CONTENTS-Continued 



Page 

 APPENDIX 



A FEDERAL LEGISLATION DIRECTLY RELATED TO THE 

 U.S. ARMY, CORPS OF ENGINEERS, BEACH EROSION 

 BOARD, AND OTHER PERTINENT DOCUMENTS 125 



B MEMBERSHIP OF THE CORPS OF ENGINEERS BEACH 



EROSION BOARD 145 



C OFFICIAL PUBLICATIONS OF THE BEB AND BEB 



COOPERATIVE BEACH EROSION STUDIES 148 



D BEB MEMBERS AND STAFF PARTICIPATION IN OVERSEAS 



CONSULTING AND INTERNATIONAL MEETINGS 164 



E SELECT ORGANIZATION CHARTS 167 



FIGURES 



1 Douglas W. Johnson, a geologist at Columbia University 17 



2 Rear Adm. Raymond S. Patton, an officer in the U.S. Coast and Geodetic 



Survey 17 



3 U.S. Army, Corps of Engineers, Board on Sand Movement and Beach Erosion 



examining jetty at Cold Spring Inlet (Cape May Harbor), New Jersey, 



10 May 1929 19 



4 Lt. Col. EUiott J. Dent at Cold Spring Inlet 19 



5 Early current velocity meter designed by George B. Pegram 21 



6 Surf boat and rodman participating in fieldwork, 28 June 1929 21 



7 Delegates attending meeting of American Shore and Beach Preservation 



Association in New Jersey, July 1935 24 



8 Members of the first U.S. Army, Corps of Engineers, Beach Erosion Board 



on an inspection tour at Fort Fisher, North Carolina, October 1931 24 



9 Jay V. Hall, Jr., the first civilian engineer to join tlie staff of the BEB 28 



10 Ethyl L. Sweet, the first stenographer on the staff of the BEB 28 



1 1 Metal building at Fort Humphreys, Virginia, housing the BEB's first 



experimental wave tank 29 



12 Another view of metal building at Fort Humphreys 29 



13 Plumbing for the BEB's 85-foot wave tank on the Dalecarlia Reservation, 



Washington, B.C., 16 August 1937 30 



