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  2. David Farragut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Farragut

    Coat of Arms of David Farragut. James Glasgow Farragut was born in 1801 to George Farragut (born Jordi Farragut Mesquida, 1755–1817), a Spanish Balearic merchant captain from the Mediterranean island of Menorca, and his wife Elizabeth (née Shine, 1765–1808), of North Carolina Scotch-Irish American descent, at Lowe's Ferry on the Holston River in Tennessee. [9]

  3. Statue of David Farragut (Washington, D.C.) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_David_Farragut...

    David Farragut (1801–1870) was a career military officer who first saw combat during the War of 1812 at the age of 9. He served on the USS Essex and was captured by the British. After the war, Farragut fought pirates in the West Indies on the ship USS Ferret, his first command of a United States Navy vessel.

  4. Admiral David Glasgow Farragut Gravesite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admiral_David_Glasgow...

    The Admiral David Glasgow Farragut Gravesite is the final resting place of David Glasgow Farragut (1801–1870), the first rear admiral, vice admiral, and four-star admiral of the United States Navy. He was most well known for his order to "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead." The granite and marble monument resembling a mast marks not only ...

  5. Statue of David Farragut (New York City) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_David_Farragut...

    The statue, cast in 1880 and dedicated on May 25, 1881, is set on a Coopersburg, Pennsylvania black granite pedestal. [1] The work depicts Farragut, the noted United States Navy admiral of the Civil War, standing in naval uniform with binoculars and sword; the statue rests upon a plinth and then a pedestal, surrounded by a semicircular, winged exedra, which features a bas-relief figure of a ...

  6. Vinnie Ream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnie_Ream

    After lobbying William Tecumseh Sherman and Mrs. Farragut, she won a competition to sculpt Admiral David G. Farragut. Her sculpture, located at Farragut Square, Washington, D.C. was dedicated on April 25, 1881. [35] Ream married Richard L. Hoxie, of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, on May 28, 1878. [36] They had one son.

  7. Augustus Saint-Gaudens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus_Saint-Gaudens

    Abraham Lincoln: The Man in Lincoln Park, Chicago (1887). In 1876, Saint-Gaudens received his first major commission: a monument to Civil War Admiral David Farragut, in New York's Madison Square; his friend Stanford White designed an architectural setting for it, and when it was unveiled in 1881, its naturalism, its lack of bombast and its siting combined to make it a tremendous success, and ...

  8. Battle of Baton Rouge (1862) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Baton_Rouge_(1862)

    In retaliation, Farragut's flagship, the Hartford, bombarded the town, causing civilian casualties and damaging St. Joseph's Church and other buildings. On May 29, US Brigadier General Thomas Williams arrived with six regiments of infantry, two artillery batteries, and a troop of cavalry, and began the occupation of Baton Rouge.

  9. George Farragut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Farragut

    His recommendation of Farragut resulted in the offer of a new job. His son James, who would grow up to become Admiral David Farragut, was born in 1801. In 1805, Farragut moved to New Orleans, and his family followed, in a 1,700-mile flatboat adventure aided by hired rivermen, the young James Farragut's first voyage.