Washington & Lafayette
Almost inseparable in wartime, the two generals split over a vital question: Should revolutionary ideals be imposed on others?
- By James R. Gaines
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2007, Subscribe
Thanks to a rich historical record, we do not have to imagine the reaction of Gen. George Washington when, on July 31, 1777, he was introduced to the latest French "major general" foisted on him by the Continental Congress, this one an aristocrat not yet out of his teens. Virtually since Washington had taken command of the Colonial Army some two years before, he had been trying to sweep back a tide of counts, chevaliers and lesser foreign volunteers, many of whom brought with them enormous self-regard, little English and less interest in the American cause than in motives ranging from martial vanity to sheriff-dodging.
The Frenchman now presenting himself to George Washington in the Colonial capital of Philadelphia was the 19-year-old Marquis de Lafayette, who was in America principally because he was enormously rich. Though Congress had told Washington that Lafayette's commission was purely honorific, no one seemed to have told the marquis, and two weeks after their first meeting, Washington shot off a letter to Benjamin Harrison, a fellow Virginian in Congress, complaining that this latest French import expected command of a division! "What line of conduct I am to pursue, to comply with [Congress'] design and his expectations, I know no more than the child unborn and beg to be instructed," the commander fumed.
The success of the American Revolution was then very much in doubt. For more than a year, apart from two militarily insignificant but symbolically critical victories in Trenton and Princeton, Washington's army had succeeded only at evasion and retreat. His depleted forces were riddled with smallpox and jaundice, there was not enough money to feed or pay them, and the British, emboldened to dream of an early end to the war, were on their way toward Philadelphia with a fleet of some 250 ships carrying 18,000 British regulars—news that Washington had received with that morning's breakfast. At the dinner where he met Lafayette, Washington had to address the urgent fear of congressmen that Philadelphia itself could fall to the British, and he had nothing of much comfort to tell them.
So a pushy French teenager would seem to have been the last thing Washington needed, and eventually the general was told that he was free to do as he liked with the impetuous young nobleman. How then to explain that before the month of August 1777 was out, Lafayette was living in Washington's house, in his very small "family" of top military aides; that in a matter of weeks he was riding at Washington's side on parade; that by early September he was riding with Washington into battle; that after he was wounded at Brandywine Creek (a defeat that indeed led to the fall of Philadelphia), he was attended by Washington's personal physician and watched over anxiously by the general himself? "Never during the Revolution was there so speedy and complete a conquest of the heart of Washington," his biographer Douglas Southall Freeman wrote. "How did [Lafayette] do it? History has no answer."
Actually, Lafayette's biographers have settled on one: that Washington saw in Lafayette the son he never had, and that Lafayette found in Washington his long-lost father—a conclusion that, even if true, is so widely and briskly postulated as to suggest a wish to avoid the question. In any case it is unsatisfying in several ways. For one, Washington rarely expressed regret at not having a child of his own, and though he had many young military aides, he hardly treated them with fatherly tenderness. His adjutant Alexander Hamilton, who like Lafayette had lost his father in infancy, found Washington so peremptory that he demanded to be reassigned.
Perhaps most discouraging to the father-son idea is that the relationship between Washington and Lafayette was not one of unalloyed affection. The elaborate 18th-century courtesies in their correspondence may be easily read as signs of warmth; they could also disguise the opposite. The two men differed on many things and are sometimes found to be working against each other in secret, each to his own ends. Their interaction reflects the always problematic relations between their two countries, an alliance of which they were also the founding fathers.
It is difficult to imagine a supposedly friendly bilateral alliance fraught with more tension than that of France and the United States. In 1800, when Napoleon brought years of outrageous French attacks on American shipping to an end with a new commercial treaty, he dismissed the long, acrimonious conflict as a "family spat." In 2003, during their bitter confrontation over war in Iraq, Secretary of State Colin Powell reassured France's distraught ambassador to the United States, among others, by reminding him that America and France had been through 200 years of "marriage counseling, but the marriage...is still strong," an analysis that was widely appreciated and brought not the shortest pause in the exchange of diplomatic fire.
