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John Lothrop Motley

John Lothrop Motley (April 15, 1814 – May 29, 1877) was an American author and diplomat. As a popular historian, he is best known for his works on the Netherlands, the three volume work The Rise of the Dutch Republic and four volume History of the United Netherlands. As United States Minister to Austria in the service of the Abraham Lincoln administration, Motley helped to prevent European intervention on the side of the Confederates in the American Civil War. He later served as Minister to the United Kingdom (Court of St. James) during the Ulysses S. Grant administration.

John Lothrop Motley
United States Minister to the United Kingdom
In office
June 18, 1869 – December 6, 1870
PresidentUlysses S. Grant
Preceded byReverdy Johnson
Succeeded byRobert C. Schenck
United States Minister to Austria
In office
November 14, 1861 – June 14, 1867
PresidentAbraham Lincoln
Andrew Johnson
Preceded byJehu Glancy Jones
Succeeded byHenry M. Watts
Personal details
Born
John Lothrop Motley

(1814-04-15)April 15, 1814
Dorchester, Massachusetts, US
DiedMay 29, 1877(1877-05-29) (aged 63)
Dorchester, Dorset, UK
OccupationHistorian and diplomat
Signature

Biography edit

John Lothrop Motley was born on April 15, 1814, in Dorchester, Massachusetts. His grandfather, Thomas Motley, a jail-keeper (a public position) and innkeeper in Portland, Maine, had been a Freemason and radical sympathizer with the French Revolution. His father Thomas and uncle Edward served mercantile apprenticeships in Portland.[1]

In 1802, Thomas Motley moved to Boston and established a commission house on India Wharf, taking his brother Edward with him as clerk. "Thomas and Edward Motley" became one of the leading commission houses in Boston. Thomas, married Anna Lothrop, daughter of the Rev. John Lathrop, product of an old and distinguished line of Massachusetts clergymen. Like other successful Boston merchants of the period, Thomas Motley devoted a great part of his wealth to civic purposes and the education of his children. The brilliant accomplishments of his second son, J.L. Motley, are evidence of the care both the father and mother—known both for her learning and what Motley's boyhood friend Wendell Phillips called her "regal beauty"—bestowed on the boy's intellectual development. Motley attended the Round Hill School and Boston Latin School, and graduated from Harvard in 1831.

His boyhood was spent in Dedham, near the site of the present day Noble and Greenough School[2] on land purchased from Edward L. Penniman.[3] His education included training in the German language and literature, and he went to Germany to complete these studies at Göttingen, during 1832–1833, during which time he became a lifelong friend of Otto von Bismarck. Motley and Bismarck studied civil law together at Frederick William University, Berlin. Bismarck recalled his early impression of Motley: "He exercised a marked attraction by a conversation sparkling with wit, humor or originality....The most striking feature of his handsome and delicate appearance was his uncommonly large and beautiful eyes."[4] After a period of European travel, Motley returned in 1834 to Boston, where he continued his legal studies.[1]

In 1837, he married Mary Benjamin (died 1874). She came from a wealthy Boston family; her brother was Park Benjamin Sr. In 1839 he published anonymously a novel titled Morton's Hope, or the Memoirs of a Provincial, about life in a German university, based on his own experiences. It was poorly received, but has later been recognized for featuring a valuable portrayal of Bismarck, "thinly disguised as Otto von Rabenmarck", as a young student.[5]

In 1841, Motley entered the U.S. diplomatic service as secretary of legation in St. Petersburg, Russia, but resigned his post within three months, because of the harsh climate, the expenses living there, and his reserved habits. Returning to Boston, he soon entered definitely upon a literary career. Besides contributing various historical and critical essays to the North American Review, such as "Life and Character of Peter the Great" (1845), and a remarkable essay on the "Polity of the Puritans", he published in 1849, again anonymously, a second novel, titled Merry Mount, a Romance of the Massachusetts Colony, based again on the odd history of Thomas Morton, who founded Merrymount. He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1856[1] and as a member to the American Philosophical Society[6] in 1861.

