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It
is rumored that the Horner line can be connected directly to the naval hero
John Paul Jones.
Possible family connections are:
- Isobel
Campbell, first wife of Francis S. Horner – Her father was from Ulster,
North Ireland.
- Margaret
Ann Calloway, second wife of Francis S. Horner
- Mary
Alice Malcom, wife of Elias Wilson Horner
"I have not yet begun to fight!"
Biography
John
Paul Jones was born on July 6, 1747, in Kirkcudbright, Scotland. He was
the son of a Scottish gardener and was originally named John Paul. At the
age of 12 he entered the British merchant marine and went to sea for the
first time, as a cabin boy. He sailed aboard merchantmen and slavers,
becoming a first mate on a slaver brigantine by 1766 and receiving his
first command in 1769. In 1773, as the commander of a merchant vessel, he
killed a mutinous crewman at Tobago in the West Indies and, rather than
stay in prison and wait for trial, he fled to North America. From that
point the British considered him to be a pirate. A fugitive from British
justice, he attempted to conceal his identity by adding the surname of
Jones.
At the outbreak of war with Britain in 1775, John Paul Jones went to
Philadelphia, and, with the help of two friendly members of the
Continental Congress, obtained a lieutenant's commission in the
Continental Navy. The following year he became captain of the sloop Providence.
In his first adventure aboard the Providence he destroyed the
British fisheries in Nova Scotia and captured 16 British prize ships.
In 1777 he took command of the sloop Ranger. Sailing to France in
1778, Jones received from the French the first salute given to the new
American flag by a foreign warship. During the spring he terrorized the
coastal population of Scotland and England by making daring raids ashore
and destroying many British vessels.
His reputation in Paris greatly enhanced, Jones received from the French
government a converted French merchantman, the Duras, which he
renamed Bonhomme Richard (Poor Richard) in honor of Benjamin
Franklin.
Jones was then promoted to commodore and placed in command of a mixed
fleet of American and French ships. Setting sail at the head of this small
squadron on Aug. 14, 1779, he captured 17 merchantmen off the British
coast and, on September 23, fell in with a convoy of British merchant
vessels escorted by H.M.S. Serapis and Countess of Scarborough.
Challenging Serapis, Jones deftly maneuvered Bonhomme Richard
alongside the larger British vessel and lashed the two ships together.
With the muzzles of their guns touching, the two warships fired into each
other's insides. Although his smaller vessel was on fire and sinking,
Jones rejected the British demand for surrender; "I have not yet
begun to fight," he replied. More than three hours after the bloody
battle began, Serapis surrendered, and Jones took command of it.
Although hailed as a hero in both Paris and Philadelphia, Jones
encountered such stiff political rivalry at home that he never again held
a major American command at sea. In 1788, Russian Empress Catherine II
(The Great) appointed him rear admiral in the Russian navy. He took a
leading part in the Black Sea campaign against the Ottoman Turks. Jealousy
and political intrigue among his Russian rivals prevented him from
receiving proper credit for his successes and resulted in his discharge.
In 1790 he retired and went to live in Paris. In 1792 Jones was appointed
U.S. Consul to Algiers, but on July 18 of that year he died before the commission
arrived. He was buried in Paris, but in 1905 his remains were removed from
his long-forgotten grave and brought to the United States where, in 1913,
they were finally interred in the U.S. Naval Academy Chapel at Annapolis,
Maryland. |
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Tomb of John Paul Jones
U.S. Naval Academy Chapel
at Annapolis, Maryland.

John Paul Jones
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