Sunday, March 29, 2026

ARP382 Yellow Fever & Genet's Downfall

Last week, we covered the arrival of Citizen Genêt, France’s new Ambassador to the US.  His mission was to weaken the enemy coalition against France by forcing them to divert resources to a war in America.

Washington’s Conundrum

The Washington Administration was trying to avoid being dragged into a new war. But it felt powerless as Genêt seemed to have popular support in rousing volunteers in the cause of liberty.  Although Genêt had only arrived in April, 1793, he already had privateers using American ports by May and bringing British prizes into American ports.

Yellow Fever Strikes Philadelphia, 1793
The British Minister in Philadelphia, George Hammond was flooding the administration with protests and threatening war. French privateers needed to be barred from US ports and captured British ships returned to their owners..

President Washington was not sure how to stop this.  In June, he denounced the French for bringing prize ships into US ports.  Genêt simply ignored this and continued converting new privateers in US ports.  When Jefferson tried to get Genêt to tone down his efforts, Genêt accused Jefferson of failing to support the cause of republicanism over monarchy.

Washington left town in late June, returning to Mount Vernon after receiving news of the death of one of the key people who oversaw his plantations.  He left his cabinet and Pennsylvania officials to deal with the crisis.

In July, the attorney general prosecuted two Americans in Philadelphia who had served aboard a French privateer that had been commissioned in Charleston. Since there was no law against serving on a French privateer, Randolph simply charged them with disturbing the peace.  Genêt hired a defense attorney for the men and a jury acquitted them.

The fighting came to a head over a converted privateer named La Petite Démocrate, which had been outfitted in Philadelphia and was prepared to sail.  Hamilton proposed arming the fort on Mud Island, in the Delaware River, and blowing the ship out of the water if it attempted to leave.  Jefferson rejected this idea, believing it would start a war with France.  Letting it go, though, would likely mean war with Britain.

Washington returned in mid-July.  When he met with the cabinet, even Jefferson admitted that Genêt was out of control and a danger to the United States.  Before any action could be taken La Petite Démocrate left port on July 14 and began attacking British merchant vessels.  Hamilton demanded that Washington ask France to recall Genêt.  Jefferson confessed to others that he feared the US would end up going to war with France in order to avoid war with Britain.

All communications between the administration and Genêt were met with haughty dismissals.  Genêt made it clear that he did not care what the administration thought.  The people of America supported the cause of liberty and he would continue with his actions.   The Administration could either get on board or be left behind.

Washington delayed any action, asking the Supreme Court to weigh in on the matter. Chief Justice John Jay sent back a reply that said the Court could not do anything because they all left town in August, for reasons I’ll get to in a moment.

A few weeks later, Washington finally agreed to request Genêt’s recall, although he went with Jefferson’s polite recall request, rather than Hamilton’s more belligerent wording. Jefferson sent the recall request on August 23, knowing that it would take months to reach France and to receive a response.  Hamilton began publishing a series of anonymous articles objecting to Genêt’s actions and accusing him of trying to involve the US into a war it did not want.  

Yellow Fever

In August a new problem arose that pushed aside the growing diplomatic dispute.  On August 5, Dr. Benjamin Rush, a prominent physician and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, received a call from Dr. Hugh Hodge to come to his home. Hodge's young daughter was jaundiced, suffering from a high fever, and vomiting blood. She died that day. Over the next two weeks, Rush saw many more patients with the same symptoms, several of whom also died.  By August 23, Elizabeth Drinker noted that she was aware of 70 people who had become sick or already died.  By that time there were around twenty deaths per day in Philadelphia.

Philadelphians began getting sick in overwhelming numbers, which seemed to grow exponentially.. Victims would get a fever and headache. Eventually, they would begin vomiting blood, while their eyes became jaundiced and their skin took on a yellowish tint.  Yellow fever had struck the city.

Over the next two months, around 11,000 people would contract the disease, half of them would die.  The deaths constituted about 10% of the city’s population.  Everyone knew that the disease was spreading like crazy, but no one understood the cause.  Some believed it was unsanitary conditions in the City.  Dr. Rush believed it was a tropical disease brought by a ship from the West Indies.  No one knew its origin, but everyone could see that hundreds of people, maybe thousands, were dying from it.

