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American traveler : the life and adventures of John Ledyard, the man who dreamed of walking the world / James Zug.

Van Pelt Library G226.L43 Z84 2005
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Zug, James, 1969-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Ledyard, John, 1751-1789--Travel.
Ledyard, John.
Ledyard, John, 1751-1789.
Travel.
Travelers--United States--Biography.
Travelers.
Voyages and travels.
History.
United States.
Voyages and travels--History--18th century.
Genre:
Biographies.
Physical Description:
xviii, 286 pages, 12 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 25 cm
Place of Publication:
New York : BasicBooks, 2005.
Summary:
Called a "man of genius" by his close friend Thomas Jefferson, John Ledyard led, by any standard, a remarkable life. Between his birth to a sea captain's family in Connecticut in 1751 and his death along the Nile in Cairo in 1789, he became the original American explorer. Abandoning his studies at Dartmouth-then a fledgling school on the New England frontier-he carved a dugout canoe and paddled 140 miles down the Connecticut River. He sailed with Captain Cook on his third and last voyage, becoming the first American to see Alaska, Hawaii, and the Pacific Northwest. Twenty years before Lewis and Clark, he and Jefferson conceived the idea of walking around the world, including hiking across North America. Fifteen months into his around-the-world trek, he was arrested in deepest Siberia on the orders of Catherine the Great and escorted back to the Polish border.
Ledyard formed fur-trading companies with John Paul Jones and Robert Morris, cadged money from Lafayette, persuaded Sir Joseph Banks's African Association to send him to find the source of the Niger River, and wrote a definitive account of the epic Cook voyage and Cook's infamous death in Hawaii.
Combining rich scholarship-including newly discovered letters and official documents-with riveting storytelling, American Traveler conjures up the mad, romantic American adventurer in fabled cities with fascinating friends. Whether skiing through Lapland in the dead of winter, basking in Tahiti's endless summer, or mingling with the brightest lights in Paris society, Ledyard blended the intellectual curiosity of the Enlightenment with a unique enthusiasm about other cultures. He was a Ben Franklin with wanderlust, an immensely influential man who traveled farther than any American before him and who pioneered a distinctly American archetype: the restless, visionary explorer.
Contents:
1 Ocean's Briny Waves-A Connecticut Childhood 1
2 Saucy Enough-Dartmouth 9
3 Before the Mast-A Sailor and a Marine 25
4 Their Native Courage-Shipping with Captain Cook 35
5 Dancing Through Life-Polynesia 51
6 Soothed a Homesick Heart-The Search for the Northwest Passage 73
7 Grief on Every Countenance-Death on the Beach 91
8 Not Short of Mutiny-Coming Home 107
9 Crooked Billet-Chasing the Fur Trade 117
10 Bought for a Bagatelle-An American in Paris 139
11 More Shirts than Shillings-Walking the World 161
12 Double Relish-Siberia 183
13 Common Flag of Humanity-Banished 203
14 I Go Alone-Grand Cairo 219.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 239-272) and index.
ISBN:
0465094058
OCLC:
58749572

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