Others have described the French-American relationship as that of "sister republics" born during "sister revolutions." If so, it is not hard to find the source of Franco-American conflict, since the parents of these siblings deeply despised each other. Never has a national rivalry been more spiteful than the one between the old regime of the Bourbons and Hanoverian England, though they did share a belief in the profound insignificance of the American colonies. As colonial overlords, Washington's mother country and Lafayette's patrie saw North America mainly as a tempting place to poach and plunder, a potential chip in their war with each other and a small but easy market of primitives and misfits who lived in forests and dressed in animal skins. For their part, the American settlers saw the British as their oppressors, and were inclined to see the French as prancing, light-minded land-grabbers sent by the pope to incite Indian massacres.
Given these and later perceptions, one may well wonder why there is a statue of Washington in Paris' Place d'Iéna, and what one of Lafayette is doing on Pennsylvania Avenue across from the White House, in...Lafayette Park. At a time when Western civilization faces a geopolitical challenge that requires more than casual Franco-American cooperation, the question is not frivolous.
The answer begins with the fact that the French and American revolutions were more like distant cousins, and that the French Revolution was incomparably more important to the United States than American independence was to France. To the revolutionary governments of France, America was relevant chiefly as a debtor. In American politics, however—just as the newly united states were struggling toward consensus on forms of government and their common character as a nation—the French Revolution posed the central question: whether to follow France's egalitarian and republican model of society or some modification of the mixed British constitution, with king, lords and commons. It was in the crucible of debate over whether to go the way of Britain or France that the citizens of the United States would discover what it was to be American.
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Comments (16)
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After the reading of this very interesting article, I noticed that many people are looking for the famous list of the people crossing the Atlantic for the first time with La Fayette on "la Victoire" in the comments. I found it after a short research on internet. Les compagnons de « voyage » de La Fayette sur la Victoire : Le « baron » Johan (de) Kalb (Allemand) Le vicomte de Mauroy Charles Antoine de Valfort, de Thionville (my place !! :D ) Guillaume de Lesser, d’Angoulême Jean-Pierre Rousseau, de Falyols de Ruffec Jacques Franval, de La Réole Le chevalier Du Buysson François Auguste Dubois-Martin, de Barbizieux Louis de Gimat, d’Agen Louis Devrigny, de Strasbourg Jean Capitaine, de Ruffec Louis-Ange de Colombe, du Puy en Velay Charles Bedaulx, de Neuchâtel (Suisse) Philippe Louis Candon, de Versailles Léonard Price, de Sauveterre (Irlandais) Jean Simon Camus, de la Ville Dieu (Franche-Comté) Michel Monteau, de Saclay François Armand Roger, de Nantes Antoine Redon, de Sarlat Jean Eloi Lepas Hope its what you looking for ! Raphaël
Posted by Raphael on September 25,2012 | 12:19 PM
I am also looking for the list of men that came over with Lafayette. My Great, Great, Great, Great Grandfather was William Razee and I have read in the book Hancock New Hampshire that he was also one of the men. I know he was in Albany, New York after staying in America, lived in New Hampshire and died in Penfield, New York. Any confirmation or a copy of the list would be wonderful. Thanks, Cherie
Posted by Cherie Peters on August 30,2012 | 07:26 PM
I as many before are trying to find the names of the eleven men who came with Lafayette to America in June of 1777.
John David Martine as written in our families history was to have come from France with Lafayette to fight in the revolution. It has also been said that John David Martine was hired by George Washington to be his head gardner at Mount Vernon. I would greatly appreciate any assistance.
Thank-you Joseph Desmond
Posted by Joseph Desmond on September 4,2011 | 02:46 PM
The furthest we can go back in our family Harmon, (or Harman) is to a George Harmon whose family was based in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The family legend is that the Harmon ancestor was French and came over with Lafayette. I would very much like to hear more about the men who came over with Lafayette.
