 November 1917 to 17 March 1919, the second of three acting presidents to oversee the college while its academic activities were shut down for the war between April 1917 and April 1919.[16]
Personal life
Parker was married to the former Mary McPherson (29 August 1862 – 16 July 1937).
Jackson, John E., Jondavid Duvall, and Kimberly Rhoades, eds. Naval War College Illustrated History and Guide, Second Edition. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 2010. ISBN978-1-884733-72-7