The Pirate Coast

Unabridged
Author: Richard Zacks
Narrator: Raymond Todd
Genres: History
Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks
Date: June 2005
Length: 13 hours, 30 minutes
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

This is the story of America’s first overseas covert operation, one of the strangest, riskiest, most compelling adventures ever undertaken for love of glory and country.

A declaration of war by Tripoli in 1801 marked the first foreign policy test of Thomas Jefferson’s administration. Then, on Halloween of 1803, the unthinkable happened: The USS Philadelphia accidentally ran aground in Tripoli harbor, and the Barbary pirates captured three hundred U.S. sailors and marines. The Moslem ruler renamed the frigate “The Gift of Allah” and held the Americans as his slaves, to be auctioned at his whim.

Faced with this hostage crisis and an ongoing war with Tripoli, Jefferson dispatched diplomats and navy squadrons to the Mediterranean, but he also authorized a secret mission to overthrow the government there. Jefferson chose an unlikely man to lead the operation. Forty-year-old William Eaton was a failed diplomat, deeply in debt, who had been court-martialed from the Army. He saw this mission as a last chance to redeem himself and resurrect his career. His assignment was to find an exiled prince named Hamet hiding in Egypt and convince him to mount a civil war in Tripoli. But before Eaton even departed, Jefferson grew wary of intermeddling in the internal affairs of another nation and withdrew Eaton’s supplies, weapons, and troops.

Astoundingly, Eaton, who was forced to beg cash from British merchants, persevered and found Hamet up the Nile and lured him to Alexandria, where he rounded up a ragtag force of European mercenaries and Bedouin fighters; Eaton then borrowed eight U.S. Marines, including fiddle-laying Presley O’Bannon, and led them all on a brutal march across five hundred miles of Libyan desert to surprise attack Tripoli.

After surviving sandstorms, treachery, and near-death from thirst, Eaton achieved a remarkable victory on “the shores of Tripoli,” commemorated to this day in the U.S. Marine Corps hymn. His triumph led to freedom for the three hundred Americans and newfound respect for the young United States, but for Eaton, the aftermath wasn’t so sweet. When he dared to reveal that the president had abandoned him, Thomas Jefferson set out to crush him.

Reviews (3)

Pirate Coast: Thomas Jefferson, the First Marines, and the Secret Mission of 1805

Written by Rachel E. Holmen on July 2nd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Fascinating tale of intrigue, treachery, stupidity, and bravery will come out -- and to learn how the U.S. Marines fought on "the shores of Tripoli".

with a better reader, might have been great.

Written by KD on June 2nd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 2/5

The story was interesting. I listened to the whole book in spite of the reader's poor ability, because I wanted to hear how it ends. But, the reader was awful. He massacred sentences, paused in odd places and managed to convey the wrong emotion -- and sometimes no emotion at all -- far too often. My adive....read the paper version, because the story is intriguing....but the reader is painful to listen to.

Pirate Coast: Thomas Jefferson, the First Marines, and the Secret Mission of 1805

Written by Anonymous from Huntsville, AL on April 6th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I didn't listen to more than 5 minutes of this because I couldn't get past the narrator's voice. I am choosy about who reads the books I pick and I just thought this reader's voice sounded too much like it was from a film you would have heard in junior high school. I'm sure it is an interesting book--I plan to read it.