Posted by Eula Harmon Hoff on May 15,2011 | 05:51 PM
I am looking for the list of French men who came with LaFayette to North America. I understand LaFayette's Mother was a Riviere. Did any of LaFayettes Riviere family come with him. I'm wondering if there is a connection to my French Rivir family who fought in the war sometime between the late 1700's to 1812-1815. This family member was killed during the war and left two son's named John and Christian Rivir. I'm sure this Rivir spelling is not the original spelling.
Posted by tish geehan on January 12,2011 | 11:53 PM
My uncle owns the field telescope that Lafayette gave to Washington. Washington gave it to my grandfather, seven generations removed, Andrew Ellicott, as thanks for his surveying contributions and friendship.
Posted by Heather Johnson on September 8,2010 | 08:27 AM
Smithsonian magazine published a multi page article many years ago about all the places in the US named for Lafayette. I have been unable to find it again. Does anyone remember it and where I might find a copy. The article said only Washington had more city streets and cities named for him.
I am trying to resurrect the Lafayette Street name in the historic downtown Tampa, Florida area and need some documentation.
Posted by Mark H. Gibbons on January 10,2010 | 03:50 AM
I am also interested in any list of names of Frenchman that came to America with Lafayette.My grandfather told my father (both deceased) that Raymond DeSurre sold his commission in the French army and sailed with Lafayette.Raymonds son, Andrew Surre was served in the New York State Militia during and after the war of 1812
Posted by john surre on September 8,2009 | 08:12 PM
This article is amazing. Took me forever to read, but it was worth it.
Posted by Desiree on March 13,2009 | 08:44 PM
Washington and lafayette spent 2 weeks at the Molland House (aug. 1778) near the village of Hartsville, Bucks County (central), Pa. U.S.A. Try checking history of french names and sights in this region. Hartsvilles location is near accurate dead center of Freedoms Way, Trailways to History. The roads and pikes to York from Wilmington to the southern tip of Manhatten Island, At a time when Brittish troops occupied the cities of Philadelphia, Trenton, Wilmington and New York, while the Brittish fleet occuppied the Delaware and Hudsun Bay areas this region was a place of mild safety and retreat for the revolutions defenders and many returned here to live their lives. Freedoms Way, the Cradle of America's Heritage. only here of all these united states of America can you experience all of America's history from 1500 B.C.E. to the race for space and beyond to what the future brings. TO ANYONE WHO WOULD LIKE TO KNOW MORE ABOUT A PROPOSED NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA AND GET INVOLVED IN THE CREATION OF TWO NEW MUSEUMSALONG WITH HELPING ME TELL THE WONDERFUL STORY SEND ME AN E-MAIL.
Posted by Robert Cremeans,dir.Freedoms Way Foundation,Inc. on March 1,2009 | 11:38 AM
I just read this article and I too have been trying to find a list of these men, my gggrandfather is supposed to be one of these men. I would very much appreciate a list of their names. Thank you, Pat
Posted by Pat Weaver on February 4,2009 | 10:40 PM
I am yet another person interested in any list of the names of Frenchmen that came from Bordeaux to America with Lafayette. The surname I am looking for is Crusselle. I would greatly appreciate any help in this search. Thanks a Million. Marcia
Posted by Marcia Watts on January 29,2009 | 12:36 AM
Family oral history indicates that a relative (surname Rickmond) came to the US with Lafayette. I too am looking for the names of Lafayettes's men. May I also have the list of names from the Regiment of the l'Isle De France? Are there any other name lists? Kind Regards, Margaret
Posted by Margaret Terry on November 25,2008 | 03:53 PM
I have just read this article, one year late I must admit, and see another possible reason for the closeness of these two great men. They were both Freemasons and shared the values and philosophies and brotherhood of Masonry. Many other Freemason liberators, like Bolivar, San Martin, Garibaldi, to name a few also shared these desires for liberty, equality and fraternity--the basic tenets of the order. There could be much research into Masonry and liberation movements and philosophies. Thank you. Abi
Posted by Abi Schatz on October 21,2008 | 05:34 AM
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