Dutch history edit

 
Motley, circa 1855–1865

In 1846, Motley had begun to plan a history of the Netherlands, in particular the period of the United Provinces, and he had already done a large amount of work on this subject when, finding the materials at his disposal in the United States inadequate, he went with his wife and children to Europe in 1851. The next five years were spent at Dresden, Brussels, and The Hague in investigation of the archives, which resulted in 1856 in the publication of The Rise of the Dutch Republic, which became very popular. It speedily passed through many editions and was translated into Dutch, French, German, and Russian. In 1860, Motley published the first two volumes of its continuation, The United Netherlands. This work was on a larger scale and embodied the results of a still greater amount of original research. It was brought down to the truce of 1609 by two additional volumes, published in 1867.[1]

 
The Rise of the Dutch Republic by John Lothrop Motley

Reception in Britain and the United States edit

The books were popular and critical successes in both Britain and the United States, and multiple editions over the decades sold tens of thousands of copies. It was a favorite prize that schools awarded to their best students. Owen Edwards says of Motley, "He and he alone had created a Dutch awareness on a wide scale."[7]

American critics have given the book mixed reviews. It was quite popular in its day, but modern scholars argue:

Motley's overdramatization and didacticism, combined with research less intense than Prescott's or Parkman's, have cost his works in staying power. Scholars have largely rewritten the story of the Dutch Republic; it is the rare modern who would, for pleasure alone, read Motley from cover to cover, even his Rise of the Dutch Republic. But particular characterizations and episodes in his writings--notably the portraits of William of Orange and Philip II and the descriptions of the Siege of Leyden, the abdication of Charles V, and the assassination of William-- are not excelled in American literature for glint and lift and thud of language.[8]

Reception in the Netherlands edit

The reception of Motley's work in the Netherlands itself was not wholly favorable, especially as Motley described the Dutch struggle for independence in a flattering light, which caused some to argue he was biased against their opponents. Although historians like the orthodox Protestant Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer (whom Motley extensively quotes in his work) viewed him very favorably, the eminent liberal Dutch historian Robert Fruin (who was inspired by Motley to do some of his own best work, and who had reported already in 1856 in The Westminster Review Motley's edition on the Rise of the Dutch Republic) was critical of Motley's tendency to make up "facts" if they made for a good story. Though he admired Motley's gifts as an author, and stated that he continued to hold the work as a whole in high regard, he stressed it still required "addition and correction".[1]

The humanist historian Johannes van Vloten was very critical, and responded to Fruin in 1860: "I agree less with your too favorable judgement....We cannot build on Motley['s foundation]; for that—apart from the little he copied from Groen's Archives and Gachard's Correspondences—for that his views are generally too obsolete." Although appreciating his efforts to make Dutch history known among an English-speaking audience, Van Vloten argues that Motley's lack of knowledge of the Dutch language prevented him from sharing the latest insights of the Dutch historiographers, and made him vulnerable to bias in favor of Protestants and against Catholics.[1]

American Civil War edit

In 1861, just after outbreak of the American Civil War, Motley wrote two letters to The Times defending the Federal position, and these letters, afterwards reprinted as a pamphlet entitled Causes of the Civil War in America,[9] made a favourable impression on President Lincoln.[citation needed] At this point the English census of 1861 confirms that he was living with his wife and two daughters at 31 Hertford Street, in the parish of St George's, Hanover Square, London and describing himself as an 'author - history'.[10]

Partly owing to this essay, Motley was appointed United States minister to the Austrian Empire in 1861, a position which he filled with distinction, working with other American diplomats such as John Bigelow and Charles Francis Adams to help prevent European intervention on the side of the Confederacy in the American Civil War. He resigned this position in 1867.[11] Two years later, he was sent to represent his country as Minister to the Court of St. James's, but in November 1870 he was recalled by President Grant. Motley had angered Grant when he completely disregarded Secretary of State Hamilton Fish's carefully drafted orders regarding settlement of the Alabama Claims.[12] After a short visit to the Netherlands, Motley again went to live in England, where the Life and Death of John Barneveld, Advocate of Holland: with a View of the Primary Causes and Movements of the Thirty Years War appeared in two volumes in 1874.[13]

Ill health now began to interfere with his literary work, and he died at Kingston Russell House, near Dorchester, Dorset.