The general result was panic.  On August 29 the mayor convened all the leading physicians, who came up with nothing.  They mostly suggested keeping the streets clear and that anyone who could should simply leave Philadelphia.  Nearly half the city’s population fled over the next few weeks, including the federal government.

Congress was not in session anyway during the summer, but the Supreme Court was.  The justices fled town in early August just as the epidemic began.

President Washington initially tried to maintain calm by remaining at his home.  On September 5, Alexander Hamilton and his wife Eliza both became ill.  Several days later, at Martha’s urging, Washington finally packed up and took his family back to Mount Vernon.  

Secretary of War Henry Knox initially stepped in to deal with any matters of government.  Vice President Adams was already at home in Quincy, Massachusetts, where he spent most of the year anyway.

Jefferson, who had initially seemed unconcerned and accused Hamilton of being a hypochondriac when he first complained of symptoms, also remained at his post at the State Department, until he realized his entire department was gone, except for a single clerk. Everyone else had gotten sick or fled the city.  Jefferson also packed up and returned to Monticello. 

Hamilton also left the city while sick.  He travelled to New York City, where officials tried to put him under quarantine. Instead, he left for Albany, where his father-in-law lived.  There locals treated him like a leper, trying to keep their distance and fearing that he and his wife might spread the disease through the city. They were eventually permitted to stay in the Schuyler mansion, but that everyone in the mansion was then under lockdown and not permitted to go out in public. Rumors that Hamilton had died spread through New England, causing panics in the financial markets until the rumors were proven false. 

Meanwhile things only got worse in Philadelphia.  By mid-September deaths had risen to over one hundred per day.  Doctors were prescribing anything from cold baths, to mercurial purges, to blood letting.  Others suggested that smoking or taking vinegar might ward off the disease, but nothing seemed to work. Cartmen waited in front of city hall, waiting for pickups of bodies. The city banned the tolling of bells for the dead since it became too common an occurrence.  Families isolated themselves.  If a family member got sick they were often tossed out into the street to avoid infecting the rest of the family.

Nearly 20,000 people fled the city, heading out to the country or to other towns. Several New York mobs prevented refugees from Philadelphia from entering the city.  Dr. Rush remained in Philadelphia, treating more than 100 patients per day. Unfortunately, his treatments, which included excessive bleeding, probably did more harm than help.

Rush also turned to the black community, believing that they were immune from the disease. Black volunteers stepped up to help nurse patients and help with other duties.  Rush taught several black men to bleed patents.  Of course, black people were not immune and hundreds of them got sick and died.

The post office ceased to function, ships’ cargoes rotted at the pier with no one to unload them.  Schools and newspapers closed.  The city essentially shut down.

Genêt’s Army of Liberation

With everyone focused on the epidemic, side issues like a potential war with Europe tended to fall to the side.  Citizen Genêt, however, tried to remain on mission.  The French Ambassador fled Philadelphia in August, when the outbreak first began. He arrived in New York on August 7, prepared to raise an army.  Crowds greeted him with chants of “Genêt to power” and “Down with Washington."

Not all of the cheers were coming from New Yorkers.  A French fleet that included about 5000 soldiers and sailors had arrived in New York for repairs and resupply.  Once ready, Genêt planned to break this naval fleet into three squadrons. One would attack the British at Halifax.  A second squadron would coordinate the invasion of Spanish St. Augustine, and the third would head for Spanish New Orleans.  These French fleets would coordinate with the American volunteer armies that Genêt had already begun to raise.

One of the ships that had put in for repair was l’Embuscade, the ship that had brought Genêt to America back in April.  At the end of July, a British frigate, the Boston, had sailed down to New York, disguised as a French ship of war. The Boston used its false French identity to capture another French ship, then sent one of the captured officers to New York to inform l‘Embuscade that it wanted to do battle.  The French frigate sailed out to attack.  On July 31, the two ships fought a protracted battle.  After several hours, l’Embuscade seemed to get the better of the fight, knocking out several of the Boston’s masts. Late in the day a French cannonball took out both the British captain and the head of the marines onboard.  By evening the surviving British officers withdrew.  The l’Embuscade pursued but could not catch them.  The Boston returned to Halifax, while l’Embuscade returned to New York.

