Our Notes & References
Beautiful example of the first edition of the official U.S. embassy’s mission to Russia under Gustavus Fox, in a handsome full morocco binding.
Gustavus Fox, in effect chief of US naval operations, has been described as “the man most responsible for the U.S Navy’s performance in the Civil War” (Hoogenboom). Following its conclusion under the title of Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Fox led a mission to Russia, ostensibly to thank Russian for its support of the Union by sending naval squadrons to New York and San Francisco, but specifically to congratulate Alexander II on his escape from an assassination attempt on April 16 1866. Fox sailed on a new American ironclad monitor, the USS Miantonomoh; it was the first and last time that a ship of this kind would navigate the high seas. Arriving at the Kronstadt port near St. Petersburg in August 1866, the Fox entourage created a great sensation and met with grand receptions, marking a high point in Russian-American friendship. Though the mission was successful, the Americans failed to sell the Miantonomoh to the Russians, one of the intentions of the trip (Saul). Alaska was to be sold to the US about 6 months later, in March 1867.
The mission was recorded by Fox’s secretary, the French/American bibliophile, sportsman, and philanthropist Joseph Florimond Loubat, who went on to publish The Medallic History of the United States of America 1776-1876 (1878).
Provenance
Philipp Weber (pictorial booklabel to upper pastedown); Private Austrian collection.
Bibliography
Norman E. Saul, Historical Dictionary of United States-Russian/Soviet Relation, page 141; Ari Hoogenboom, Gustavus Vasa Fox of the Union Navy: A Biography, Preface.
Item number
2260