King of the Gunrunners


How a Philadelphia Fruit Importer Inspired a Revolution and Provoked the Spanish-American War

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By James W. Miller
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
277

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Description

James W. Miller is retired athletics director at the University of New Orleans. Prior to his tenure there, he spent eleven years as a newspaper reporter and twenty-one years in the NFL, where he held positions with the New Orleans Saints, Buffalo Bills, and Chicago Bears. He is author of Integrated: The Lincoln Institute, Basketball, and a Vanished Tradition.

Acknowledgments Prologue Chapter 1: A Wondrous World Chapter 2: A New Revolution Chapter 3: Scrambling for Ships Chapter 4: The Wealthy and Useful Ker Chapter 5: The Director of Expeditions Chapter 6: A Lesson in Competition Chapter 7: Fully Vested in the Filibuster Business Chapter 8: Not a Man of Patience Chapter 9: "Until Cuba Is Free" Chapter 10: A Clear Victory in Court Chapter 11: Spanish Spies and US Marshals Chapter 12: "Captain Dynamite" Johnny O'Brien Chapter 13: A Quick Indoctrination into Filibuster Protocol Chapter 14: A Booming Reply of "NOT GUILTY!" Chapter 15: "Damfoolitis" Chapter 16: Prosecution or Persecution? Chapter 17: An Ambitious Expedition Chapter 18: A Worst-Case Scenario Chapter 19: Publicity Agent for an Expedition Chapter 20: "You Don't Often See a Man Like Him" Chapter 21: "Justly Convicted" Chapter 22: The Laurada's Last Expedition Chapter 23: Captain Dynamite's Expedition to Havana Chapter 24: Broke and Headed for Prison Chapter 25: The King of the Gunrunners Is Affirmed Chapter 26: Perceived Wrongs and Righteous Rights Chapter 27: The Maine Explodes, and Hart Goes to Prison Chapter 28: A Full and Complete Pardon Chapter 29: The Importing Business Had Changed Chapter 30: He Took Up the Cause and Suffered for It Epilogue Source Notes Bibliography Index

Jim Miller has given us a swashbuckling tale of a larger-than-life American hero, John D. Hart.?This Philadelphia banana tycoon is at the heart of Miller's riveting story of spies, gunrunners, pirates, and international diplomacy. Who would have guessed that the acolytes of Jose Marti, Cuban philosopher, poet, and nationalist, would entice an American banana importer to ship arms that?fueled a revolution? And how did this help bring America into the war that ended Spain's colonial rule in Cuba? You will have to read Miller's fine book to find the answers. It's a page-turner." - Nick Mueller, president and CEO emeritus, The National World War II Museum As time marches on, important events in history and the critical actors who affected the outcome of those events can fade into oblivion. In King of the Gunrunners, author James W. Miller allows us to vividly recall John D. Hart, a rascally, tenacious, yet unsung hero of Cuba's revolt from Spain's cruel dominance in the 1890s. Miller's exquisitely detailed account of Hart's remarkable efforts to get vital weaponry to the Cuban revolutionaries is a lesson for all ages. Miller weaves the fascinating but true tale of how Hart's blustery and, at times, bullheaded persistence, risking death and imprisonment, overcame ham-handed law enforcement efforts that stood in his way. Hart's refusal to take 'no' for an answer at almost every turn is a lesson to all who struggle for freedom, even in today's world." - Judge John Daniel Tinder (ret.), United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit James W. Miller's King of the Gunrunners is a massively researched treatise on liberty centering on John D. Hart, an American fruit importer who assisted Cuba's efforts to oust Spanish rule during the Gilded Age. Miller's literary and historical acumen in this previously untold story reveals how American bureaucratic lunacy and political wrangling targeted Hart and interfered with the Cuban struggle. But Hart prevailed thanks to the biases of the 'Yellow Press' which embraced the Cuban struggle and made Hart a public hero. King of the Gunrunners captures the passion for liberty that is as relevant today as it was during the Gilded Age, the so-called 'quiet period' between the Civil War and World War I that launched America's emergence as a global superpower." - Major General William A. Whitlow, United States Marine Corps (ret.), former director of Expeditionary Warfare Division, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations "In the netherworld of gunrunners and arms traffickers, the persona of the filibuster has long dwelled in the murky obscurity of illegality. To a lesser or greater extent, the filibuster played a decisive supporting role in the cause of Cuba Libre. James W. Miller draws filibuster John D. Hart out from the shadows into full view and into the fullness of his environment. Against the backdrop of national and international tensions, Miller provides a vivid and textured account of the 'business' of the filibuster, in pursuit of pecuniary interests and in discharge of well-meaning sympathies, always something of a ubiquitous presence among Cuban patriots engaged in the politics of war." - Louis A. Perez Jr., author of The War of 1898: The United States and Cuba in History and Historiography and Cuba and the United States: Ties of Singular Intimacy "A detailed and entertaining glimpse into the operations of American gunrunners and the complexity of their interactions with Cuban revolutionaries." - Jason M. Colby, author of The Business of Empire: United Fruit, Race, and U.S. Expansion in Central America

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