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Lafayette Returns to the United States

Marquis de Lafayette (Charles Willson Peale)

On July 13, 1824, the Marquis de Lafayette left France for the United States. He did so at the invitation of President James Monroe. Lafayette was the last living general from the American Revolution. His invitation came as veterans of the American Revolution were dying off just as we recently saw with veterans from the D-Day landing. He was invited to a country nearing the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence just as we are nearing the 250th. And he arrived in the midst of a bitter presidential year in a country wracked by sectionalism just as 2024 is a presidential year in a deeply divided country.

Lafayette toured all 24 states then in the country. Streets would be named after him. So would villages, towns, cities, and parks. His portrait would be painted and statues would be erected in his honor. Think of the event at Lafayette Park with our last president and how we ignore the name of the park.

Any attempt to understand the Lafayette visit should be put in historical context. The trip did not occur in a vacuum.

THE MONROE DOCTRINE

The Monroe Doctrine was proclaimed on December 2, 1823. Typically, one does not link the Monroe Doctrine with Lafayette’s visit the following year. Lafayette was a leading figure in the cause of liberty everywhere. This included the Spanish colonies in the New World. He was a figure of some prominence in the ongoing strife in Europe between monarchical and authoritarian forces and those aware of the American model and experiment. This is not the place to document the constantly shifting developments in England, France, Prussia, and the Holy Roman Empire except to note that there was a constant churning between authoritarian and anti authoritarian forces. Depending on the prevailing winds Lafayette was a hero or villain to these governments.

What did this mean for the United States? There was a genuine concern that the authoritarian governments might seek to restore the former Spanish colonies to Spanish rule and perhaps even to seek to end the republican experiment in the United States. Just because those fears were not realized does not mean they were not legitimate. The official welcome to republican hero Lafayette and his tour of the United States delivered a message to the European authoritarian governments –HANDS OFF.

THE GREEK REVOLUTION

The Greek Revolution beginning in 1821, was an example of a European country seeking to become an independent state. At that time, the Ottoman Empire was in the role of Putin and England, France, and, yes, Russia, were in the role of the West today. While many Americans are familiar with the Founding Fathers looking back to the Greek city-state republics for guidance, the reverse is less well-known. The impact the American experiment as a republican government had on the Greek people seeking their own independence.

How should America respond to this Greek desire to overthrow Ottoman rule and become an independent country? There were two city on a hill options. One was the United States was to be an example for countries around the world. The second was for the United States to become actively involved in helping the Greeks achieve the independence they sought. To some extent, one may say the considerations are debated in whether or not to support Ukraine in its quest for independence and desire to join the West.

We know, of course, that the United States did not join the battle. But once again, the invitation to Lafayette, the world champion in the cause of liberty, signaled a message.

These two examples demonstrate that Lafayette’s visit to the United States should not be understood in isolation from ongoing developments in Europe. It also signals that what happened here was a matter of concern for what happened over there long before the Great War, World War I, saw the presence of American troops in Europe.

PASSING THE TORCH

We take for granted the 50th anniversary and the 250th anniversary. We take the former for granted because we know that it already has occurred. However, to people living 200 years ago, there was great trepidation about the pending event. Would the “experiment” called the United States survive intact? Would the values of the hallowed Founding Fathers be sustained by a new generation?

As we approach the 250th anniversary of the birth of the country, perhaps we are in a better position to recognize the anxiety felt in 1824. The United States had changed significantly since the American Revolution had ended. Huge numbers of people were beginning to settle in what would have been wilderness areas only a few decades earlier. When Lafayette was is in Utica, he was stunned and dismayed to see how the Oneida had been treated. During the American Revolution, there developed a closed bond between Lafayette and the Oneida from Valley Forge to the Mohawk Valley. Now they were not even part of his welcoming committee. He had to make a specific request to see them and then spent time alone with them. This was a time of looking back, of James Fenimore Cooper and Washington Irving and soon the paintings of Thomas Cole. What had happened to the America of virtue? Was the world of the Founding Fathers soon to pass from scene with a country no longer linked to its origins?

