Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II (November 5, 1830 – September 3, 1893)
Early life
He was born in Baltimore, Maryland on November 5, 1830. He was the eldest son of the French-American Jérôme Napoléon Bonaparte (1805–1870) and his wife, the former Susan May Williams (1812–1881). His younger brother was Charles Joseph Bonaparte, who served as the United States Attorney General and Secretary of the Navy under Theodore Roosevelt. Through his grandfather, he was the grandnephew of Emperor Napoleon, who died in 1821.
Bonaparte entered the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1847 and graduated 11th in the Class of 1852. For his services, he was the recipient of the decoration of the Medjidie Order from Abdulmejid I, the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, the Crimea Medal from Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, and was made a knight of the Légion d'honneur.
Personal life
Upon his return to the United States, he married Caroline Le Roy Appleton Edgar (1840–1911), daughter of Samuel and Julia Appleton, and widow of Newbold Edgar. Caroline was also the granddaughter of American statesman, Daniel Webster. Together, they were the parents of two children:
- Louise-Eugénie Bonaparte (February 7, 1873–January 22, 1923), who married Count Adam Carl von Moltke-Huitfeld (1864–1944) (see Moltke family) in 1896 and had issue.
- Jerome Napoleon Charles Bonaparte (February 26, 1878–November 10, 1945), who married Blanche Pierce Strebeigh, daughter of Edward and Emily Pierce of Newtonville, Massachusetts, and former wife of Harold Strebeigh of Hewlett, New York, in 1914, no issue. He died after tripping over his dog's leash in Central Park.
Had his family not been excluded, he would have been first in line to the Bonaparte succession from 1873 and would have succeeded in 1891.