Selected works edit

  • Morton's Hope, or the Memoirs of a Provincial, 1839
  • Life and Character of Peter the Great (North American Review), 1845
  • On Balzac's Novels (North American Review), 1847
  • Merry Mount, a Romance of the Massachusetts Colony, 1849
  • Polity of the Puritans (North American Review), 1849
  • The Rise of the Dutch Republic, 3 vol., 1856
  • Florentine Mosaics (Atlantic Monthly), 1857
  • History of the United Netherlands, 4 vol., 1860–67
  • Causes of the Civil War in America (from The Times), 1861
  • Historic Progress and American Democracy, 1868
  • Review of S. E. Henshaw's History of the Work of the North-West Sanitary Commission (Atlantic Monthly), 1868
  • Democracy, the Climax of Political Progress and the Destiny of Advanced Races: An Historical Essay, 1869. (Pamphlet reprint of "Historic Progress and American Democracy," listed above.)
  • The Life and Death of John of Barneveld: Advocate of Holland, 2 vol., 1874

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Motley, John Lothrop". Encyclopædia Britannica. (11th ed. 1911). 18:909–910.
  2. ^ Guide Book To New England Travel. 1919.
  3. ^ Clarke, Wm. Horatio (1903). Mid-Century Memories of Dedham. Dedham Historical Society.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Sommers, 2017.
  5. ^ Steinberg (2011), pp. 39–41
  6. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 16, 2021.
  7. ^ Edwards, 1982, p. 173.
  8. ^ Robert E. Spiller, et al., eds. Literary history of the United States (2nd ed., 1953) p. 535.
  9. ^ Making of America - The Causes of The American Civil War: A letter to the London Times.
  10. ^ "Ancestry.co.uk".
  11. ^ . U.S. Embassy in Vienna. Archived from the original on September 7, 2008. Retrieved December 31, 2008.
  12. ^ Corning, Amos Elwood (1918). Hamilton Fish. Lamere Publishing Company. pp. 59–84. Hamilton Fish.
  13. ^ The Life and Death of John of Barneveld, Advocate of Holland, by John Lothrop Motley (1874)

Further reading edit

  • Baarssen, G.H. Joost (2014). America's True Mother Country? Images of the Dutch in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century. London: LIT Verlag. ISBN 978-3-643-90492-8.
  • Edwards, Owen Dudley. "John Lothrop Motley and the Netherlands." BMGN-Low Countries Historical Review 97.3 (1982): 561–588. online
  • Guberman, Joseph. The Life of John Lothrop Motley (Springer, 2012).
  • Haight, Gordon S. "The Publication of Motley's Rise of the Dutch Republic." The Yale University Library Gazette (1980): 135-140 online.
  • Kaplan, Lawrence S. "The Brahmin as Diplomat in Nineteenth Century America: Everett Bancroft Motley Lowell." Civil War History 19.1 (1973): 5–28.
  • Putnam, Ruth. "Prescott and Motley," Cambridge History of American Literature (1918), 2:131-47, 501–03. online
  • Sommers, William. "John Lothrop Motley: The Witty US Minister to Vienna" Foreign Vistas: Stories from a Life in the Foreign Service. (2017), p. 1+. online
  • Steinberg, Jonathan. "The American connection: John Lothrop Motley, George Bancroft and Andrew Dickson White. Eminent Americans and Otto von Bismarck." Realpolitik für Europa (Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh, 2016) pp. 267–280.
  • Steinberg, Jonathan (2011). Bismarck: A Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-978252-9.
  • Wheaton, Robert (1962). "Motley and the Dutch Historians". New England Quarterly. 35 (3): 318–336. doi:10.2307/363823. JSTOR 363823.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Motley, John Lothrop". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 909–910.

