Relations between the new French Republic and …
Years: 1797 - 1797
March
Relations between the new French Republic and the American administration of President George Washington had become strained in the wake of the 1789 French Revolution.
In 1792, France and the rest of Europe had gone to war, a conflict in which Washington had declared American neutrality.
However, both France and Great Britain, the major naval powers in the war, had seized ships of neutral powers (including those of the United States) that trade with their enemies.
With the Jay Treaty, ratified in 1795, the United States had reached an agreement on the matter with Britain that angered members of the Directory that governed France.
The French Navy had consequently stepped up its efforts to interdict American trade with Britain.
By the time John Adams assumes the presidency in early 1797, the matter is reaching crisis proportions.
In March 1797, not long after assuming office, President Adams learns that Charles Cotesworth Pinckney has been refused as U. S. minister because of the escalating crisis, and that American merchant ships have been seized in the Caribbean.
Popular opinion in the United States on relations with France is divided along largely political lines: Federalists take a hard line, favoring a defensive buildup but not necessarily advocating war, while Republicans express solidarity with the Republican ideals of the French revolutionaries and do not want to be seen as cooperating with the Federalist Adams administration.
Jefferson looks at the Federalists as monarchists who are linked to Britain and therefore hostile to American values.
In 1792, France and the rest of Europe had gone to war, a conflict in which Washington had declared American neutrality.
However, both France and Great Britain, the major naval powers in the war, had seized ships of neutral powers (including those of the United States) that trade with their enemies.
With the Jay Treaty, ratified in 1795, the United States had reached an agreement on the matter with Britain that angered members of the Directory that governed France.
The French Navy had consequently stepped up its efforts to interdict American trade with Britain.
By the time John Adams assumes the presidency in early 1797, the matter is reaching crisis proportions.
In March 1797, not long after assuming office, President Adams learns that Charles Cotesworth Pinckney has been refused as U. S. minister because of the escalating crisis, and that American merchant ships have been seized in the Caribbean.
Popular opinion in the United States on relations with France is divided along largely political lines: Federalists take a hard line, favoring a defensive buildup but not necessarily advocating war, while Republicans express solidarity with the Republican ideals of the French revolutionaries and do not want to be seen as cooperating with the Federalist Adams administration.
Jefferson looks at the Federalists as monarchists who are linked to Britain and therefore hostile to American values.
Locations
People
Groups
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- United States of America (US, USA) (Philadelphia PA)
- French First Republic
