In 1794, Decius Wadsworth was appointed by President
George Washington as a captain in the
Artillerist and Engineer Corps. He served was promoted to major in January 1800, supervised the rebuilding of
Fort Nelson in
Portsmouth, Virginia in 1802, and served as acting Superintendent of the Military Academy from 1803 until 1805, when he resigned. Just prior to the War of 1812, Wadsworth was invited to lead the newly established Army Ordnance Department and he was appointed as the first
Commissary General of Ordnance (later renamed to Chief of Ordnance). His department was charged with the procurement, supply, and maintenance of all cannon, small arms, powder, ball, shot, and other related items for the army. He drew up a set of regulations to ensure a system of uniformity in the armories and in the manufacture of ordnance material. He standardized small arms in the service and accomplished inventories of materiel at posts and forts around the country. Wadsworth supervised the ordnance establishment across the country (including
Springfield and
Harpers Ferry Armory), established arsenals on the Hudson River (
Watervliet Arsenal) and Pittsburgh (
Allegheny Arsenal) in support of the war, made efforts to standardize weapons, particularly artillery, and in 1813, undertook efforts to improve the coastal defenses of the
Chesapeake Bay. Wadsworth stressed the importance of uniformity and simplicity. Despite bureaucratic obstacles, he and his staff managed to streamline the number and variety of small arms and heavy ordnance. He led a failed campaign to adopt an artillery carriage based on a British design. Colonel Wadsworth served as the Chief of Ordnance until June 1, 1821, at which time he left the service due to illness. He died in
New Haven, Connecticut. ==Wadsworth's cipher==