The whole battle took place about 15 miles off the coast of Sandy Hook New Jersey.  Hundreds of Americans flocked to the shore to watch the battle.  After Genêt arrived the following week, New Yorkers seemed excited at the prospect of war with Britain.

When Genêt arrived in New York, he seemed at the height of his popularity, while the American government was unable to coordinate anything due to the fight of officials escaping the Yellow Fever Epidemic in Philadelphia. Genêt seemed to think Americans were ready to follow him into war, and dump the Washington Administration.  

Genêt issued $100,000 worth of drafts to begin construction of several French naval vessels in New York.  The federalists in New York attacked Genêt for his disrespect of President Washington. Chief Justice Jay, who had left Philadelphia for his home in New York, along with Senator Rufus King, published an article based on information from Hamilton revealing Genêt’s confrontational attitude and his refusal to respect presidential authority.  Genêt denied the public charges and even tried to bring a libel suit against Jay and King.

Across the country, Americans were divided. I mentioned Hamilton was publishing editorials against Genêt.  James Monroe began a similar series of articles in favor of supporting France.  The Federalists tended to characterize the issue as a French official bullying our President.  The Democratic Republicans appealed to the need to support liberty and the Republic of France against the forces of monarchy. But even many Democratic Republicans seemed ready to overthrow President Washington to further the cause of liberty.

Genêt’s Fall

As the summer came to an end, so did Genêt’s plans for war in America.  His main obstacle had not been political.  Genêt had found great support among the Democratic-Republicans of New York.  Governor George Clinton embraced Genêt and supported his efforts.  Genêt even began dating the Governor’s daughter Cornelia Clinton.

What really seemed to slow up Genêt’s progress was the yellow fever epidemic.  Although the disease remained largely confined to Philadelphia, some cases began to turn up in New York.  Many New Yorkers fled the city.  The same happened in most large cities across the country.  People feared that Philadelphia was only the beginning and got out of town where they could be safe.  This made it impossible to recruit the armies in time to have any sort of fighting season before winter.

Work stopped on Genêt’s shipbuilding and the drafts that he had provided proved worthless after Hamilton’s Department of Treasury refused to release to him the American debt payments to France.  The French soldiers and sailors who had arrived with the fleet from the West Indies and were now in  New York learned that they would soon be sent back south rather than home to France.  The sailors mutinied.  When Genêt ordered soldiers to disarm the sailors, the soldiers marched to the ships, joined with the sailors, and the whole group marched back to Genêt’s house, which they burned to the ground.

The Federalist argument that Genêt was challenging President Washington and meant to bring down the federal government caught hold with most Americans, as popular opinion turned against Genêt.

By October, Washington, still at Mount Vernon, was looking for ways to get his government back to work.  In September, he had laid the cornerstone for the new US Capital in DC.  But it would still be years before the new capital was ready to house the government.

Congress did not plan to meet until December, but Washington wanted to call a special session.  He asked others if they thought he could call a session somewhere other than in Philadelphia. Thomas Jefferson, who stopped by Mount Vernon on his way back to Pennsylvania, said he did not think that calling Congress into session somewhere other than the capital would be constitutional.  Remember, one of the complaints in the Declaration of Independence was that the Governor was moving the legislature to other places that the legislators found inconvenient. Washington also reached out for Hamilton’s opinion.  Hamilton, who had recovered from the yellow fever, responded that the president could request that Congress meet elsewhere, but could not order it.

Washington decided he would return to Pennsylvania, asking his cabinet members to join him in Germantown, only a few miles from Philadelphia, but not suffering from the deadly disease.  On October 28, he left Mount Vernon.  He caught up with Jefferson, who had only made it as far as Baltimore.  The men travel together to Germantown, where they arrived on November 1.  

