225th anniversary of the Treaties signed in Paris on
February 6, 1778.
Program
for the commemoration in Paris, February 4th-8 th, 2003.
TUESDAY, FEB. 4th : Welcome - Arrival at the Hotel
Guided visits : Musée d'Orsay, or Grande Chancellerie de la Légion
d’honneur
Welcome party at the Residence of the United States Ambassador to France
Free time for dinner; possible private receptions by French SAR families
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5th : The co-operation before the Alliance (1775-1777)
Lafayette and the volunteers : visit at Lafayette’s grave (Picpus
Cemetery) and statue.
Beaumarchais, Franklin in 18th Century Paris. Optional visits : Musée
Carnavalet,
Musée de la Chasse, Bibliothèque Nationale, Musée
des Arts et Métiers.
Lunch and haute couture presentation at the Galeries Lafayette department
store
Flame ceremony at the Arch of Triumph
Dinner at the Paris City Hall
THURSDAY, FEB. 6th : Alliance Day
Parade under arms, hymns, wreath laying in front of Hôtel de Coislin,
Place de la
Concorde
Reception by the French Minister of Foreign Affairs at the Quai d'Orsay
Wine tasting and buffet lunch
Reception at Christofle Museum : goldsmith’s trade and craft
Wreath laying at Benjamin Franklin’s statue
Private guided visit and buffet dinner at Musée de la Marine
FRIDAY, FEB. 7th: After the Alliance
Optional visits : Hôtel des Invalides (Army Museum, Napoleon’s
tomb),
Désert de Retz (Franklin’s and Jefferson’s favorite
park)
Private visit and reception at the Senate (to be confirmed)
Optional visits : Rodin Museum; Château de la Malmaison,
(evocation of Napoléon Bonaparte making decision on Louisiana
purchase)
Private presentation of War of Independence documents,
dinner and dancing at the Pavillon du Roi in the Château de Vincennes
SATURDAY, FEB. 8th : Further Franco-American friendship
Château de Compiègne (18th century apartments) and Château
de Blérancourt
(Museum of Franco-American friendship) Buffet lunch and visit of the
Château de Chantilly
Gala dinner at the Palace of Versailles in the Galerie des Batailles
(black tie, long dress)
SUNDAY, FEB. 9th : Departure to the U.S.A., or continuing optional program
Optional: Religious offices at the American Cathedral in Paris
D-day visit in Normandy (including Sainte-Mère Église,
Omaha Beach),
documents will be sent upon request.
REGISTRATION FORM
If possible, please register before Dec. 13 so we can make the best
arrangements. Most of the optional tours limit the number of visitors,
so the slots will be filled with those who are first to register (using
your postmark as the date).
Name : _____________________________________________________
Address : ___________________________________________________
Tel :________________________________________________________
Fax : _______________________________________________________
Email:_______________________________@______________________
Accompanied by : _____________________________________________
Fees per person (do not include accommodation, insurance or air transportation)
n Registration and administration fees: 100 € per person.
n Receptions, ceremonies, guided visits, ground transportation by bus
and administrative expenses : 1.200 € per person.
Accommodation : Special arrangements have been made with :
Hotel Sofitel : Porte de Sevres (close to Aquaboulevard, a nautical
sports resort)
Double room, tax included: 168 € + Breakfast 15 € Tel: 011
(33) 1 40 60 30 00
Hotel Novotel : Paris Tour Eiffel (close to a shopping center; on the
river side)
Double room, tax and breakfast included : 206 € (single 194 €)
Tel: 011 (33) 1 40 58 20 00
Book directly your hotel as soon as possible, under the reference "Alliance
Day" Special coaches will assure all transportation to and from
these two hotels and the various locations to be visited.
For more information, please contact
Le Protocole, Michel Soyer
95, rue de la Faisanderie - 75116 Paris - France
Tel: 011 (33) 1 45 04 84 51 Fax: 011 (33) 1 40 72 86 25
Email: leprotocole1@aol.com
Insurance : It is the responsibility of each participant to verify that
he is covered by health, accident and travel insurance. The French Society
of the Sons of the American Revolution cannot reimburse participants
who cancel their voyage or are repatriated early, whatever the cause.
Any dispute over the interpretation of the agreement for this voyage
will be resolved by French courts.
The easiest way to pay is by credit card, although a check in euros
payable to “Alliance Day” is acceptable.
Credit card : Visa MasterCard American Express
I hereby authorize to debit
my credit card in the amount of __________________ e
Card N° :___________________________________
Exp. date : ____________ /_____________________
Signature :
An invoice will be sent upon request in accordance with French Tax
law. There will be no pay-desk.
Send completed registration form to : Le Protocole 95, rue de la Faisanderie
- 75116 Paris - France.
Questions? E-mail: leprotocole1@aol.com / Tel: 011 (33) 1 45 04 84
51 / Fax: 011 (33) 1 40 72 86 25
Why celebrate February 6th, 2003
Through common sacrifices for shared goals, the friendship between
France and America has remained vibrant though the years. Commemorations
and monuments serve as cherished reminders of our past. The State Society
in France of the Sons of the American Revolution brings together all
direct descendants of officers and soldiers who fought side by side
to bring Liberty and Justice to the Thirteen Colonies from which the
United States of America was formed. >From February 4th thru 8th
we will celebrate the 225th anniversary of the fateful decision that
has bonded these two great Nations.
The decisive moment came on February 6th, 1778, on Rue Royale in Paris,
in an apartment in the Hotel de Coislin where Silas Deane, the "agent
of the United Colonies," lived. Benjamin Franklin had arrived in
France a year earlier as the plenipotentiary minister of the rebellious
colonies, and on that day his efforts were crowned with success. The
representative of Louis XVI and commissioners representing the Continental
Congress signed two treaties: An official treaty of friendship and commerce,
which made France the first nation to recognize the United States of
America as an independent nation. A second secret alliance, in which
France agreed to fight at the side of the American colonies, assuring
the success of their revolution against England.