The political world was in disarray. What we call the First Party system had collapsed. This system of Federalists and Anti-Federalists/Republicans included such stalwarts as John Adams, the killed Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison. The Second Party system of Andrew Jackson Democrats and the Whigs of Daniel Webster, Henry Clay and, later, Abraham Lincoln, was just in the process of being formed In 1824, all was chaos with rampant “sectionalism” as it was called then leading to a disputed election. We know that the country survived then to celebrate the 50th anniversary and that it would be decades before the country divided into the Union and the Confederacy. No one knew that in 1824.

Lafayette was invited as a unifying figure. He was living proof that the American Revolution lived. His longtime advocacy for liberty made him an excellent choice for returning to the United States. His thirteen month visit began on August 15, 1824 with his first stop in Staten Island, which was not part of Manhattan/New York City then. The next day he sailed across to what is now lower Manhattan where he was greeted by a huge crowd of thousands if not tens of thousands for a parade up Broadway in what later would become the Canyon of Heroes, until he arrived at City Hall.

Everywhere he went the story was the same. Huge crowds with music, muskets, and sometimes cannon fire welcomed him. Veterans poured forth to see this living reminder of the glorious days of the American Revolution. They would yell out to him “Do you remember…” and name a battle from the war.

As it turns out Lafayette was a man of three times. First as the youngster who came of his own free will and with his own money to fight and be wounded for the American War for Independence. Second, in 1824-1825, in his triumphal tour showing that the spirit of the American Revolution still lived. And now in 2024-2025, where the United States once again stands on the precipice to determine if we will continue to be governed by the Constitution and be the City on Hill as an example and leader in the cause of liberty and freedom.

 

Lafayette, You Are Here! August 15, 1824: The Bicentennial Countdown

1824 Elections (Wikipedia)

In 1824, President James Monroe invited the Marquis de Lafayette to tour the original 13 states. The year was a presidential election year. The era of good feelings was over. It had been replaced by bitter sectionalism. No one American was popular throughout the country to complete such a tour. Individual presidential candidates had regional strongholds.

Lafayette represented a living link to the American Revolution. John Adams and Thomas Jefferson did too. Both had had their shot at unity as Presidents and both were in the waning years of their lives. Plus Lafayette was a “defacto” son of George Washington who had not yet become just another dead white man or name people mentioned without having any direct connection to him.

His tour was widely successful (imagine Taylor Swift making stops at localities throughout the country). It was so successful that the new 11 states since the Revolution asked that he visit them as well. Lafayette ended touring all 24 states.

As a living testament to his appeal, all manner of places were named after him. For example, there is a Lafayette Drive where I live. Besides streets there were villages, towns, and cities named after him or his home, La Grange, in France. Statutes were erected to him. However the now-closed Lafayette High School in Brooklyn may be better known for being the school of Sandy Koufax than for its namesake.

AMERICAN FRIENDS OF LAFAYETTE (AFL)  

The American Friends of Lafayette is dedicated to celebrating the bicentennial of Lafayette’s visit. It has issued the following:

Lafayette’s Farewell Tour saw the French 67-year-old last surviving major general of the American Revolution triumphantly return to the country he loved. He was invited with the hope that he might bring a renewed unity and patriotic fervor back to American citizens being torn apart by the divisive Presidential campaign of 1824. Lafayette accepted this invitation desiring to both revisit old friends and to bring the story of the fruits of democracy back to a France, then being ruled by an undemocratic monarchy. From August 15, 1824, to September 9, 1825, Lafayette covered over 6000 miles by carriage, stagecoach, canal boat, and steamboat, traveling to all 24 then-existing states and “Washington City.” As a youth, Lafayette was instrumental in securing American independence both through his direct military leadership in the Revolutionary War, as well as his constant petitioning of King Louis XVI and France for their alliance and support. Therefore, it was with heartfelt gratitude and joy that Americans welcomed him as “The Nation’s Guest” during his Farewell Tour in 1824-1825.

