Marquis de Lafayette https://www.americanheritage.com/ en A Bicentennial Blitz for Lafayette https://www.americanheritage.com/bicentennial-blitz-lafayette <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">A Bicentennial Blitz for Lafayette</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/elizabeth-reese" lang="" about="/users/elizabeth-reese">Elizabeth Reese</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2024-05-21T11:07:38+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Tue, 05/21/2024 - 07:07</span> Tue, 21 May 2024 11:07:38 +0000 Elizabeth Reese 133755 at https://www.americanheritage.com Lafayette's Grand American Tour https://www.americanheritage.com/lafayettes-grand-american-tour <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Lafayette&#039;s Grand American Tour</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/elizabeth-reese" lang="" about="/users/elizabeth-reese">Elizabeth Reese</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2024-05-13T14:59:52+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Mon, 05/13/2024 - 10:59</span> Mon, 13 May 2024 14:59:52 +0000 Elizabeth Reese 133753 at https://www.americanheritage.com Lafayette: A Hero Among Heroes https://www.americanheritage.com/lafayette-hero-among-heroes <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Lafayette: A Hero Among Heroes</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/harlow-giles-unger" lang="" about="/users/harlow-giles-unger">Harlow Giles Unger</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2021-07-13T20:06:51+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Tue, 07/13/2021 - 16:06</span> Tue, 13 Jul 2021 20:06:51 +0000 Harlow Giles Unger 133403 at https://www.americanheritage.com Vandalism in Lafayette Square https://www.americanheritage.com/vandalism-lafayette-square <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Vandalism in Lafayette Square</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/edwin-s-grosvenor" lang="" about="/users/edwin-s-grosvenor">Edwin S. Grosvenor</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2020-06-12T03:10:45+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Thu, 06/11/2020 - 23:10</span> Fri, 12 Jun 2020 03:10:45 +0000 Edwin S. Grosvenor 133150 at https://www.americanheritage.com Lafayette Square: Seven Acres of History https://www.americanheritage.com/lafayette-square-seven-acres-history <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Lafayette Square: Seven Acres of History</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/gil-klein" lang="" about="/users/gil-klein">Gil Klein</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2020-06-06T22:23:45+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Sat, 06/06/2020 - 18:23</span> Sat, 06 Jun 2020 22:23:45 +0000 Gil Klein 133141 at https://www.americanheritage.com Jefferson, Lafayette, and The Roads Taken and Untaken https://www.americanheritage.com/node/133091 <span class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Jefferson, Lafayette, and The Roads Taken and Untaken</span> <span class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/tom-chaffin" lang="" about="/users/tom-chaffin">Tom Chaffin</a></span> <span class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Fri, 01/17/2020 - 09:56</span> <div class="clearfix text-formatted field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field__item"><p><figure role="group" class="caption caption-img align-right"><img alt="Portrait of Jefferson" data-entity-type="file" data-entity-uuid="c77c8a99-48a4-458f-b4f9-459a39b98ce9" height="381" src="/sites/default/files/inline-images/3a10811r_1.jpg" width="305" loading="lazy" /><figcaption><em>Portrait Courtesy of Library of Congress</em></figcaption></figure></p> <p>Rambles down the past's travel-pathways can be eye-opening. I've just returned from four years of traveling, occasionally literally but mainly through archived letters and journals — in the paths of Thomas Jefferson and the Marquis de Lafayette, through the age of the American and French revolutions. </p> <p>Both men, friends and collaborators for over four decades, were prodigious travelers — though of the two, Jefferson far less so. My sojourns were for my latest book — and as much as any other aspect of their respective lives, I found their individual philosophies of travel revelatory of the inner geography of each man's personality.</p> <blockquote><p>In his own pursuit of happiness, even the Declaration of Independence's author was not immune to coveting roads untaken, lives unlived. </p> </blockquote> <p>Unlike Jefferson, Lafayette as a traveler, whether for military or non-military purposes, was anything but inconspicuous, possessing a taste for grandiloquent gestures and expansive rhetoric. "I recall nothing in my life that preceded my enthusiasm for glorious tales or my plans to travel the world in search of renown," he reflected in his memoirs.  </p> <p>Moreover, he remembered, "burning with the desire to have a uniform." To be sure, Lafayette would later come to truly venerate the republican ideals of the American patriots. But, at least initially, his recitation of those values bore a hollow resonance. Indeed, it was a desire to avenge the death of his father by the British in the Seven Years War and his appetite for fame and adventure that initially drew him, at the ripe age of nineteen, to American shores.