Primary sources edit

  • The Rise of the Dutch Republic, 3 vol., 1856; many editions online
  • History of the United Netherlands, 4 vol., 1860–67; many editions online
  • Holmes Sr., Oliver Wendell (1879). John Lothrop Motley: A Memoir. Boston, Houghton, Osgood and company.
  • Motley, John Lothrop (1939). Higby, Chester Penn; Schantz, B.T. (eds.). John Lothrop Motley: Representative Selections.
  • Motley, John Lothrop. The Correspondence of John Lothrop Motley (G.W. Curtis, ed. 3 vol. Harper & brothers, 1889). vol 1 online; also vol 2 online; and vol 3 online

External links edit

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by U.S. Minister to the Austrian Empire
1861 – 1867
Succeeded by
Preceded by U.S. Minister to Great Britain
1869 – 1870
Succeeded by

john, lothrop, motley, april, 1814, 1877, american, author, diplomat, popular, historian, best, known, works, netherlands, three, volume, work, rise, dutch, republic, four, volume, history, united, netherlands, united, states, minister, austria, service, abrah. John Lothrop Motley April 15 1814 May 29 1877 was an American author and diplomat As a popular historian he is best known for his works on the Netherlands the three volume work The Rise of the Dutch Republic and four volume History of the United Netherlands As United States Minister to Austria in the service of the Abraham Lincoln administration Motley helped to prevent European intervention on the side of the Confederates in the American Civil War He later served as Minister to the United Kingdom Court of St James during the Ulysses S Grant administration John Lothrop MotleyUnited States Minister to the United KingdomIn office June 18 1869 December 6 1870PresidentUlysses S GrantPreceded byReverdy JohnsonSucceeded byRobert C SchenckUnited States Minister to AustriaIn office November 14 1861 June 14 1867PresidentAbraham LincolnAndrew JohnsonPreceded byJehu Glancy JonesSucceeded byHenry M WattsPersonal detailsBornJohn Lothrop Motley 1814 04 15 April 15 1814Dorchester Massachusetts USDiedMay 29 1877 1877 05 29 aged 63 Dorchester Dorset UKOccupationHistorian and diplomatSignature Contents 1 Biography 2 Dutch history 2 1 Reception in Britain and the United States 2 2 Reception in the Netherlands 3 American Civil War 4 Selected works 5 References 6 Further reading 6 1 Primary sources 7 External linksBiography editJohn Lothrop Motley was born on April 15 1814 in Dorchester Massachusetts His grandfather Thomas Motley a jail keeper a public position and innkeeper in Portland Maine had been a Freemason and radical sympathizer with the French Revolution His father Thomas and uncle Edward served mercantile apprenticeships in Portland 1 In 1802 Thomas Motley moved to Boston and established a commission house on India Wharf taking his brother Edward with him as clerk Thomas and Edward Motley became one of the leading commission houses in Boston Thomas married Anna Lothrop daughter of the Rev John Lathrop product of an old and distinguished line of Massachusetts clergymen Like other successful Boston merchants of the period Thomas Motley devoted a great part of his wealth to civic purposes and the education of his children The brilliant accomplishments of his second son J L Motley are evidence of the care both the father and mother known both for her learning and what Motley s boyhood friend Wendell Phillips called her regal beauty bestowed on the boy s intellectual development Motley attended the Round Hill School and Boston Latin School and graduated from Harvard in 1831 His boyhood was spent in Dedham near the site of the present day Noble and Greenough School 2 on land purchased from Edward L Penniman 3 His education included training in the German language and literature and he went to Germany to complete these studies at Gottingen during 1832 1833 during which time he became a lifelong friend of Otto von Bismarck Motley and Bismarck studied civil law together at Frederick William University Berlin Bismarck recalled his early impression of Motley He exercised a marked attraction by a conversation sparkling with wit humor or originality The most striking feature of his handsome and delicate appearance was his uncommonly large and beautiful eyes 4 After a period of European travel Motley returned in 1834 to Boston where he continued his legal studies 1 In 1837 he married Mary Benjamin died 1874 She came from a wealthy Boston family her brother was Park Benjamin Sr In 1839 he published anonymously a novel titled Morton s Hope or the Memoirs of a Provincial about life in a German university based on his own experiences It was poorly received but has later been recognized for featuring a valuable portrayal of Bismarck thinly disguised as Otto von Rabenmarck as a young student 5 In 1841 Motley entered the U S diplomatic service as secretary of legation in St Petersburg Russia but resigned his post within three months because of the harsh climate the expenses living there and his reserved habits Returning to Boston he soon entered definitely upon a literary career Besides contributing various historical and