Before these treaties, French aid to America had been unofficial, although
considerable : French arms permitted the victory of Saratoga (October
1777) against the English and German soldiers under General Burgoyne.
Talented volunteers were secretly encouraged to go to America. They
included the military engineers that General Washington needed like
Du Portail, who created the first unit of Army engineers on the continent,
officers like the young La Fayette and his mentor Jean de Kalb, and
many others from all over Europe who were transported by ships from
Beaumarchais. None-the-less, as he wintered in Valley Forge after a
series of defeats from the British General Howe, Washington knew that
the time would soon arrive when he could no longer continue.
Why did France intervene ?
She had an objective: The colonies' fight for freedom paralleled the
French desire to re-establish freedom on the high seas that the British
navy had denied them. Freedom of the sea would restore a balance of
power and encourage balanced economic development, and therefore peace.
She had the means: Thanks to Choiseul's efforts, supported by the King,
to give the Marine Royale the support it needed to face England's 66
ships of the line, the French fleet rebuilt itself rapidly. The 50,000
sailors of the Marine Royale had the job of fighting the British, protecting
merchant convoys and their provisions for troops, and transporting 20,000
infantry to the Antilles, North America and other hot spots in Europe,
Africa and Asia. More than 5,000 sailors and soldiers would die in American
territory. She had the leader: As opposed to the other monarchs of Europe,
young Louis XVI (he was 23) was concerned with ordinary people. He brought
new liberties to the Jews and Protestants of France, and his concern
for improving the conditions of life is evident in his insistence on
proper hygiene of his ships. And he knew how to take the risk of supporting
a newborn democracy. She had the values : More than any other nation,
France had been moved by the philosophy of enlightenment. Franklin "conquered
the Parisian intelligentsia" by his familiarity with French philosophers
like Montesquieu, Helvétius, Voltaire, Rousseau, l'abbé
Raynal and Diderot. The fundamental texts of the two great republics
of the 18th Century - the Declaration of Independence and the Declaration
of the Rights of Man and the Citizens of France - spring from the same
roots.
Consequences of the treaties of February 6th, 1778.
Six months later the two great powers, King George III and his 11 million
subjects and Louis XVI of France with its 28 million habitants, were
at war.
However, for the first time in four centuries, the British found themselves
alone in front of their traditional enemy. Clever diplomacy of Vergennes
and Louis
XVI had persuaded some countries to neutrality, and some concessions
to a reluctant Spain kept her out of the picture.
The end of the story is well known :
· An indecisive naval war for two years, was followed, in 1780,
by the arrival of the 6,000-man French Expeditionary Corps of Rochambeau,
transported in a convoy of 47 ships.
· The allies mounted the formidable operation of Yorktown and
Chesapeake. On October 19, 1781, the 8,000 English and Hessians soldiers
of General Cornwallis surrendered to 9,000 well-trained and -equipped
soldiers of Rochambeau and Saint-Simon, backed by a powerful artillery,
the 8,000 American infantrymen, and the 28,000 sailors of Admiral de
Grasse and Admiral de Barras on 36 ships. French soldiers and sailors
landed in the Antilles, Guyana, and Hudson Bay, laid siege to Gibralter
and captured Minorca in the Mediterranean, won the sea battle of Suffren
and besieged Britain's commercial ports in India. English commerce declined.
Together, these elements led the British to conclude that their government
was incapable of continuing to support the costly and unpopular war.
They entered into genuine negotiations, which culminated Sept. 3, 1783,
with the two Treaties signed on the same day: In Paris at the Hotel
d'York, between Britain and the insurgents at the Ministry of Foreign
Affaires in Versailles, between all the warring parties.
Twice, in the 20th Century, the United States of America have abundantly
reciprocated through heavy sacrifices for the liberty of the World.
High Patronage
Monsieur Jacques Chirac,
Président de la République Française.
Monsieur Christian Poncelet,
Président du Sénat.
Monsieur Dominique de Villepin,
Ministre des Affaires Étrangères.
His Excellency Howard H. Leach,
Ambassador of the United States of America, Honorary President
of the French State Society, Sons of the American Revolution.
Honorary Committee
Madame Jean-Paul Anglès,
Présidente des American Friends of Blérancourt.
Mr B. Rice Aston,
President General, National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
Monsieur Jean-René Bernard,
Président de France-Amériques.
Madame Bertrand Chatel de Brancion,
Regent of the Rochambeau Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
Son Excellence François Bujon de l’Estang,
Ambassadeur de France aux Etats-Unis d’Amérique.
Madame Robert Chatin,
Présidente des Amis de Blérancourt.
Monsieur le sénateur Paul Girod,
Président du groupe d’amitié France-USA du Sénat.
Mr Douglas S. Glucroft,
President, Democrats Abroad France.
Mr Jay Wayne Jackson,
President General, The Society of the Cincinnati.
Monsieur Hervé de La Choüé de la Mettrie,
Président, Association des Descendants de Capitaines Corsaires.
La comtesse de Pusy-Lafayette,
French State Regent, Daughters of the American Revolution.
Le marquis de Roquefeuil,
Président de la Société des Cincinnati de France.
Mr Anthony A. Smith,
President, French-American Foundation.
Monsieur Claude Teboul,
Président de France-Louisiane Franco-Americanie.
Ms. Linda Tinker Watkins,
President General, Daughters of the American Revolution.
Monsieur Guy Wildenstein,
President, American Society of the Legion of Honour,
Délégué pour les Etats-Unis au Conseil Supérieur
des Français de l'Etranger.
.