Showing posts with label Palm Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palm Family. Show all posts

Saturday, August 26, 2017

History Of The German Struggle For Liberty


See Johan Phillip Palm, A Martyr For Liberty, at my Detour Through History blog.


Source

"The body of John Palm died in the summer of 1806, but, like John Brown of Ossawatomie, 'his soul goes marching on."' [Source]



Monday, June 8, 2015

My Favorite Inscription!






After purchasing the book, Errands, by Judith Guest, I stood in line at the bookstore in Oscoda, to get the book signed by the author.

We had previously met at the local library when Ms. Guest was the invited speaker.  After her talk, I started to explain to Ms. Guest, picture in hand, that her mother and Jim's father [Richard S. Palm] were two of the [4?] children in the photograph, when her mother [Marion A. Nesbitt Guest] approached us and exclaimed, "That's Dick Palm, and that's ME!"  Turns out that the Nesbitts, Guests and Palms were close family friends and neighbors.

That's why this is my favorite inscription:


To The Palms

June 1997

From one who's known your name since I was born!

Best wishes

Judith Guest




Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Johann Jacob Palm

Source

This branch of the Palm family....




More about the Palm family here (translated version):

"Johan Jacob Palm (1750-1826), the youngest of 14 children of Jacob Christoph, the first surgeon, has established itself as a bookseller in Erlangen, Bavaria, where from 1779 until his death published 793 works."



Monday, March 23, 2009

A Fictional Encounter With Napoleon

Desperate Measures by Dennis Wheatley places its hero, Roger Brook, on the European continent in the midst of Napoleon's machinations. Famous people mentioned in the book included Archduke John, King Louis XVIII, Duchess Angouleme, Fouche, Soult, Ney, Murat, and Marmont (Duke of Ragusa). [Quotes are all from Desperate Measures]

One measure Roger Brook was desperate to employ was to invent a reason to leave England and his jealous and vindictive wife. He consulted with Lord Castlereagh, the Foreign Minister, who suggest that Roger could join his staff, eventually going to the Congress in Vienna "In the hope that we may be able to settle some of the outstanding questions, and so bring permanent peace to Europe...".

After Napoleon's first defeat, "the Prussians, of course, wanted to hang him (Napoleon), but the Czar (Alexander) favoured treating him with chivalry, and it was the Emperor (Francis) of Austria who had the last word. Against Metternich's advice, he insisted on his son-in-law's being given a small kingdom. Sardinia and Corfu were talked of, but Elba finally decided upon."

Since France was Roger's first destination in Europe, he was advised to resume his identity as M. le Colonel le Compte de Breuc, who had acted as an A.D.C. to Napoleon, rather than the English Roger Brook, Lord Kildonan, and so that it would not be revealed that he (Roger) was a secret British agent.

In order to divert suspicion that Roger was in the pay of Talleyrand after he (Roger) was spotted coming from Talleyrand's Kaunitz Palace, the Duke of Wellington sent Roger on a mission to Elba to renew his acquaintance with Napoleon in order to "probe his mind." Roger arrived at Elba just prior to Napoleon's escape and was swept along with the Napoleon's attempt to reconquer France. "Desperate Measures" details who, when and why prominent individuals changed their allegiances as Napoleon marched toward Paris.

Roger, as Compte Breuc, was notified by one of Napoleon's generals that "he (Napoleon) has decided to wait no longer, but eliminate one of our enemies before the others can take the field. We'll be off to war next week, and are going into Belgium to drive the English into the sea."

The French commanders Gerard, Count d'Erlon, Vandamme, Reille, Grouchy were pitted against Blucher, the Prussian general and Wellington who commanded the English troops. After a pitched battle, Napoleon's primary concern was that the enemy might retreat before he could annihilate them. "That they should do so was his one fear, as he felt confident that, having seriously crippled the Prussians, he would defeat Wellington (the) next day and enter Brussels before nightfall."

The battle Napoleon was anticipating with such delight was one which "the main assault was to be delivered half a mile to the east, where the road from Genappe cut straight through the centre of the battlefield, across Mont St. Jean towards Waterloo. History tells us that the Battle of Waterloo did not turn out well for Napoleon.

Our PALM family had a history with Napoleon, as well. Napoleon had Johan Philip Palm executed for publishing libelous pamphlets about Napoleon. Details are embedded in my "Detour Through History" blog post here.