While George Farragut was fishing one day on Lake Pontchartrain...
David Glasgow, the second son of George Farragut, and the future Admiral of 
the United States Navy, was born before the removal to Louisiana, on the 5th of 
July, 1801, at Campbell's Station, near Knoxville, in eastern Tennessee. In 
1808, while living in his father's house on the banks of Lake Pontchartrain, an 
incident occurred which led directly to his entrance into the navy, and at the 
same time brought into curious coincidence two families, not before closely 
associated, whose names are now among the most conspicuous of those in the 
annals of the navy. While George Farragut was fishing one day on Lake 
Pontchartrain he fell in with a boat, also engaged in fishing, in which was an 
old gentleman prostrated by the heat of the sun. He took him to his own house, 
where he was cared for and nursed until he died, never having recovered strength 
sufficient to be removed. The sufferer was David Porter, the father of the 
Captain David Porter who afterward commanded the frigate Essex in her 
adventurous and celebrated cruise in the Pacific during the years 1813 and 1814, 
and grandfather of the still more distinguished Admiral David D. Porter, who, 
over half a century later, served with David Farragut on the Mississippi in the 
civil war, and in the end succeeded him as second admiral of the navy. Captain, 
or rather, as he then was, Commander Porter being in charge of the naval station 
at New Orleans, his father, who had served actively afloat during the Revolution 
and had afterward been appointed by Washington a sailing master in the navy, had 
obtained orders to the same station, in order to be with, though nominally 
under, his son. The latter deeply felt the kindness shown to his father by the 
Farraguts. Mrs. Farragut herself died of yellow fever, toward the end of Mr. 
Porter's illness, the funeral of the two taking place on the same day; and 
Commander Porter soon after visited the family at their home and offered to 
adopt one of the children. Young David Farragut then knew little of the element 
upon which his future life was to be passed; but, dazzled by the commander's 
uniform and by that of his own elder brother William, who had received a 
midshipman's warrant a short time before, he promptly decided to accept an offer 
which held forth to him the same brilliant prospects. The arrangement was soon 
concluded. Porter promised to be to him always a friend and guardian; and the 
admiral wrote in after life, 'I am happy to have it in my power to say, with 
feelings of the warmest gratitude, that he ever was to me all that he promised.' 
The boy returned to New Orleans with his new protector, in whose house he 
thenceforth resided, making occasional trips across Lake Pontchartrain to a 
plantation which his father had purchased on the Pascagoula River. A few months 
later Commander Porter appears to have made a visit to Washington on business 
connected with the New Orleans station, and to have taken Farragut with him to 
be placed at school, for which there were few advantages at that time in 
Louisiana. The boy then took what proved to be a last farewell of his father. 
George Farragut continued to live in Pascagoula, and there he died on the 4th of 
June, 1817, in his sixty-second year. 
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