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COMTE DE JEAN BAPTISTE DONATIEN DE VI...

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 426 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COMTE DE
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JEAN
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BAPTISTE DONATIEN DE VIMEUR ROCHAMBEAU (1725-1807)
  , French soldier, was born at Vendome (Loir-et-
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Cher) on the 1st of
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July 1725 . He was originally destined for the church and was brought up at the Jesuit college at
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Blois, but after the
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death of his elder
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brother he entered a cavalry regiment, served in Bohemia and Bavaria and on the Rhine, and in 1747 had attained the rank of colonel He took
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part in the siege of Maestricht in 1748, became governor of Vendome in 1749, and after distinguishing himself in 1756 in the Minorca expedition was promoted brigadier of
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infantry . In 1757 and 1758 he fought in Germany, notably at Crefeld, received several wounds in the
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battle of Clostercamp (176o), was appointed marechal de camp in 1761 and inspector of cavalry and was frequently consulted by the ministers on technical points . In 178o he was sent, with the rank of
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lieutenant-general, in command of 6000 French troops to help the
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American colonists under Washington against the
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English . He landed at
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Newport, Rhode Island, on the Toth of July, but was held here inactive for a
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year, owing to his reluctance to abandon the French
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fleet, which was blockaded by the
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British in
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Narragansett
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Bay . At last, in July 1781, Rochambeau's force was able to leave Rhode Island and, marching across
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Connecticut, joined Washington on the Hudson . Then followed the celebrated march of the combined forces to York-
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town, where on the 22nd of September they formed a junction with the troops of
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Lafayette; as the result Cornwallis was forced to surrender on the 19th of
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October . Throughout, Rochambeau had displayed an admirable spirit, placing himself entirely under Washington's command and handling his troops as part of the American army . In recognition of his services, Congress voted him and his troops the thanks of the nation and presented him with two cannon taken from the English . These guns, which Rochambeau took back to Vendome, were requisitioned in 1792 . On his return to France he was loaded with favours by Louis XVI. and was made governor of Picardy . During the Revolution he commanded the Army of the North in 1790, but resigned in 1792 .

He was arrested during the Terror, and narrowly escaped the

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guillotine . He was subsequently pensioned by
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Bonaparte, and died at Thore (Loin et-Cher) on the loth of May 1807 . A statue of Rochambeau by Ferdinand Hamar, the gift of France to the
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United States, was unveiled in Lafayette Square, Washington, by President Roosevelt on the 24th of May 1go2 . The ceremony was made the occasion of a
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great demonstration of friendship between the two nations . France was represented by her ambassador, M . Cambon,
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Admiral Fournier and General Brugere, a detachment of sailors and marines from the warship " Gaulois " being
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present . Representatives of the Lafayette and Rochambeau families also attended . Of the many speeches perhaps the most striking was that of Senator Henry C . Lodge, who, curiously enough in the circumstances, prefaced his eloquent appreciation of the services rendered to the American cause by France by a brilliant sketch of the way in which the French had been driven out of North
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America by England and her colonists combined . General Brugere, in his speech, quoted Rochambeau's words, uttered in 1781: "'Entre
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vous, entre nous, a la
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vie, a la mort." A "Rochambeau fete " was held simultaneously in Paris . The Memoires militaires, historiques et politiques, de Rochambeau were published by Luce de Lancival in 1809 . Of the first
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volume a part, translated into English by M .

W . E .

Wright, was published in 1838 under the title of
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Memoirs of the Marshal Count de R. relative to the War of Independence in the United States . Rochambeau's correspondence during the American
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campaign is published in H . Doniol, Hist. de la participation de la France d l'etablissement
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des hats Unis d'Amerique, vol. v . (Paris, 1892) . See Duchesne, " Autour de Rochambeau " in the Revue des faculles catholiques de l'ouest (1898-1900); E . Gachot, " Rochambeau in the Nouvelle Revue (1902) ; H. de Ganniers, " La Derniere Campagne du marechal de Rochambeau " in the Revue des questions historiques (1901) .

End of Article: COMTE DE JEAN BAPTISTE DONATIEN DE VIMEUR ROCHAMBEAU (1725-1807)
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