Lingua: Inglese
Editore: University of South Carolina Press, 2013
ISBN 10: 1611172896 ISBN 13: 9781611172898
Da: Your Online Bookstore, Houston, TX, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Fair.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: University of South Carolina Press, 2013
ISBN 10: 1611172896 ISBN 13: 9781611172898
Da: Epilonian Books, Manhattan Beach, CA, U.S.A.
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good. First Edition. University of South Carolina Press, Columbia, South Carolina, Published date: 2013. Hardcover, xiv, 403 pp; 24 cm. Part of the Studies in Maritime History series. Black and white illustrations and maps throughout; notes; bibliography; index. In very good condition with a very good dust jacket. Blue cloth boards with gilt lettering to spine. Boards clean with light shelf wear; binding tight; small black remainder mark on bottom edge of text block; interior pages clean and unmarked. Dust jacket has light edge wear and minor rubbing and faint surface wear; now in an archival quality (removable) Brodart cover. [From front jacket flap] Today the twenty-gun sloop USS Constellation is a floating museum in Baltimore Harbor; in 1859 it was an emblem of the global power of the American sailing navy. When young William E. Leonard boarded the Constellation as a seaman for what proved to be a twenty-month voyage to the African coast, he began to compose a remarkable journal. Sailing from Boston, the Constellation, flagship of the U.S. African Squadron, was charged with the interception and capture of slave-trading vessels illegally en route from Africa to the Americas. During the Constellation's deployment, the squadron captured a record number of these ships, liberating their human cargo and holding the captains and crews for criminal prosecution. At the same time, tensions at home and in the squadron increased as the American Civil War approached and then erupted in April 1861. Leonard recorded not only historic events but also fascinating details about his daily life as one of the nearly four-hundred-member crew. He saw himself as not just a diarist, but a reporter, making special efforts to seek out and record information about individual crewmen, shipboard practices, recreation and daily routine - from deck swabbing and standing watch to courts martial and dramatic performances by the Constellation Dramatic Society. This good-humored gaze into the lives and fortunes of so many men stationed aboard a distinguished American warship makes Gilliland's edition of Willie Leonard's journal a significant work of maritime history.