A little more than three weeks after John Paul Jones was buried, a Paris mob stormed the royal palace of the Tuileries, and the bodies of the Swiss Guards killed while trying to protect the king and queen were tossed into a common grave adjoining that of Jones. With France in the midst of revolution and a crushing foreign war with Austria and Prussia, any hope of recovering Jones's body and bringing it back home would have to be postponed indefinitelyânot that there was any great clamor in the United States to do so. John Paul Jones was quietly fading into obscurity as the years passed, and, except for his heirs pestering Congress for his unpaid salary and other monies, no one gave the great man much thought. The cemetery where he was buried closed in 1804 and was soon covered over by the expanding city.
There were several attempts to find the burial site as the nineteenth century progressed, but all were futile. It seemed that Jones would be lost forever. But then, in 1899, General Horace Porter, the American ambassador to France, initiated his own search and eventually found the site of the old graveyard. As word of the discovery leaked out, though, the owners of the buildings on the site saw an opportunity for profit and demanded exorbitant sums for the right to excavate beneath their property. Ambassador Porter had no choice but to postpone his project until 1905, when the initial excitement had died down and he was able to secure permission to dig on more favorable terms.
An army of workers immediately set about sinking shafts and digging tunnels. Around the clock they toiled, at one point encountering the badly deteriorated remains of those unfortunate Swiss Guards who had been, according to one report, “stacked like cord-wood” in their graves. Eventually, a series of lead coffins were found. One of them surely contained the remains of John Paul Jones. But which one? A group of anthropologists and pathologists were called in to help sort through the corpses. When the coffin thought to be Jones's was opened, it proved to be a bonanza. “To our intense surprise,” wrote Ambassador Porter, “the body was marvelously preserved, all the flesh remaining intact, very slightly shrunken, and of grayish brown or tan color.” Simmoneau's decision to cure the corpse in alcohol had paid off. The gathered experts were able to match the well-preserved face with a bust of Jones known to be an accurate likeness, and an autopsy confirmed the cause of death. The search for John Paul Jones was over. Now it was time to finally give him his propers.
President Theodore Roosevelt, sensing the propaganda value for the U.S. Navy, which he was looking to strengthen, sent a fleet of ships over to France to escort Jones back home. First, though, an elaborate service was held over the body, which now reposed in a sleek new mahogany coffin. This was followed by a big parade and a special trip to Cherbourg, where, after another ceremony, the casket was transferred to the U.S.S.
Brooklyn
for the trip back to the United States.
Still more obsequies awaited the arrival home, yet despite all the tributes and long-delayed expressions of gratitude, John Paul Jones was still getting dissed in some quarters. Midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy, Jones's final resting place, sang a parody of a popular song called “Everybody Works but Father”:
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Everybody works but John Paul Jones!
He lies around all day,
Body pickled in alcohol
On a permanent jag they say.
Middies stand around him
Doing honor to his bones;
Everybody works in Crabtown [Annapolis]
But John Paul Jones.
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And though Congress had settled on the academy over many other places vying for the remains, it was too cheap to fund a proper shrine. As a result, Jones's body was stashed behind a set of stairs until Congress finally came through with the cash. That only took seven years.
Appendix I
Presidents of the United States
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1) GEORGE WASHINGTON
Born: February 22, 1732, Westmoreland County, Virginia
Political Party: Federalist
State Represented: Virginia
Vice President: John Adams
First Lady: Martha Dandridge Custis Washington
Term of Office: 1789-1797 (two terms)
Died: December 14, 1799, aged 67, Mount Vernon, Virginia
Distinctions: Only president inaugurated in two cities (New York, 1789, and Philadelphia, 1793). Only president to not live in Washington, D.C. Only president unanimously elected, receiving 69 of the 69 electoral votes cast in 1788.
Pages: 4, 7-8, 37-39, 172-73
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2) JOHN ADAMS
Born: October 30, 1735, Braintree (now Quincy), Massachusetts
Political Party: Federalist
State Represented: Massachusetts
Vice President: Thomas Jefferson
First Lady: Abigail Smith Adams
Term of Office: 1797-1801 (one term)
Died: July 4, 1826, aged 90, Quincy, Massachusetts
Distinctions: First president to live in the White House. First to have his son elected president.
Pages: 37-46, 155-57
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3) THOMAS JEFFERSON
Born: April 13, 1743, Albermarle County, Virginia
Political Party: Democratic-Republican
State Represented: Virginia
Vice President: Aaron Burr (first term); George Clinton (second term)
First Lady: None (Jefferson was a widower.)
Term of Office: 1801-1809 (two terms)
Died: July 4, 1826, aged 83, Charlottesville, Virginia
Distinctions: First president inaugurated in Washington, D.C. First elected by the U.S. House of Representatives.
Pages: 32, 41-46, 155-58, 178, 180-83, 250-52
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4) JAMES MADISON
Born: March 16, 1751, Port Conway, Virginia
Political Party: Democratic-Republican
State Represented: Virginia
Vice President: George Clinton (first term); Elbridge Gerry (second term)
First Lady: Dolley Dandridge Payne Todd Madison
Term of Office: 1809-1817 (two terms)
Died: June 28, 1836, aged 85, Montpelier, Virginia
Distinctions: Shortest president (5 feet 4 inches). First to have been a congressman. Last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence.
Pages: 42, 157, 180, 252
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5) JAMES MONROE
Born: April 29, 1758, Westmoreland County, Virginia
Political Party: Democratic-Republican
State Represented: Virginia
Vice President: Daniel D. Tompkins
First Lady: Elizabeth Kortright Monroe
Term of Office: 1817-1825 (two terms)
Died: July 4, 1831, aged 73, New York, New York
Distinctions: First president to have been a U.S. Senator. First to ride on a steamboat.
