America's Sweet-and-Sometimes-Sour Relationship with France (August/September 2003 | Volume: 54, Issue: 4)

America's Sweet-and-Sometimes-Sour Relationship with France

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Authors: Richard F. Snow

Historic Era: Era 3: Revolution and the New Nation (1754-1820s)

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August/September 2003 | Volume 54, Issue 4

“We’ve got it, but I don’t like to pour it.” The couple next to me at the bar had ordered Gray Goose vodka martinis, and the bartender didn’t want to make them. I had no idea what was going on, and neither did the couple. “It’s French,” the bartender explained. The couple nodded and settled on a vodka made by our unwavering ally Russia.

The French have gotten us sore again. As Richard Brookhiser points out in his essay in this issue, that’s no new thing. We’re always getting mad at them. Well, they can be irritating. I remember seeing a Bill Mauldin cartoon published in the mid-1960s after Charles de Gaulle had committed some bit of austere highhandedness. It shows him standing in a field of white stone crosses, shrugging (of course) and saying, “Why do you Americans stay where you’re not wanted?” That’s the French for you: No gratitude.

On the other hand, here’s a favor rendered not so very long ago in historical time. In the early spring of 1781, Admiral François Joseph Paul de Grasse, the Marquis de Grasse-Tilly, a.k.a. the Comte de Grasse, set sail from Brest with an impressive fleet bound for the West Indies. His orders were to work with France’s Spanish allies there, but he received an urgent plea: The American army needed reinforcements, money, and every kind of help. De Grasse raised the money, found the troops, and sailed north. He could, he said, stay only until October 15. Begged to stick around longer, he waited out the month, although he was in poor health, and he didn’t have to linger in the autumn seas off the Virginia coast. During his stay, he fought a fleet action with the British; he didn’t win, but he didn’t lose, which meant that Lord Cornwallis did. With no help coming from the sea, the English general eventually had to surrender his army at Yorktown. (It would be nice to be able to see the scene when Washington first met de Grasse aboard his flagship, Ville de Paris. The French admiral flung his arms around the American and called him “My dear little general!” All of Washington’s staff managed to remain solemn through this except Henry Knox, who laughed out loud.)

On the 200th anniversary of that victory, American Heritage published a lengthy account of the campaign and a story about a far-less-familiar moment in Franco-American relations. It began in 1949 with a single freighter setting sail from France and bound for America, its hold full of old railroad cars.

Two generations of American soldiers had lurched toward battle in Forty and Eights, stubby French freight cars so called because, in World War I, they had stenciled on their sides their carrying capacity for live cargo: HOMMES 40—CHEVAUX 8. To their amused and alarmed American occupants, used to the long, rangy boxcars of the Great Northern or the