The small town could barely house the Cabinet, let alone Congress.  After a few weeks in Germantown though, it became clear that the epidemic in Philadelphia was over.  While contemporaries never figured out the cause, we know today that yellow fever is spread by mosquitos.  When the first frost hit the region, the mosquitos died and the new infections ceased.  It took a few weeks for everyone to be certain, but by December, Washington returned to Philadelphia, and Congress met at the time and place that it had originally planned back in March.

Washington gave his 5th State of the Union Address, where he defended his position on neutrality, but also called for building up a stronger military.  Several Republican Senators tried to restore relations between Washington and Genêt.  Genêt, however, refused.  Jefferson had informed him in September that they had requested his recall.  Genêt figured it would be up to his replacement to mend relations.  He was still in a huff, believing that members of Washington’s administration had unfairly attacked his honor. In his address to Congress, Washington only reinforced this belief by telling Congress that Genêt had shown “nothing of the friendly spirit of the nation which sent him.”  Washington also turned over to Congress all the correspondence and other documents he had regarding Genêt.

Back in France, Gouverneur Morris had received the recall request in October and submitted it to the French Government.  Jefferson’s request made clear that they still wanted good relations with France and that Genêt personally was responsible for the problems.  Since Genêt had been a Girondin appointment, and the Jacobins were in power now, no one in the government felt any loyalty toward Genêt.  By this time the Reign of Terror had begun in France, and any official out of favor had to fear for his life.

The Jacobin government sent a new Ambassador Jean Antoine Joseph Fauchet to Philadelphia.  It also charged Genêt with being a counterrevolutionary traitor who was involved in a criminal plot to drive the US into an alliance with Britain.  Fauchet arrived with a warrant for Genêt’s arrest.  Some sources even indicate that he had a guillotine in the hold of his ship in order to carry out the sentence immediately.

When Fauchet arrived in Philadelphia in February, 1784, Genêt realized that he would not be long for this world if French officials got ahold of him.  He turned to President Washington, requesting political asylum.  Washington wanted Genêt removed from power, but he did not want to see him dead. His cabinet, even Hamilton, agreed with him. Washington granted the asylum and refused to turn over Genêt.  

In return, Genêt left politics entirely.  He married governor Clinton’s daughter later that year.  The two bought a farm on Long Island and settled down to a private life together.  Later, they would move to a home near Albany.

His replacement, Fauchet, revoked all the French military commissions that Genêt had granted, gave order to disarm all the privateers and halt all plans to invade Florida, Louisiana, and Canada. Fauchet’s goal was much more limited.  He hoped the US would continue to be a supplier of food needed for the French war effort in Europe, and pressed for these to be paid by reducing US debt to France.  Fauchet also gave a guarantee that France would respect US neutrality and would only purchase food in America.  It would not attempt to incur British wrath by purchasing military supplies.

Next Week: a new invention changes the southern economy, and James Madison gets married.

 - - -

Next Episode 383 The Cotton Gin and Madison's Marriage (coming soon)

Previous Episode 381 The Citizen Genêt Affair

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Further Reading

Websites

Epidemic in Philadelphia https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/fever-epidemic-philadelphia-1793

Reports on the yellow fever epidemic, 1793 https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/spotlight-primary-source/reports-yellow-fever-epidemic-1793

Boston v Embuscade – 31 July 1793: https://morethannelson.com/boston-v-embuscade-31-july-1793

The Citizen Genêt Affair, 1793–1794 https://history.state.gov/milestones/1784-1800/citizen-Genêt

Genêt Affair https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/Genêt-affair

“John Jay and the Genêt Affair [Editorial Note],” Founders Online, National Archiveshttps://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jay/01-05-02-0271

SHERIDAN, EUGENE R. “The Recall of Edmond Charles Genêt: A Study in Transatlantic Politics and Diplomacy.” Diplomatic History, vol. 18, no. 4, 1994, pp. 463–88. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/24912307

Ammon, Harry. “The Genêt Mission and the Development of American Political Parties.” The Journal of American History, vol. 52, no. 4, 1966, pp. 725–41. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1894343 

