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Standing on a Volcano The Life and Times of David R. Francis Harper Barnes
October 464
pages, 75 illus., 6 Ľ x 9 ˝
ISBN 1-883982-13-8 $49.95t cloth ISBN
1-883982-17-0 $19.95t Distributed for the Missouri Historical Society Press
David R. Francis was a brash, plain-spoken man whose political savvy guided him to positions of prominence at all levels of American government. He served as both mayor of St. Louis and governor of Missouri, and later entered national and international politics as ambassador to Russia from 1916 to 1918.
Appointed to that post by President Woodrow Wilson,
Francis possessed a background in agricultural trade and banking and also
impressed Wilson with his experience wooing heads of state as president of
the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition.
This challenge and others are recounted in the biography, Standing on a Volcano: The Life and Times of David R. Francis, by accomplished St. Louis journalist Harper Barnes. In this fascinating book, Barnes discusses how Russia’s internal volatility frustrated the diplomatic efforts of Francis, a maverick statesman who sympathized with Russia’s poor and sought to stall the Bolshevik uprising. Though criticized by some historians for bold, unthinking calls for American intervention—advice President Wilson dismissed—Francis showed an unflagging commitment to Russia and to the hope of ushering in a democratic government.
Despite his
mixed legacy, that Francis remains a figure of great historical
significance locally, nationally, and internationally is
evidenced at the Museum of the Diplomatic Corps in Vologda, Russia,
where he is the primary subject. St. Louisans and U.S. history buffs alike
will marvel at the man and his story.
Harper Barnes
is a longtime editor and cultural critic for the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch. He edited the Boston
Phoenix, has written for the Atlantic
Monthly, Rolling Stone, and
other publications, and served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist.
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