The Admiral and the Ambassador
One Man's Obsessive Search for the Body of John Paul Jones
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
As the French Revolution gathered steam, the exact location of Jones’s grave—and, in fact, the exact location of St. Louis cemetery in Paris, where he was buried in 1792—was forgotten: information on his death and burial were destroyed in the Paris Commune and the few who had attended his burial had passed away. His body had, though, been preserved in a lead-lined coffin filled with alcohol; theoretically, if the coffin could be located, Jones could be returned to the United States for proper burial. The Admiral and the Ambassador details Porter’s long, unrelenting search for that coffin, first through scraps of archive material and written recollections of funeral attendees, and then beneath the rickety buildings that had been constructed over what he believed to be the graveyard. This book, the only full-length account of the search for and discovery of John Paul Jones’s body, offers a fascinating look into the charismatic, real-life characters who populated the first century of the United States of America.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Martelle (Detroit: A Biography) tells the fascinating "historical detective story" of how Gen. Horace Porter, United States ambassador to France from 1897 to 1905, directed a long, complicated effort to discover the forgotten final resting place in Paris of the legendary U.S. Navy hero John Paul Jones, who died there in 1792 during the chaos of the French Revolution. Porter saw much combat in the Civil War, receiving a Medal of Honor. He then became an aide de camp to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, following him to the White House to serve as his secretary. After directing and paying for the search for Jones's body, Porter saw to it that the remains were sent back to the U.S. Martelle's well-written and well-researched narrative focuses on Porter's complicated five-year quest to find Jones's burial site and the machinations required to get the body back home. He also covers aspects of Jones's colorful life, as well as Porter's eventful life and times, including his service in the Civil War, along with momentous events that took place while he served as U.S. ambassador to France: the Spanish-American War, the assassination of President William McKinley, and the Dreyfus affair.