</p> <p>Like a character conjured by James Fenimore Cooper or Joseph Conrad, the marquis's preoccupation with valor and travel was never far from his lust for military adventure. Indeed, Lafayette's hunger for public acclaim suggested nothing less than the sort of preening quality that Ralph Waldo Emerson faulted in the explorer John Frémont's public image — an apparent obsession with "how we must look."</p> <p>After successive failed efforts to reach the American Revolution's battle theater, Lafayette purchased and outfitted his own ship, <em>La Victoire,</em> for the Atlantic crossing. Eluding French authorities, Lafayette, in 1777, along with a coterie of other European volunteers for the American cause, sailed from a port in Spain to South Carolina. Traveling overland from Charleston, he soon found his way to Philadelphia where he reported for duty.  </p> <p>Over the next few years, the Revolution took Lafayette to battle theaters across the north — and eventually to Virginia, where his troops, in 1781, came to the rescue of the state's embattled Governor Thomas Jefferson and where Lafayette soon thereafter played a key role in the Patriot victory at Yorktown.  Not that those venues satisfied the marquis's appetite for military adventure — or travel. During the war, he also proposed expeditions with himself in command, to the Caribbean, England, and elsewhere.     </p> <p><figure role="group" class="caption caption-img align-right"><img alt="Book Cover" data-entity-type="file" data-entity-uuid="b943690d-d4b9-4dfe-9861-8d7f27335940" height="473" src="/sites/default/files/inline-images/RB%20Chaffin_1.jpg" width="311" loading="lazy" /><figcaption><em>This essay is adapted from <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Revolutionary-Brothers-Jefferson-Lafayette-Friendship/dp/1250113725">Revolutionary Brothers: Thomas Jefferson, the Marquis de Lafayette, and the Friendship that Helped Forge Two Nations</a> by Tom Chaffin (St. Martin's Press, 2019). </em></figcaption></figure></p> <p>Jefferson was Lafayette's senior by fourteen years. And if Lafayette suggested a character from the pen of an adventure novelist — or a modern traveler consumed with idealizing each trip through carefully selected photos on social media — the Virginian more resembled a protagonist crafted by a more cerebral writer — by say, George Eliot, Henry James, perhaps even Laurence Sterne. The latter Irish-born Anglican clergyman and writer ranked among the few novelists whose works Jefferson read and enjoyed. </p> <p>During Jefferson's turns as a state and federal legislator, Virginia governor, secretary of state, vice-president president, he famously longed for the familiar comforts of his beloved Monticello, his mountain-top estate in Charlottesville, Virginia. Even so, three years before Jefferson — in 1784, at the age of forty-one — accepted an offer to serve as a U.S. diplomat in Paris, he lamented to Lafayette his growing regret that, for all his study of European civilization, he had never ventured abroad. He ached, he wrote, to see more of the world, admitting that his lack of such experiences, "has given me more mortification than al[most] any occurrence of my life."     </p> <p>In Paris and Versailles, as Lafayette opened doors for the neophyte diplomat, the friendship between the two men blossomed. Making the most of his European stay, Jefferson, during his five-year posting, completed methodically-planned tours of  England (with John Adams, then U.S. minister in London), the south of France, Holland and Prussia. During those outings, eschewing social obligations — though traveling with hired drivers and servants — Jefferson craved a degree of privacy that approached anonymity.  Indeed, disdainful of Lafayette's preening, Jefferson to Madison in 1787, complained of his friend's "canine appetite for popularity and fame."  Equally telling, on the eve of departing for France's Midi, Jefferson, requesting from the writer Chastellux an  introduction to an abbot he hoped to consult on a scientific matter, asked that his diplomatic title go unmentioned in any contact information provided the monk: "I will only beg to be announced but as a <em>voyageur etranger simplement,</em> and that it be addressed <em>à Monsr. Jefferson à Tours,</em> <em>poste restante </em>[general delivery]. This deception keeps me clear of those polite obligations to which I might otherwise be engaged, and leaves me the whole of the little time I have to pursue the objects that always delight me."</p> <p>Gathering information on diverse subjects, from local agriculture to architecture, Jefferson brought to his travels a discipline more befitting an observant journalist than a casually curious tourist. Aware that his time in each visited place was limited, he restricted those investigations to topics of personal interest and subjects that he believed could advance American interests. Convinced, for instance, that the United States was not destined to become in the forseeable an industrial society, while in Lyons, France, he avoided the city's then famous silk and printing industries; to an associate, he reported, "I have not visited at all the manufactures of this place: because a knowledge of them would be useless, and would extrude from the memory other things more worth retaining. Architecture, painting, sculpture, antiquities, agriculture, the condition of the labouring poor fill all my moments."