Saving Monticello: The Newsletter
The latest about the book, author
events, and more
Newsletter Editor - Marc Leepson
Volume XVI, Number 7 July
1, 2019
“The study of the past is a constantly evolving,
never-ending journey of discovery.” – Eric Foner
URIAH LEVY’S DEEDS: If you’ve ever been to downtown Norfolk, Virginia,
chances are you’ve driven by—if not visited—the striking Hampton Roads Naval
Museum, which sits on the Elizabeth River and includes the massive, World War
II battleship, the U.S.S. Wisconsin.
I just learned through a new posting
on the museum’s website that the museum has in its collection a much (much)
smaller Navy object that I had not known existed:
A julep silver cub that Uriah
Levy received after he came home from the War of 1812—having been imprisoned
along with the rest of the crew of his chip, The Argus—in England for sixteen
months.
The cup (below) is engraved with Levy’s initials, along with a Latin inscription, Dant Facta Hanc Coronam (“Deeds gave this crown). As I wrote in Saving Monticello, Jefferson M. Levy had that motto emblazoned—along with a French-style coat of arms of two laurel sprays enclosing the letter “L”—on the headboard of a bed in one of the upstairs rooms at Monticello that JML used as a dressing room and clothes closet.
The base of the cup, she points out, is engraved with the
date “1814, likely celebrating Levy’s return home.”
Her
post goes on to briefly recount UPL’s post-1814 Navy career (he died in service
in 1862), noting that his promotion to Captain in 1844 was “uncommon in the
Navy, having started as a cabin boy [on a merchant ship] and promoted to
captain.” She also talks about the antisemitism
he faced in the Navy and Uriah Levy’s ultimately successful campaign to end
flogging.
Pullen notes that perhaps Levy’s “most significant contribution to the American people” was his
“effort to preserve, conserve, and repair President Thomas Jefferson’s home at
Monticello.”
And she goes on to mention that UPL’s nephew Jefferson Levy took control of the property in 1879 after it went into a second period of decline. Her conclusion is right on the mark: “The Levys’ efforts in restoring one of the nation’s most notable historic landmarks demonstrated their devotion and understanding for historic preservation as a way of maintaining the legacy of its leaders and the past.”
You can read
the entire post—which includes a reference to Saving Monticello—at http://bit.ly/UriahCup
EVENTS: I’m still in seven-day-a-week writing
mode for my next book, and won’t have another public event for any of my books
in July.
There’s
always the chance that I may have a last-minute talk or signing, though. For
the latest on that, or to check out my scheduled 2019 events, go to the Events
page on my website at https://leepsoncalendar.blogspot.com
If
you’d like to arrange an event for Saving
Monticello, or for any of my other books, email me. For info on my latest
book, Ballad of the Green Beret, go
to http://bit.ly/GreenBeretBook
GIFT IDEAS: Want a
personally autographed, brand-new paperback copy of Saving Monticello? Please e-mail me at marcleepson@gmail.com I also have a few as-new, unopened hardcover
copies, along with a good selection of brand-new copies of my other books.