During our celebration of the Bicentennial of Lafayette’s Farewell Tour, the AFL will hold events in cities and towns in all of the 24 states Lafayette visited, and we will follow Lafayette’s 1824-1825 itinerary. With over 400 “boots-on-the-ground” volunteers, the planned activities will be unique to their individual locations.

The goal of this commemorative odyssey is to “Celebrate, Commemorate, and Educate!” Our three-fold emphasis will be:

Human Rights: Lafayette was an abolitionist, supported the rights of women and Native Americans, and championed religious freedom.

The Franco-American Alliance: This friendship of two nations which began during the American Revolution, in a large part through the efforts of Lafayette, has weathered multiple adversities and remains strong to today…nearly 250 years later!

The importance of linking the past to the present: President James Monroe invited Lafayette to America hoping that he could bring unity and revive patriotism in America. Lafayette’s presence had an ameliorative effect on a country torn apart by the contentious Presidential election of 1824, which was decided by the House of Representatives. The AFL will explore what we can learn from Lafayette that is relevant to today’s fraught political environment.

 Please visit www.lafayette200.org for more information.

Lafayette arrived at Staten Island on August 15, 1824, 199 years ago. He crossed the harbor the next day to Castle Garden which would become the arrival point so many Irish in the 19th century. Depending on the status of the post-Sandy Resiliency project, a Lafayette re-enactor will follow that route with a parade up Broadway to City Hall. I am working with the AFL on this portion of his visit.

After a few days in lower Manhattan, he then headed north eventually on the Boston Post Road to Cambridge. He intended to visit John Adams there. I am responsible for the Westchester portion of the trip which at that time included potions of the Bronx. All told, Lafayette made nine stops on August 20, 1824, before arriving in Connecticut and making a few more stops. Quite a lengthy day for someone traveling by horse and carriage. It’s a little like taking the Stamford local from Grand Central and making every single stop. At each stop, he would be greeted by some combination of music, muskets, and people on horseback including veterans from the American Revolution.

Since August 20, 2024, is a Tuesday, County Executive George Latimer has exercised his powers in history to shift the celebration to Sunday, August 18, 2024.

Last week I spoke to the trustees of the Town of Rye who passed a proclamation recognizing the day to be set aside as the day honoring Lafayette. All the people from Lafayette Drive will be invited to the ceremony. According to newspaper accounts, he had a glass of wine there.

LAFAYETTE 1824 AND 2024

Future historians will have the opportunity to compare and contrast the two visits by Lafayette – the one by the real Lafayette and the other by the re-enactor. You can see the latter on this short video which has been produced by the American Friends of Lafayette. Click here.

This time around, he will be arriving approximately one month after the Republic presidential convention and he will be in New York when the Democratic presidential convention begins. Since he stayed at the home of the Vice President on Staten Island on August 15, 2024, there will just be sufficient time for the current Vice President to welcome him there before departing for the convention. The larger question is will the visit of Lafayette be weaponized as a prelude to the American Revolution 250th.

Lafayette, the re-enactor, will have the opportunity to touch upon issues that continue to this very day. While he would applaud the end of slavery, that does not mean he would support how slavery is taught especially in the Confederate states. Lafayette was very closely associated with Oneida from Valley Forge. Already in 1824, he was extremely disappointed as to how America’s allies had been treated in the time since the war. In other words, there will be topics to discuss through Lafayette that are still relevant.

Lafayette in 2024 is not likely to be the unifying figure in 2024 that he was in 1824. However his visit has the potential to spark conversations about he thought then and what it means now. The challenge for the American Friends of Lafayette is to provide venues for discussion for topics that will carryover through the presidential election and into the 250th. If he can be the spark for such discussions then the bicentennial of visit may have even more impact than his actual visit two centuries ago.