critical essays to the North American Review such as Life and Character of Peter the Great 1845 and a remarkable essay on the Polity of the Puritans he published in 1849 again anonymously a second novel titled Merry Mount a Romance of the Massachusetts Colony based again on the odd history of Thomas Morton who founded Merrymount He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1856 1 and as a member to the American Philosophical Society 6 in 1861 Dutch history edit nbsp Motley circa 1855 1865 In 1846 Motley had begun to plan a history of the Netherlands in particular the period of the United Provinces and he had already done a large amount of work on this subject when finding the materials at his disposal in the United States inadequate he went with his wife and children to Europe in 1851 The next five years were spent at Dresden Brussels and The Hague in investigation of the archives which resulted in 1856 in the publication of The Rise of the Dutch Republic which became very popular It speedily passed through many editions and was translated into Dutch French German and Russian In 1860 Motley published the first two volumes of its continuation The United Netherlands This work was on a larger scale and embodied the results of a still greater amount of original research It was brought down to the truce of 1609 by two additional volumes published in 1867 1 nbsp The Rise of the Dutch Republic by John Lothrop Motley Reception in Britain and the United States edit The books were popular and critical successes in both Britain and the United States and multiple editions over the decades sold tens of thousands of copies It was a favorite prize that schools awarded to their best students Owen Edwards says of Motley He and he alone had created a Dutch awareness on a wide scale 7 American critics have given the book mixed reviews It was quite popular in its day but modern scholars argue Motley s overdramatization and didacticism combined with research less intense than Prescott s or Parkman s have cost his works in staying power Scholars have largely rewritten the story of the Dutch Republic it is the rare modern who would for pleasure alone read Motley from cover to cover even his Rise of the Dutch Republic But particular characterizations and episodes in his writings notably the portraits of William of Orange and Philip II and the descriptions of the Siege of Leyden the abdication of Charles V and the assassination of William are not excelled in American literature for glint and lift and thud of language 8 Reception in the Netherlands edit The reception of Motley s work in the Netherlands itself was not wholly favorable especially as Motley described the Dutch struggle for independence in a flattering light which caused some to argue he was biased against their opponents Although historians like the orthodox Protestant Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer whom Motley extensively quotes in his work viewed him very favorably the eminent liberal Dutch historian Robert Fruin who was inspired by Motley to do some of his own best work and who had reported already in 1856 in The Westminster Review Motley s edition on the Rise of the Dutch Republic was critical of Motley s tendency to make up facts if they made for a good story Though he admired Motley s gifts as an author and stated that he continued to hold the work as a whole in high regard he stressed it still required addition and correction 1 The humanist historian Johannes van Vloten was very critical and responded to Fruin in 1860 I agree less with your too favorable judgement We cannot build on Motley s foundation for that apart from the little he copied from Groen s Archives and Gachard s Correspondences for that his views are generally too obsolete Although appreciating his efforts to make Dutch history known among an English speaking audience Van Vloten argues that Motley s lack of knowledge of the Dutch language prevented him from sharing the latest insights of the Dutch historiographers and made him vulnerable to bias in favor of Protestants and against Catholics 1 American Civil War editIn 1861 just after outbreak of the American Civil War Motley wrote two letters to The Times defending the Federal position and these letters afterwards reprinted as a pamphlet entitled Causes of the Civil War in America 9 made a favourable impression on President Lincoln citation needed At this point the English census of 1861 confirms that he was living with his wife and two daughters at 31 Hertford Street in the parish of St George s Hanover Square London and describing himself as an author history 10 Partly owing to this essay Motley was appointed United States minister to the Austrian Empire in 1861 a position which he filled with distinction working with other American diplomats such as John Bigelow and Charles Francis Adams to help prevent European intervention on the side of the Confederacy in the American Civil War He resigned this position in 1867 11 Two years later he was sent to represent his country as Minister to the Court of St James s but in November 