In 1839–40 Rodgers served aboard the schooner Flirt on the coast of Florida, taking part in operations during the Second Seminole War, and also briefly commanded the 2-gun schoonerPhoenix.[6]
After the war Rodgers returned to the U.S. Coast Survey for three years, before serving aboard the screw sloopCongress on the Brazil Station in 1850–51. This was followed by duty as Flag Lieutenant aboard the Constitution with the Africa Squadron in 1852–55.[6] He then spent another two years with the U.S. Coast Survey (1856–1858) before serving on the screw frigateWabash, flagship of the Mediterranean Squadron, in 1858–1859.[4]
Rodgers was promoted to captain on 25 July 1866,[5] and in 1867–68 commanded the screw frigate Franklin,[4] flagship of Admiral David Farragut in the European Squadron.[10] Promoted to commodore on 28 August 1870,[5] he then served as Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks[4] from 1871 to 1874.[11] Achieving flag rank as a rear admiral on 14 June 1874,[5] Rodgers served as superintendent of the Naval Academy from September 1874 until July 1878,[12] before a two-year tour as commander of the Pacific Squadron,[4] returning to the Naval Academy to serve as superintendent for a second time from June to November 1881.[12] Rodgers also served as president of the United States Naval Institute from 1875 to 1877. He was put onto the retired list on 14 November 1881.[5] He again became president of the U.S. Naval Institute in 1882.
Naval Academy accomplishments
While at the Academy Rodgers fostered careful and concrete reforms to help restore the navy's professional and institutional credibility in an era when the service suffered from institutional decay, public indifference, and relied on an antiquated wooden navy sporting canvas and smoothbore guns. By upgrading and rationalizing the academy's curriculum, especially in regard to the new four-year course for engineers, introducing the first mechanical engineering course in the country, concentrating professional subjects in the first- and second-class years, and adding upper-level electives in mathematics, mechanics, physics, and chemistry, Rodgers laid the groundwork for an American naval renaissance in the 1880s.[13]
Rodgers married Julia Slidell, and had two sons follow him into Navy service, Raymond Perry Rodgers (1849–1925), and Thomas Slidell Rodgers (1858–1931), both of whom achieved the rank of rear admiral.
^East, Omega G., and H. B. Jenckes. “St. Augustine during the Civil War.” The Florida Historical Quarterly, vol. 31, no. 2, Florida Historical Society, 1952, pp. 75–91, http://www.jstor.org/stable/30145370.
^Brown, Stephen D. (1987). "Christopher Perry Raymond Rodgers: Mentor of the New Navy". United States Naval Academy History Symposium (6th). Scholarly Resources, Inc.: 291. ISBN0-8420-2278-3 – via Papers of the Sixth Naval History Symposium.