250 years of US independence: Why France supported American Revolutionaries
On July 4, 1776, 13 British colonies in North America broke with the British Crown and declared their independence, in a momentous act of rebellion that would change the course of history. As the United States celebrates its 250th birthday, FRANCE 24 looks back at France's decisive – and often overlooked – role in the American Revolutionary War.
Behind the independence project, lies another story: that of a long-standing rivalry between Great Britain and France, the two great European powers at the time. When the Thirteen Colonies proclaimed their independence, they were still a long way from winning the war. Across the Atlantic, France watched the brewing rebellion with increasing interest.
For the young King Louis XVI, the dispute between American colonists and the British government represented an opportunity to exact revenge on France's historic rival. Far from being a spontaneous show of support for a democratic revolution, France's support was rooted in decades of conflict with its neighbour from across the Channel.
'Englishmen in America'
France and Britain had been competing for control of North America, the Caribbean, the Indies, and trade routes since the 17th century. The French monarchy had colonised territory spanning from the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in the north, in modern-day Canada, to the Gulf of Mexico in the south.
"France held nearly half the territory east of the Mississippi," said Steven Ekovich, professor emeritus of politics and history at the American University of Paris. “For both monarchies, America was part of a much wider global conflict between the English and the French."
The rivalry between the two powers did not prevent trade. As early as the 17th century, steady commerce developed between the British colonies of New England and the French West Indies. Timber, supplies, livestock, and construction materials all regularly crossed the Atlantic Ocean. These early economic ties between French and American colonists were well established before independence.
A break between the colonists and the mother country was unimaginable at this time. "The Americans were Englishmen in America above all, and they wished to remain so," said Ekovich. The Thirteen Colonies and their 2.5 million inhabitants thus far did not consider themselves as citizens of a single nation.
The trauma of the Seven Years' War
The Seven Years' War (1756 to 1763), pitting England and Prussia against France, Austria, and Russia, changed everything. The global conflict fuelled by colonial rivalries ended with the Treaty of Paris, which forced France to cede several of its territories to the British: including Canada, part of Louisiana, parts of the West Indies, Senegal, and most of its territory in India – except for a few trading posts such as Pondicherry and Chandernagore, now spelled as Chandannagar.
The French defeat was perceived as a national humiliation. The court in Versailles became obsessed with one idea: preventing England from becoming the dominant power. But Louis XVI, a pacifist at heart, remained cautious at first. His kingdom had emerged significantly weakened from the conflict and needed to rebuild its navy.
"France had only one objective on its mind: reclaiming its territory and undermining the English," said Émilie Mitran, a historian specialised in the United States and the author of Des Américains en France,1776–1792 (Americans in France, 1776-1796). "If Britain lost part of its empire, it would be a proper payback from the French point of view following its own humiliation of 1763."
Britain was also under financial pressure after the Seven Years' War, which had cost a colossal fortune. To compensate, it imposed new taxes on its colonies – specifically on sugar, tea, and stamped paper through the infamous Stamp Act, which applied to all printed documents. Since the colonists had no representatives in the British Parliament, they refused to pay and angrily chanted the slogan: "No taxation without representation”.
Supporting the rebels without encouraging a revolution
France's newly appointed foreign minister Charles Gravier, count of Vergennes, watched from the sidelines as tensions continued to simmer between the British Empire and the Thirteen Colonies. The friction evolved into the American War of Independence in the spring of 1775, with the first clashes between insurgents and British troops in Lexington, Massachusetts.
It was a historic opportunity for Vergennes. His plan was to exploit the crisis to the fullest while holding France back from entering the conflict prematurely.
For an absolute monarchy like the French one, support for insurgents revolting against their own king was a striking paradox. Louis XVI could not officially condone the rebellion. Yet unofficially, every British setback served French interests.
"It was initially a matter of political realism," said Ekovich. "France wanted to use the Americans against its hereditary enemy. (...) French support was primarily driven by this logic of realpolitik."
Enlightenment ideas also guided French supporters of the Thirteen Colonies. For decades, Parisian salons were the setting for philosophers like Montesquieu, Voltaire, and Rousseau as they launched debates on liberty, the separation of powers and popular sovereignty. American leaders picked up these concepts while fighting for their independence.
"Two sets of logic coexisted from the beginning," said Ekovich. "The king acts against Great Britain, while a portion of the French elite supports the Americans out of conviction." This duality was embodied by two figures: Louis XVI, who pursued a strategic objective and the Marquis de Lafayette, a French aristocrat who later became the most famous French figure of the American War of Independence. The latter viewed the American struggle as a cause driven by Enlightenment ideals.
Shadow diplomacy
Versailles opted for discretion before initiating any formal alliance. On May 2, 1776, Louis XVI authorised Vergennes to covertly send arms, ammunition and supplies to the insurgents through Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, who used a shell company known as Rodrigue Hortalez et Compagnie as a screen for the transactions.
"Beaumarchais became an irreplaceable secret agent for Louis XVI," said Mitran. "He made it possible to fund the rebels as long as France refused to commit officially."
France's caution was based on several imperatives. "No one knew whether the insurgents would declare independence or if they could withstand British military might," said the historian. "For France to commit prematurely meant running the risk of another financial and diplomatic disaster."
The break between the British Crown and the Thirteen Colonies was finally sealed two months later with the adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. The young nation's name went from the "United Colonies" to the "United States of America".
Fighting between Britain and the colonists continued. British troops captured New York in September 1776. For the representatives of the American colonies who had just declared their independence, finding reinforcements became urgent.
Eager to forge a bond with France, the American Congress dispatched a new diplomat named Benjamin Franklin to Paris. His mission was to persuade France to openly support the American rebels. Soon after arriving in France in December 1776, the scientist became a celebrity.
"Benjamin Franklin captivated the French as much with his inventions as with his personality," said Mitran. "He visited the salons, mastered their social codes and incarnated the new ideals arriving from America for the French."
Despite the successful charm offensive, Vergennes remained cautious. He continued to wait for the right moment before transforming France's covert support into an open alliance. That moment did not arrive until October 1777, when George Washington's troops inflicted a decisive blow to the British at Saratoga, forcing 6,000 soldiers to surrender.
This military success finally convinced Versailles that the rebels could prevail. A few months later, France signed an alliance with the United States and officially entered the war against Great Britain – a decision that would profoundly alter the course of the conflict.
This article has been translated from the original in French.