France and Britain

Printed Page 250

Section Chronology

While Indian battles engaged the American military in the west, another war overseas was also closely watched. In 1789, monarchy came under attack in France, bringing on a revolution that inspired Americans in many states to celebrate the victory of the French people. Even fashions expressed symbolic solidarity: Some American women donned sashes and cockades made with ribbons of the French Revolution’s red, white, and blue colors. Pro-French headgear for committed women included an elaborate turban, leading one horrified Federalist newspaper editor to chastise the “fiery frenchified dames” thronging Philadelphia’s streets. In Charleston, South Carolina, a pro-French pageant in 1793 united two women as partners, one representing France and the other America. The women repudiated their husbands “on account of ill treatment” and pledged mutual “union and friendship.” Most likely, this ceremony was not the country’s first civil union but instead a richly metaphorical piece of street theater in which the spurned husbands represented the French and British monarchs. In addition to these symbolic actions, the growing exchange of political and intellectual ideas across the Atlantic helped plant the seeds of a woman’s rights movement in America.

Sentiments against the French Revolution also ran deep. Vice President John Adams, who had lived in France in the 1780s, trembled to think of radicals in France or America. “Too many Frenchmen, after the example of too many Americans, pant for the equality of persons and property,” Adams said. “The impracticability of this, God Almighty has decreed, and the advocates for liberty, who attempt it, will surely suffer for it.”

image
Figure false: French Dress Style: Woman with Cockade
Figure false: In the early 1790s, some Americans showed enthusiasm for the French Revolution by wearing a tricolor cockade — a distinctive bow made from red, white, and blue ribbons. Bibliothèque Nationale de France.

Support for the French Revolution remained a matter of personal conviction until 1793, when Britain and France went to war and divided loyalties now framed critical foreign policy debates. Pro-French Americans remembered France’s critical help during the American Revolution and wanted to offer aid now. But those shaken by the report of the guillotining of thousands of French people — including the king — as well as those with strong commercial ties to Britain sought ways to stay neutral.

In May 1793, President Washington issued the Neutrality Proclamation, which contained friendly assurances to both sides, in an effort to stay out of European wars. Yet American ships continued to trade between the French West Indies and France. In early 1794, the British expressed their displeasure by capturing more than three hundred of these vessels near the West Indies. Clearly, the president thought, something had to be done to assert American power.

Washington tapped John Jay, the chief justice of the Supreme Court and a man of strong pro-British sentiments, to negotiate commercial relations in the British West Indies and secure compensation for the seized American ships. Jay was also told to resolve southern demands for reimbursement for the slaves evacuated by the British during the war along with western settlers’ desires to end the British occupation of frontier forts. Jay returned from his diplomatic mission with the Jay Treaty, a treaty that no one could love. First, the Jay Treaty failed to address the captured cargoes or the lost property in slaves. Second, it granted the British a lenient eighteen months to withdraw from the frontier forts, as well as continued rights in the fur trade. (This provision disheartened the Indians just then negotiating the Treaty of Greenville in Ohio. It was a significant factor in their decision to make peace.) Finally, the treaty called for repayment with interest of the debts that some American planters still owed to British firms dating from the Revolutionary War. In exchange for such generous terms, Jay secured limited trading rights in the West Indies and agreement that some issues — boundary disputes with Canada and the damage and loss claims of shipowners — would be decided later by arbitration commissions.

Jay Treaty

image 1795 treaty between the United States and Britain, negotiated by John Jay. It secured limited trading rights in the West Indies but failed to ensure timely removal of British forces from western forts and reimbursement for slaves removed by the British after the Revolution.

When newspapers published the terms of the treaty, powerful opposition quickly emerged. In Massachusetts, disrespectful anti-Jay graffiti appeared on walls, and effigies of Jay along with copies of the treaty were ceremoniously burned. Nevertheless, the treaty passed the Senate in 1795 by a vote of 20 to 10. The corresponding vote in the House, on funding the implementation of the treaty, passed by only 3 votes. The bitter votes in Congress divided along the same lines as the Hamilton-Jefferson split on economic policy.