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Commanding Old Ironsides

The Life of Captain Silas Talbot
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Silas Talbot's life illuminates his time-not with greater brightness than the lives of his more famous contemporaries, but with perhaps broader range and greater insight into the experiences and circumstances of a plain citizen of the new republic-a citizen whose bravery and energy helped to create it. Silas Talbot was a farmer's son who went to sea, learned the building trades, saved and invested his money wisely, married well several times, fought as a Rhode Island soldier in the Revolutionary War, became a lieutenant colonel, served with courage and competence, became a privateer and a prisoner-of-war in the conflict at sea, speculated in western lands, was elected to the New York State Legislature and the U.S. Congress, represented the interests of American sailors forced to serve in Britain's navy, and finally achieved the rank of U.S. Navy captain and became the second commanding officer of the frigate USS Constitution. In a full and energetic life of sixty-two years he met and served the famous-Washington, Adams, Hamilton, Lafayette-and also raised a family; advanced in the social, political, and business circles of New York and Rhode Island; and was, as the author notes, "among the first of the new citizens of the new republic to seize its gifts."
William M. Fowler, Jr. was former director of the Massachusetts Historical Society and consulting editor to The New England Quarterly. He received his undergraduate degree from Northeastern University and his PhD from the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of many books on American history, including Empires at War: The French and Indian War and the Struggle For North America, 1754-1763, Rebels Under Sail: The Navy in the Revolution, The Baron of Beacon Hill: A Biography of John Hancock, Jack Tars and Commodores: The American Navy 1783-1815, and Under Two Flags: The American Navy in the Civil War. He is also co-author of America and The Sea: A Maritime History of America. He was Professor of History at Northeastern University from 1971 to 1998 and taught a variety of courses in American history. He also taught at Mystic Seaport Museum and lectured at the Smithsonian Institution, the United States Naval War College, and the Sea Education Association. He is a member of the Massachusetts State Archives Advisory Commission, The Colonial Society of Massachusetts, the American Antiquarian Society, and an Honorary Member of the Boston Marine Society and the Society of the Cincinnati. He received an Honorary degree from Northeastern University in 2000. He lives in Massachusetts. Anne Grimes Rand is President and CEO of the USS Constitution Museum, which received the 2023 NMHS Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Maritime Education.
America's maritime past often gets lost in the great sweep of our history, but here William M. Fowler, Jr. (once again) does yeoman's service correcting that oversight. Like Fowler's other excellent histories, Commanding Old Ironsides is both scholarly and a great read, illuminating the life and career of Silas Talbot, a man who is largely and undeservedly forgotten. This is an important contribution to the study of United States naval history, and a lively tale to boot. --James L. Nelson, author of Benedict Arnold's Navy and George Washington's Secret Navy No one knows the Navy's history so well, or tells its story as vividly, as William Fowler. In this biography we meet Silas Talbot, but we also come to understand the world in which he lived, and the new nation he and the USS Constitution served. --Robert J. Allison, professor of history, Suffolk University; author of Stephen Decatur, American Naval Hero Professor Bill Fowler's biography of Silas Talbot is a gift to American public. To read his life of Talbot is to revisit a world nearly forgotten, from America's pre-Revolutionary era to the nation's birth; and especially revealing to see, through Talbot's eyes, the nation's dependence on maritime trade and the birth of the U.S. Navy. Fowler traces Talbot's emergence as a prototypical American, from his humble beginnings in Rhode Island to his life-forming experiences in the Continental Army, privateering, service in Congress, shipbuilding, and his rise as the second captain of the frigate Constitution. Fowler gives us the whole man as he rises in fame, his wife Becky, their children, land speculation in the west, and his declining years. It's wonderful to see his book republished in this new edition. --Dr. Bill Dudley, naval historian Silas Talbot may not be the first person you think of when you hear the words "Founding Father." But as this terrific biography shows, he was no mere bystander to the grand events of his time. Historian William Fowler takes us on Talbot's journey from Revolutionary privateer to commander of the USS Constitution, capturing the politics of the era in broad, bright strokes while defining the character of the time--and the people--in vivid, detail-rich vignettes. He gives us a superb study of a man who lived his own adventure and a brilliant depiction of the world he lived in. And when you're done, you'll feel that you've lived it all right along with Silas Talbot. --William Martin, New York Times bestselling author of Citizen Washington and December '41
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