Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau

(Redirected from Marshal Rochambeau)

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Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau (1 July 1725 – 10 May 1807) was a French Royal Army officer who played a critical role in the Franco-American victory at the siege of Yorktown in 1781 during the American Revolutionary War. He was commander-in-chief of the Expédition Particulière, the French expeditionary force sent to North America during the conflict.

Military lifeEdit

Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur was born in Vendôme, in the province of Orléanais, and he was educated at the Jesuit college in Blois. After the death of his elder brother, he entered a cavalry regiment and served in Bohemia, Bavaria, and on the Rhine during the War of the Austrian Succession. By 1747, he had attained the rank of colonel. He took part in the Siege of Maastricht and became governor of Vendôme in 1749. He distinguished himself in the Battle of Minorca on the outbreak of the Seven Years' War and was promoted to brigadier general of infantry. In 1758, he fought in Germany, notably in the Battle of Krefeld and the Battle of Clostercamp, receiving several wounds at Clostercamp.<ref name=EB1911/>

American RevolutionEdit

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In 1780, Rochambeau was appointed commander of land forces as part of the project code-named Expédition Particulière.<ref>Kennett, Lee (1977). The French Forces in America, 1780–1783. Greenwood Press, Inc. p. 10 Template:ISBN</ref> He was given the rank of lieutenant general in command of 7,000 French troops and sent to join the Continental Army under George Washington during the American Revolutionary War. Axel von Fersen the Younger served as his aide-de-camp and interpreter. The small size of the force at his disposal made him initially reluctant to lead the expedition.<ref>Template:CathEncy</ref>

File:Bataille de Yorktown by Auguste Couder.jpg
Bataille de Yorktown by Auguste Couder; Rochambeau stands at the center of the painting

He landed at Newport, Rhode Island, on 10 July but was held there inactive for a year because he did not want to abandon the French fleet blockaded by the British in Narragansett Bay.<ref name=EB1911/> The college in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (now Brown University) served as an encampment site for some of Rochambeau's troops. The college edifice was converted into a military hospital, now known as University Hall.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In July 1781, the force left Rhode Island and marched across Connecticut to join Washington on the Hudson River in Mount Kisco, New York. The Odell farm served as Rochambeau's headquarters from 6 July to 18 August 1781.<ref name="nrhpinv_ny">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Washington and Rochambeau then marched their combined forces to the Siege of Yorktown and the Battle of the Chesapeake. On 22 September they combined with the Marquis de Lafayette's troops and forced Lord Cornwallis to surrender on 19 October. The Congress of the Confederation presented Rochambeau with two cannons taken from the British in recognition of his service. He returned them to Vendôme, and they were requisitioned in 1792.

Return to FranceEdit

Upon his return to France, Rochambeau was honored by King Louis XVI and was made governor of the province of Picardy.<ref name=EB1911/> He supported the French Revolution of 1789, and on 28 December 1791 he and Nicolas Luckner became the last two generals created Marshal of France by Louis XVI.

When the French Revolutionary Wars broke out, he commanded the Armée du Nord for a time in 1792 but resigned after several reversals to the Austrians. He was arrested during the Reign of Terror in 1793–94 and imprisoned in the Conciergerie. He narrowly avoided the guillotine, with his execution being scheduled mere days away when the Thermidorian Reaction occurred, ending the Reign of Terror.<ref name=EB1911/><ref name="General Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Later life and deathEdit

After his imprisonment and subsequent release, Rochambeau was pensioned after meeting Napoleon in 1801 and later received the Légion d'honneur in 1804 after Napoleon's ascension to emperor. Rochambeau died in 1807 at Thoré-la-Rochette during the First French Empire.<ref name=EB1911/><ref name="General Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau" /> His son Donatien was also a French general.

