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MSgt Dale Johnson
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I had a professor in college that gave History such interesting details about events and people. I always hated History in High School, but he made it enjoyable and I am sure if he'd have discussed Jones he would have delighted in the fact that they took her Silverware with her Breakfast Tea still in it. Such Rogues!
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
Lt Col Charlie Brown
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We had a professor of history in college who was amazing...so many people wanted his class that he taught auditorium sized classes and then multiple ones...with grad students who were available to respond to issues and questions...
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Great history share. You're bringing back memories today. Again, when I was stationed in New Hampshire we had someone in our squadron who had a home just a few blocks down from the John Paul Jones house in Portsmouth. It wasn't at all uncommon to park by the Jones house and walk to his home if he was having a party, all street parking in the area and you took what you could find.
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LTC John Griscom
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When the master of a British ship in 1780, John Paul had one of his crew flogged after trying to start a mutiny about early payment of wages, leading to accusations that his discipline was "unnecessarily cruel". These claims were initially dismissed, but his favorable reputation was destroyed when the sailor died a few weeks later. John Paul was arrested for his involvement in the man's death and was imprisoned in Kirkcudbright Tolbooth, but later released on bail. The negative effect of this episode on his reputation is indisputable. The local governor encouraged John Paul to leave the area and change his name while on bail. The man who died of his injuries was not a usual sailor but an adventurer from a very influential Scottish family.
Leaving Scotland, John Paul commanded a London-registered vessel named Betsy, a West Indiaman mounting 22 guns, engaging in commercial speculation in Tobago for about 18 months. This came to an end, however, when he killed a mutinous crew member named Blackton with a sword in a dispute over wages. Years later, in a letter to Benjamin Franklin describing the incident, John Paul claimed that the killing was committed in self-defense, but he was not willing to be tried in an Admiral's Court, where the family of his first victim had been influential.
From Wikipedia
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