John B. Timberlake

John B. Timberlake (1777–April 2, 1828) was a protagonist in the American political scandal known as the Petticoat affair. His wife Peggy O'Neill Timberlake was said to have had an affair with John Eaton, who became Secretary of War in President Andrew Jackson's cabinet. The scandal brought about the resignation of most members of Jackson's cabinet.

Background

Timberlake was a purser in the United States Navy. During his initial service in the military, he fell into massive debt. In 1816, when he was 39 years old, he married Peggy O'Neill, who was 17. They moved into a house in Washington, D.C. provided by her father, across the street from his hotel and tavern called the Franklin House.

In 1818, the couple met the widowed United States Senator, John Eaton, then aged 28. Peggy was then 19 years old. John Eaton, recently elected and the youngest U.S. Senator, stayed at Franklin House.

Timberlake and Eaton became fast friends, and Timberlake confessed his financial problems. Eaton introduced a petition to the United States Senate to relieve Timberlake of debts collected while he was in service to the Navy. The Senate failed to act on his request and Timberlake slipped deeper into debt. He returned to the Navy, leaving his wife and their daughter, Mary Virginia Timberlake, behind in Washington. He returned for short periodic visits between voyages. In 1825 he fathered another daughter, Margret Rosa Timberlake.

Timberlake left for a four-year voyage on the USS Constitution. During his long absence, Peggy was rumored to have suffered a miscarriage, from a pregnancy that could only have resulted from an affair with another man. Although it was later rumored that he committed suicide because of the alleged affair, Timberlake had been ill, and died of pneumonia while on board ship in the Mediterranean Sea.[1] When the Constitution put in at Mahón on the Spanish island of Minorca, Timberlake was buried with full military honors.[2]

Soon after Timberlake's death, Peggy and Eaton married. Their action brought widespread criticism because they had not waited until the passing of a proper mourning period. The circumstances of their marriage led to a political crisis, the Petticoat affair, during President Andrew Jackson's first term in office. When Eaton was later appointed Minister to Spain, the Eatons and Timberlake's daughters visited his gravesite.[3]

References

  1. Steven M. Gillon and Cathy D. Matson, The American Experiment, 2nd ed., Vol. 1 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2006)
  2. Marszalek, John F. (1997). The Petticoat Affair: Manners, Mutiny, and Sex in Andrew Jackson's White House. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-0-8071-2634-9.
  3. Gerson, Noel Bertram (1974). That Eaton Woman: In Defense of Peggy O'Neale Eaton. Barre, MA: Barre Publishers. p. 144.
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