LegacyEdit

CommemorationEdit

File:Yorktown 1931 Issue-2c.jpg
US postage stamp, 1931 issue, honoring Rochambeau, George Washington, and François Joseph Paul de Grasse, commemorating 150th anniversary of the victory at Yorktown, 1781

President Theodore Roosevelt unveiled a statue of Rochambeau by Ferdinand Hamar as a gift from France to the United States on 24 May 1902, standing in Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C. The ceremony was a great demonstration of friendship between the two nations. France was represented by ambassador Jules Cambon, Admiral Fournier, General Henri Brugère, and a detachment of sailors and marines from the battleship Gaulois. Representatives of the Lafayette and Rochambeau families also attended. A Rochambeau fête was held simultaneously in Paris.<ref name=EB1911/> In 1934, A. Kingsley Macomber donated a statue of Rochambeau to Newport, Rhode Island. The sculpture is a replica of a statue in Paris.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> There is a Rochambeau monument at French Hill in Marion, Connecticut, close to the Asa Barnes Tavern, the eighth campsite of his troops through Connecticut in 1781.

In 1867, the French Navy named a casemate ironclad frigate Rochambeau. In 1911, CGT named a transatlantic liner Template:SS. In 1942, the US Navy named a troopship Template:USS. In 2009, President Barack Obama signed the Omnibus Public Land Management Act with a provision to designate the Washington–Rochambeau Revolutionary Route as a national historic trail. A bridge was named for Rochambeau in the complex of bridges known as the 14th Street Bridge (Potomac River) connecting Washington, D.C., with Virginia. A mansion on the campus of Brown University is named Rochambeau House and houses the French Department.

MemoirsEdit

File:Jeanne Therese Tilles D'Acosta, Madame la Marquise de Rochambeau.jpg
Jeanne Therese Tilles D'Acosta, Madame la Marquise de Rochambeau

Rochambeau's Mémoires militaires, historiques et politiques, de Rochambeau was published by Jean-Charles-Julien Luce de Lancival in 1809. Part of the first volume was translated into English and published in 1838 under the title Memoirs of the Marshal Count de R. relative to the War of Independence in the United States.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> His correspondence during the American campaign was published in 1892 in H. Doniol's History of French Participation in the Establishment of the United States.<ref>Doniol, H. Histoire de la participation de la France en l'établissement des Etats Unis d'Amérique, Vol. V. [publisher unknown] Paris: 1892</ref><ref name=EB1911>{{#if: |

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Motto and coat of armsEdit

Coat of arms Motto
File:Heraldique couronne comte français.svg
File:Blason famille fr de Vimeur.svg
VIVRE EN PREUX, Y MOURIR<ref>Johannes Baptist Rietstap, Armorial général
contenant la description des armoiries des familles nobles et patriciennes de l'Europe : précédé d'un dictionnaire des termes du blason, G.B. van Goor, 1861, 1171 p</ref>
(To live and die valiantly)

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

  • "Jean Baptiste Donatien De Vimeur Rochambeau." in Dictionary of American Biography (1936). online
  • Kennett, Lee. The French Forces in America, 1780–1783 (Greenwood, 1977),
  • Nager, Cody E. "The Fading Mirage Of Revolution: The French Expeditionary Force's Disillusionment With America, 1780–1782." The Historian 81#3 (2019), pp. 426+. online
  • Whitridge, Arnold. "Rochambeau And The American Revolution" History Today (May 1962), Vol. 12 Iss. 5, pp. 312–320.
  • Tugdual de Langlais, L'armateur préféré de Beaumarchais Jean Peltier Dudoyer, de Nantes à l'Isle de France, Éd. Coiffard, 2015, 340 p. (Template:ISBN).
  • Jean-Baptiste-Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau, Memoirs of the Marshal Count de Rochambeau, Relative to the War of Independence of the United States, ed. and trans, by M.W.E. Wright (New York: The New York Times and Arno Press, 1971),
  • Arnaud Blondet, Préface Iris de Rode Jeux de guerre, l'histoire de l'armée de Rochambeau au secours des États-Unis 1780–1781 Tome I, Éditions Jean-Jacques Wuillaume – Trace ta vie, collection Histoire et Patrimoine, 2024, 384 pages. Template:ISBN
  • conférence des associations Amis de Rochambeau et France-Etats-unis41 :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V958r618JWk&t=6s [archive]

External linksEdit

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