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
(Page 3 of 4)
Two years later, in the run-up to Yorktown, Washington ordered the troops of "Mad Anthony" Wayne and Lafayette to move south to defend Virginia. Both men immediately faced mutinies, Wayne because his men had not been paid for months, Lafayette because his had been told they would be on the march for only a few days. Wayne responded by holding an immediate court-martial, executing six of the mutiny's ringleaders and making the rest file past the corpses—which they did, "mute as fish," a witness would recall—on their way to Virginia.
Lafayette told his men they were free to go. Ahead of them, he said, lay a hard road, great danger and a superior army determined on their destruction. He, for one, meant to face that army, but anyone who did not wish to fight could simply apply for leave to return to camp, which would be granted. Given the option of fighting or declaring themselves to be unpatriotic cowards, Lafayette's men stopped deserting, and several deserters returned. Lafayette rewarded his men by spending 2,000 pounds of his own money to buy desperately needed clothing, shorts, shoes, hats and blankets. But it was his appeal to their pride that mattered most.
The idea would not have occurred to Lafayette even a year before, in the spring of 1780, when he had proposed a foolishly intrepid attack on the British fleet in New York. The Comte de Rochambeau, commander of French forces in America, told Lafayette it was a rash bid for military glory (as it was). Lafayette learned the lesson well. In the summer of 1781, he managed to corner British forces in Yorktown precisely because he did not attack, while Lord Cornwallis painted himself into the corner from which there would be no escape.
When the admiral of the French fleet arrived in the Chesapeake Bay off Yorktown, he insisted that his forces and Lafayette's were sufficient to defeat Cornwallis by themselves. (He was probably right.) Lafayette, several ranks and decades the admiral's junior, was well aware that he would gain more glory by not waiting for the forces of Washington and Rochambeau, and equally aware that he would be just a third-tier officer once they arrived. But he rebuffed the admiral and waited. Confessing "the strongest attachment to those troops," he asked Washington only to leave him in command of them. He recognized that there was more at stake than his personal glory and that glory was a more complex alloy than he had known before.
After Washington assumed the presidency of his new nation, his goal was the emergence of a uniquely American character, of a distinctive and respected Americanism that was respected as such at home and abroad. Lafayette, returning to France after Yorktown, began advocating American principles with the fervor of a convert. But at the end of Washington's life, the relationship between the two men nearly foundered on an issue that, two centuries later, would divide France and America over the war in Iraq: the wisdom of trying to export revolutionary ideals by force.
The France of Napoleon was making that experiment, and while Lafayette despised Bonaparte's authoritarianism, he was thrilled with France's victories in the field. Washington, who exhorted his country never to "unsheath the sword except in self-defense," was furious with France's military adventurism, coming as it did at the expense of American shipping (the "family spat," Napoleon had called it). His letter excoriating France for such behavior was the last to Lafayette he ever wrote. Lafayette's defensive reply was Lafayette's last to Washington.
When Washington died, in 1799, his refusal to let America be drawn into the sanguinary politics of Europe stood as one of his most important legacies. As much as he believed American principles worthy of export, he recoiled at the idea as a matter of principle as well as pragmatism. His policy of neutrality toward England and France—which was widely interpreted as favoring our enemy at the expense of our ally and monarchic rule over egalitarian government—robbed him of the universal acclaim he had long enjoyed and led to the severest criticism he was ever to endure. Benjamin Franklin Bache's Aurora, Washington's fiercest critic, called him everything from a weak-minded captive of his cabinet to a traitor. Thomas Paine, famously, said: "[T]reacherous in private friendship...and a hypocrite in public life, the world will be puzzled to decide, whether you are an apostate or an impostor; whether you have abandoned good principles, or whether you ever had any." For a man as intolerant of criticism as Washington, such abuse must have been unbearable.
Still, his policy of neutrality saved Americans not only from involvement in the war between Britain and France but also from supporting either of them as models of government. In the course of years, Washington had found a greater glory, or something greater than glory, that allowed him to achieve his final victory in a campaign for peace, without which American independence might never have been secured.
In time, Napoleon's misadventures would bring Lafayette closer to Washington's view about exporting revolution by force, but he never gave up support for liberation movements around the world. At home he was an early leader of the pre-revolutionary reform movement, and he was named commandant-general of the National Guard of Paris on July 15, 1789. The preeminent leader of the "moderate" first two years of the French Revolution, he wrote the first draft of France's Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen and invented the tricolor cockade, which combined the colors of Paris with Bourbon white to create the symbol of France's republican revolution. But he never changed his view that the government best suited to France was a constitutional monarchy, which put him at odds with Robespierre and eventually contributed to his conviction in absentia for treason. At the time, he was the general of one of three French armies arrayed against an invasion by Austrian and Prussian forces. Lafayette had already returned to Paris twice to denounce Jacobin radicalism before the National Assembly, and rather than return a third time to meet certain death at the guillotine, he crossed into enemy territory and served the next five years in prison, followed by two more in exile.
Lafayette returned to France in 1799 but stayed out of politics until 1815, when he was elected to the National Assembly in time to put the weight of his revolutionary-era credentials behind the call for Napoleon to abdicate after Waterloo. When the emperor's brother, Lucien Bonaparte, came before the assembly to denounce the attempt as that of a weak-willed nation, Lafayette silenced him. "By what right do you dare accuse the nation of...want of perseverance in the emperor's interest?" he asked. "The nation has followed him on the fields of Italy, across the sands of Egypt and the plains of Germany, across the frozen deserts of Russia.... The nation has followed him in fifty battles, in his defeats and in his victories, and in doing so we have to mourn the blood of three million Frenchmen."
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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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