</p> <p>Indeed, as he toured Europe, Jefferson refined an approach to travel that he later shared with friends. "On arriving at a town, the first thing is to buy the plan of the town, and the book noting it’s curiosities... Walk round the ramparts when there are any. Go to the top of a steeple to have a view of the town and it’s environs." He likewise had views as to how to best assess the merits of competing places and vistas.  "When you are doubting whether a thing is worth the trouble of going to see, recollect that you will never again be so near it, that you may repent the not having seen it, but can never repent having seen it. But there is an opposite extreme too. That is, the seeing [of] too much. A judicious selection is to be aimed at, taking care that the indolence of the moment have no influence on the decision."</p> <p>Even so, Jefferson, then and throughout his life, remained a homebody in fundamental ways. In June 1787 — returned to Paris after his four-month, 1,200-mile tour of the south of France (and briefly Italy) — the Virginian, though only forty-four, confiding to a nephew, expressed the world-weariness of an older soul. "When men of sober age travel, they gather knowledge which they may apply usefully for their country, but they are subject ever after to recollections mixed with regret, their affections are weakened by being extended over more objects, and they learn new habits which cannot be gratified when they return home."</p> <p>In his own pursuit of happiness, even the Declaration of Independence's author was not immune to coveting roads untaken, lives unlived.</p> <p><em>Adapted from <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Revolutionary-Brothers-Jefferson-Lafayette-Friendship/dp/1250113725">Revolutionary Brothers: Thomas Jefferson, the Marquis de Lafayette, and the Friendship that Helped Forge Two Nations</a> by Tom Chaffin (St. Martin's Press, 2019). </em></p> </div> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-article-keywords field--type-entity-reference field--label-above field--entity-reference-target-type-taxonomy-term clearfix"> <h3 class="field__label">Keywords</h3> <ul class='links field__items'> <li><a href="/category/article-keywords/thomas-jefferson" hreflang="en">Thomas Jefferson</a></li> <li><a href="/category/article-keywords/marquis-de-lafayette" hreflang="en">Marquis de Lafayette</a></li> </ul> </div> Fri, 17 Jan 2020 14:56:20 +0000 Tom Chaffin 133091 at https://www.americanheritage.com America and France's Love-Hate Dynamic https://www.americanheritage.com/america-and-frances-love-hate-dynamic <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">America and France&#039;s Love-Hate Dynamic</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/richard-brookhiser" lang="" about="/users/richard-brookhiser">Richard Brookhiser</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2011-01-21T10:57:41+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Fri, 01/21/2011 - 05:57</span> Fri, 21 Jan 2011 10:57:41 +0000 Richard Brookhiser 61123 at https://www.americanheritage.com Triumph At Yorktown https://www.americanheritage.com/triumph-yorktown <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Triumph At Yorktown</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/jack-rudolph" lang="" about="/users/jack-rudolph">Jack Rudolph</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2011-01-21T05:41:00+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Fri, 01/21/2011 - 00:41</span> Fri, 21 Jan 2011 05:41:00 +0000 Jack Rudolph 54381 at https://www.americanheritage.com The Imprisonment Of Lafayette https://www.americanheritage.com/imprisonment-lafayette <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">The Imprisonment Of Lafayette</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/james-wesley-baker" lang="" about="/users/james-wesley-baker">James Wesley Baker</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2011-01-20T17:10:18+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Thu, 01/20/2011 - 12:10</span> Thu, 20 Jan 2011 17:10:18 +0000 James Wesley Baker 53596 at https://www.americanheritage.com The French Connection https://www.americanheritage.com/french-connection <span property="schema:name" class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">The French Connection</span> <span rel="schema:author" class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"> <a title="View user profile." href="/users/j-h-plumb" lang="" about="/users/j-h-plumb">J. H. Plumb</a></span> <span property="schema:dateCreated" content="2011-01-20T16:42:41+00:00" class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden">Thu, 01/20/2011 - 11:42</span> Thu, 20 Jan 2011 16:42:41 +0000 J. H. Plumb 53090 at https://www.americanheritage.com