Jerome J. Collins: Ireland's Forgotten Hero

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Posted by Aimee at 1:19 AM
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Labels: Cork, Ireland, Irish, Jerome J. Collins, Minnesota

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PLEASE DONATE to FURTHER MY RESEARCH ON THE AMAZING LIFE OF THIS UNSUNG HERO, JEROME J. COLLINS



All proceeds will go toward furthering my research on the life of Jerome J. Collins, America & Ireland's Unsung Hero, who's funeral was deemed the "Longest Funeral in the World". Collins was the World's First Weather Reporter, and died at the age of 40 on the USS Jeannette Expedition to the North Pole while serving as the Scientific Officer on board. He was placed under arrest for a trivial charge of "smoking in the cabin", yet charges were never lifted in 1884 during the formal naval inquiry which investigated the mistreatment of Jerome; his brother Dr. Daniel F. Collins of Minnesota forced this Naval Inquiry to attempt to clear his brother Jerome's naval record of the trivial charges. Dr. Daniel Collins, my GG Grandfather, died at the young age of 50 yrs in 1900, unselfishly donating his body to science in order to further the medical practice. His grave, along with about 8 other plots including his wife and children all located together, sadly remain unmarked at St. Mary's Cemetery in Minneapolis, MN. Any further donations will go to erect a proper monument in tribute of his life, which was likely financially exhausted due to his unwavering efforts to aid his dead heroic brother Jerome Collins during the Jeannette Inquiry of 1884. Jerome Collins is possibly the only person in history to have been awarded a Congressional Gold Medal posthumously for his sacrifice in the Arctic while he forever remains under arrest/suspension. It is my goal to overturn those charges, but I realistically can't do it without outside help as a single mom. It is also my campaign to replicate his Congressional Gold Medal, which was lost or stolen, and have it formerly donated to the City of Cork in Ireland, specifically the Cork City Museum; the medal would be made based off an existing medal. This replication has already started as of October 2015 & has been completed. In addition, any donations will help fund my portion of writing for our book about Jerome Collins; travel is needed in order to finalize the last bit of my research at the NARA in D.C., the Smithsonian, the Naval Academy Museum in Annapolis, MD, and lastly to visit specific places of interest in NYC where Jerome Collins would have resided and worked, including St. Patrick's Cathedral where his first out of 2 funerals was held in 1884. Ultimately, I would like to return to Cork City, Ireland, to have the replicated medal formally presented to the city. Thank you in advance for reading my story and for your support!

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Jerome Collins, Cork, Ireland

Jerome Collins, Cork, Ireland
[17 Oct 1841 - 30/31 Oct 1881]

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Who IS
Jerome Collins?

An engineer, journalist, scientist, meteorologist, and arctic explorer, among other achievements, Jerome came from a family of warriors and statesmen, he grew up with a passion for meteorology; men of his day even heralded him as the "Father of Meteorology". Born October 17, 1841 in Cork, Ireland. Engineered the North Gate Bridge, Cork. Came to the US about 1866 and eventually worked for the New York Herald Newspaper as Scientific Editor. Established the New York Herald Weather Service and used the telegraph to cable storm warnings to the western coasts of Europe, UK, Ireland. Founded the Clan na Gael. Died October 30, 1881 while enlisted in the US Navy as the Scientific Officer aboard the
  • Jeannette Arctic Expedition.
  • Wrongfully placed under arrest for 18 arduous months until his death, the official charge "smoking in the cabin". Lt. Commander De Long forced Collins' photographs, scientific notes, and diaries to sink with the ship. Jerome's funeral deemed "Longest In The World", his body having travelled approx. 15,000 miles from the Lena Delta, Siberia, to NYC, then to Cork for burial alongside that of his beloved mother's. The charges were never lifted from Jerome's record, despite the fight two of his loyal brothers (Dr. Daniel F. Collins a gifted and well versed physician in Minnesota, and Bernard A. Collins an Inventor/Scientific Engineer in NYC) gave against a US naval Inquiry in 1884; no official ruling was made on the claim that Jerome Collins was mistreated by Lt. De Long while on board the Jeannette. Although Jerome died while serving under the United States flag in the Navy, his heart always fought for the freedom of his native island home, Ireland.

    Continuing the Fight 134 years later...

    Continuing the Fight 134 years later...
    Amy standing at the tip of Lake Superior in Duluth, Minnesota. The Aerial Lift Bridge in background. Amy is holding an etching of her Great-Great Granduncle, Jerome who still remains under arrest over 134 years later.

    Part I of "The Jeannette Tragedy" published in "The Irish Echo" Newspaper July 9th 2008 in NYC.

    Part I of "The Jeannette Tragedy" published in "The Irish Echo" Newspaper July 9th 2008 in NYC.
    I was recently interviewed for this article written by Ed O'Donnell with "The Irish Echo" in NYC. Click on newspaper here to take you to "The Irish Echo" online where you can read the complete edition including Part I of Jerome's story while aboard his Arctic Expedition to the North Pole in 1879. Part II due out July 15th.

    Part II of The Irish Echo's "The Jeannette Tragedy" about Jerome Collins, pub. 7/15/08

    Part II of The Irish Echo's "The Jeannette Tragedy" about Jerome Collins, pub. 7/15/08
    Bravo to Ed O'Donnell for painting a great historical image of Jerome Collins, an accurate account of Jerome's life aboard the Jeannette Arctic Expedition to the North Pole in 1879. Click the newspaper to read this 2nd half of the story, where you can download the entire newspaper or just Jerome's story in PDF format.
    All content & photos copyright by Amy Nossum & may not be used without the consent of this author.. Awesome Inc. theme. Powered by Blogger.