Page: 75
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6) JOHN QUINCY ADAMS
Born: July 11, 1767, Braintree (now Quincy), Massachusetts
Political Party: Democratic-Republican
State Represented: Massachusetts
Vice President: John C. Calhoun
First Lady: Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams
Term of Office: 1825-1829 (one term)
Died: February 23, 1848, aged 80, Washington, D.C.
Distinctions: Only ex-president to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Pages: 9-11, 159-61
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7) ANDREW JACKSON
Born: March 15, 1767, Waxhaw, South Carolina
Political Party: Democratic
State Represented: Tennessee
Vice President: John C. Calhoun (first term); Martin Van Buren (second term)
First Lady: None (Jackson was a widower)
Term of Office: 1829-1837 (two terms)
Died: June 8, 1845, aged 78, Nashville, Tennessee
Distinctions: First president to be born in a log cabin. First target of
assassination attempt.
Pages: 12, 56, 58-63, 64-71, 136-37, 159-61
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8) MARTIN VAN BUREN
Born: December 5, 1782, Kinderhook, New York
Political Party: Democratic
State Represented: New York
Vice President: Richard M. Johnson
First Lady: None (Van Buren was a widower.)
Term of Office: 1837-1841 (one term)
Died: July 24, 1862, aged 79, Kinderhook, New York
Distinctions: First president not born a British subject.
Pages: 64, 67, 69, 120
9) WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON
Born: February 9, 1773, Charles City County, Virginia
Political Party: Whig
State Represented: Ohio
Vice President: John Tyler
First Lady: Anna Tuthill Symmes Harrison (never went to Washington)
Term of Office: 1841 (32 days)
Died: April 4, 1841, aged 68, Washington, D.C.
Distinctions: Shortest term in office.
Pages: 131, 281-82
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10) JOHN TYLER
Born: March 29, 1790, Charles City County, Virginia
Political Party: Whig
State Represented: Virginia
Vice President: None
First Lady: (1) Letitia Christian Tyler, (2) Julia Gardiner Tyler
Term of Office: 1841-1845 (one partial term)
Died: January 18, 1862, aged 71, Richmond, Virginia
Distinctions: First accidental president. First to marry while in office.
Page: 131
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11) JAMES K. POLK
Born: November 2, 1795, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
Political Party: Democratic
State Represented: Tennessee
Vice President: George M. Dallas
First Lady: Sarah Childress Polk
Term of Office: 1845-1849 (one term)
Died: June 5, 1849, aged 53, Nashville, Tennessee
Distinctions: First presidential inauguration reported by telegraph.
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12) ZACHARY TAYLOR
Born: November 24, 1784, Orange County, Virginia
Political Party: Whig
State Represented: Louisiana
Vice President: Millard Fillmore
First Lady: Margaret Smith Taylor
Term of Office: 1849-1850 (one partial term)
Died: July 9, 1850, aged 65, Washington, D.C.
Distinctions: First president to represent a state west of the Mississippi River.
Pages: 115, 271
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13) MILLARD FILLMORE
Born: January 7, 1800, Summerhill, New York
Political Party: Whig
State Represented: New York
Vice President: None
First Lady: Abigail Powers Fillmore
Term of Office: 1850-1853 (one partial term)
Died: March 8, 1874, aged 74, Buffalo, New York
Distinctions: Only president to run for a term on the American (“Know-Nothing”) Party ticket.
Page: 113
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14) FRANKLIN PIERCE
Born: November 23, 1804, Hillsborough (now Hillsboro), New Hampshire
Political Party: Democratic
State Represented: New Hampshire
Vice President: William Rufus King (died before serving any functions of V.P.)
First Lady: Jane Appleton Pierce
Term of Office: 1853-1857 (one term)
Died: October 8, 1869, aged 64, Concord, New Hampshire
Distinctions: First president born in the nineteenth century. Only one to affirm rather than swear the oath of office.
Pages: 116-17
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15) JAMES BUCHANAN
Born: April 23, 1791, Cove Gap, Pennsylvania
Political Party: Democratic
State Represented: Pennsylvania
Vice President: John C. Breckinridge
First Lady: None (Buchanan was a bachelor.)
Term of Office: 1857-1861 (one term)
Died: June 1, 1868, aged 77, Lancaster, Pennsylvania Distinctions: Only bachelor president. Pages: 118-19, 254, 255, 257-58
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16) ABRAHAM LINCOLN
Born: February 12, 1809, Hardin (now Larue) County, Kentucky
Political Party: Republican
State Represented: Illinois
Vice President: Hannibal Hamlin (first term); Andrew Johnson (second term)
First Lady: Mary Todd Lincoln
Term of Office: 1861-1865 (one full term; one partial term)
Died: April 15, 1865, aged 56, Washington, D.C. (assassinated)
Distinctions: Tallest president (6 feet 4 inches). First to be assassinated.
First to wear a beard. First depicted on a noncommemorative coin.
Pages: 15-16, 72-78, 162-64, 278-80
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17) ANDREW JOHNSON
Born: December 29, 1808, Raleigh, North Carolina
Political Party: Democratic (elected vice president on Republican
ticket)
State Represented: Tennessee
Vice President: None
First Lady: Eliza McCardle Johnson
Term of Office: 1865-1869 (one partial term)
Died: July 31, 1875, aged 66, Carter's Station, Tennessee
Distinctions: First president to be impeached. Only one to have been a tailor.
Pages: 120-21, 261
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18) ULYSSES S. GRANT
Born: April 27, 1822, Point Pleasant, Ohio
Political Party: Republican
State Represented: Illinois
Vice President: Schuyler Colfax (first term); Henry Wilson (second term)
First Lady: Julia Dent Grant
Term of Office: 1869-1877 (two terms)