The Prince and the Yankee: The Tale of a Country Girl Who Became a Princess

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, Aug 22, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 202 pages
"Beautiful, vivacious, fearless Agnes Leclerq Joy was 21 years old when she met Prince Felix zu Salm-Salm, a Prussian officer in the Union Army at the outbreak of the American Civil War. Their marriage took Agnes from small-town Vermont and a short lived career as a circus artist to the royal palaces of Europe. She accompanied Felix on his Civil War campaigns, schemed with the powerful in Washington for his advancement and secured the young officer's promotion to the rank of General in the US army when he could barely speak English. She followed him to Mexico to fight for the ill-fated Emperor Maximilian, then returned home to the Salm ancestral castle in Germany after his defeat. Agnes was a remarkable woman. Kings, presidents, senators, governors and generals all succumbed to her charms. She pleaded with the implacable Benito Juarez for Maximilian's life and the German Emperor honoured her for her hospital work during the Franco-Prussian War. Felix's life was cut short in 1870 when he was killed in the war. Although she toyed with the idea of joining a convent, the indefatigable American country-girl lived out her life in fin de siecle Europe as a grand if impoverished continental aristocrat."--Jacket.

About the author (2003)

Robert N. White was born in Boston and educated at Harvard and Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of 'A River in Spain: Discovering the Duero Valley in Old Castile' and editor of 'An Inquisitive Eye'(both I.B.Tauris).

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