1870 he was recalled by President Grant Motley had angered Grant when he completely disregarded Secretary of State Hamilton Fish s carefully drafted orders regarding settlement of the Alabama Claims 12 After a short visit to the Netherlands Motley again went to live in England where the Life and Death of John Barneveld Advocate of Holland with a View of the Primary Causes and Movements of the Thirty Years War appeared in two volumes in 1874 13 Ill health now began to interfere with his literary work and he died at Kingston Russell House near Dorchester Dorset Selected works editMorton s Hope or the Memoirs of a Provincial 1839 Life and Character of Peter the Great North American Review 1845 On Balzac s Novels North American Review 1847 Merry Mount a Romance of the Massachusetts Colony 1849 Polity of the Puritans North American Review 1849 The Rise of the Dutch Republic 3 vol 1856 Florentine Mosaics Atlantic Monthly 1857 History of the United Netherlands 4 vol 1860 67 Causes of the Civil War in America from The Times 1861 Historic Progress and American Democracy 1868 Review of S E Henshaw s History of the Work of the North West Sanitary Commission Atlantic Monthly 1868 Democracy the Climax of Political Progress and the Destiny of Advanced Races An Historical Essay 1869 Pamphlet reprint of Historic Progress and American Democracy listed above The Life and Death of John of Barneveld Advocate of Holland 2 vol 1874References edit a b c d e f Motley John Lothrop Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 18 909 910 Guide Book To New England Travel 1919 Clarke Wm Horatio 1903 Mid Century Memories of Dedham Dedham Historical Society a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sommers 2017 Steinberg 2011 pp 39 41 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 16 2021 Edwards 1982 p 173 Robert E Spiller et al eds Literary history of the United States 2nd ed 1953 p 535 Making of America The Causes of The American Civil War A letter to the London Times Ancestry co uk Former U S ambassadors to Austria U S Embassy in Vienna Archived from the original on September 7 2008 Retrieved December 31 2008 Corning Amos Elwood 1918 Hamilton Fish Lamere Publishing Company pp 59 84 Hamilton Fish The Life and Death of John of Barneveld Advocate of Holland by John Lothrop Motley 1874 Further reading editBaarssen G H Joost 2014 America s True Mother Country Images of the Dutch in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century London LIT Verlag ISBN 978 3 643 90492 8 Edwards Owen Dudley John Lothrop Motley and the Netherlands BMGN Low Countries Historical Review 97 3 1982 561 588 online Guberman Joseph The Life of John Lothrop Motley Springer 2012 Haight Gordon S The Publication of Motley s Rise of the Dutch Republic The Yale University Library Gazette 1980 135 140 online Kaplan Lawrence S The Brahmin as Diplomat in Nineteenth Century America Everett Bancroft Motley Lowell Civil War History 19 1 1973 5 28 Putnam Ruth Prescott and Motley Cambridge History of American Literature 1918 2 131 47 501 03 online Sommers William John Lothrop Motley The Witty US Minister to Vienna Foreign Vistas Stories from a Life in the Foreign Service 2017 p 1 online Steinberg Jonathan The American connection John Lothrop Motley George Bancroft and Andrew Dickson White Eminent Americans and Otto von Bismarck Realpolitik fur Europa Verlag Ferdinand Schoningh 2016 pp 267 280 Steinberg Jonathan 2011 Bismarck A Life Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 978252 9 Wheaton Robert 1962 Motley and the Dutch Historians New England Quarterly 35 3 318 336 doi 10 2307 363823 JSTOR 363823 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Motley John Lothrop Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 909 910 Primary sources edit The Rise of the Dutch Republic 3 vol 1856 many editions online History of the United Netherlands 4 vol 1860 67 many editions online Holmes Sr Oliver Wendell 1879 John Lothrop Motley A Memoir Boston Houghton Osgood and company Motley John Lothrop 1939 Higby Chester Penn Schantz B T eds John Lothrop Motley Representative Selections Motley John Lothrop The Correspondence of John Lothrop Motley G W Curtis ed 3 vol Harper amp brothers 1889 vol 1 online also vol 2 online and vol 3 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about John Lothrop Motley nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to John Lothrop Motley nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Lothrop Motley Works by John Lothrop Motley at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Lothrop Motley at Internet Archive Works by John Lothrop Motley at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Diplomatic posts Preceded byAnson Burlingame U S Minister to the Austrian Empire1861 1867 Succeeded byHenry M Watts Preceded byReverdy Johnson U S Minister to Great Britain1869 1870 Succeeded byRobert C Schenck Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Lothrop Motley amp oldid 1216544509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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