Ammon, Harry. “Agricola versus Aristides: James Monroe, John Marshall, and the Genêt Affair in Virginia.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 74, no. 3, 1966, pp. 312–20. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4247222

Foster, Kenneth R., et al. “The Philadelphia Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793.” Scientific American, vol. 279, no. 2, 1998, pp. 88–93. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/26070603

Henderson, Archibald. “Isaac Shelby and the Genet Mission.” The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, vol. 6, no. 4, 1920, pp. 451–69. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1886469

Kornfeld, Eve. “CRISIS IN THE CAPITAL: THE CULTURAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PHILADELPHIA’S GREAT YELLOW FEVER EPIDEMIC.” Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies, vol. 51, no. 3, 1984, pp. 189–205. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/27772983

Stough, Mulford. “THE YELLOW FEVER IN PHILADELPHIA 1793.” Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies, vol. 6, no. 1, 1939, pp. 6–13. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/27766332

Tighe, Janet A. “Negotiating the Health of the Public: Yellow Fever in 1793 Philadelphia.” OAH Magazine of History, vol. 19, no. 5, 2005, pp. 30–35. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/25161977

Neutrality Proclamation of 1793 https://www.mountvernon.org/education/primary-source-collections/primary-source-collections/article/neutrality-proclamation-of-1793

“Edmond Charles Genêt to Alexander Hamilton, 19 July 1793,” Founders Online, National Archiveshttps://founders.archives.gov/documents/Hamilton/01-15-02-0089

Free eBooks
(from archive.org unless noted)

A message of the President of the United States to Congress relative to France and Great Britain, Philadelphia: Childs and Swaine, 1793. 

The Mangourit Correspondence in Respect to Genet's Projected Attack Upon the Floridas, 1793-94 [Google Books]. 

Bassett, John Spenser The Federalist System, 1789-1801, New York: Harper & Bros, 1906. 

Cresson, Joshua Meditations written during the prevalence of the yellow fever, in the city of Philadelphia, in the year 1793, London: W. Phillips, 1803. 

Devèze, Jean An enquiry into, and observations upon the causes and effects of the epidemic disease, which raged in Philadelphia from the month of August till towards the middle of December, 1793, Philadelphia: Parent, 1794. 

Genêt, George Clinton Washington, Jefferson, and "Citizen" Genêt, 1793, New York: 1899. 

Helmuth, Justus H. A Short Account of the Yellow Fever in Philadelphia, for the Reflecting Christian, Philadelphia: Jones, Hoff & Derrick, 1794. 

Jenkins, Charles F. Jefferson's Germantown letters, together with other papers relating to his stay in Germantown during the month of November, 1793, Philadelphia: William Campbell, 1906. 

Jones, Absalom A narrative of the proceedings of the black people, during the late awful calamity in Philadelphia, in the year 1793, Philadelphia: Woodward, 1794. 

Michaux, André Journal of André Michaux, 1793-1796, Cleveland: A.H. Clark Co. 1904. 

Minnigerode, Meade Jefferson Friend of France 1793: The Career of Edmond Charles Genêt 1763-1834, GP Putnam’s Sons, 1928.

Rush, Benjamin An account of the Bilious remitting yellow Fever ... of Philadelphia ... 1793, Philadelphia: Thomas Dobson, 1794. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Ammon, Harry The Genet Mission, W.W. Norton & Co. 1973. 

Burstein, Andrew and Nancy Isenberg Madison and Jefferson, Random House, 2010

Chernow, Ron Alexander Hamilton, Penguin Press, 2004. 

Chernow, Ron Washington, A Life, Penguin Press, 2010. 

Chervinsky, Lindsay M. The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution, Belknap Press, 2020. 

Dillon, Mark. C. The First Chief Justice: John Jay and the Struggle of a New Nation, State Univ. of New York Press, 2022.

Dugatkin, Lee A. The Botanist and Citizen Genêt: André Michaux’s 1793 Expedition to the Pacific and America’s First Diplomatic Crisis, Butler Books, 2025. 

Elkins, Stanley M. and Eric McKitrick, The Age of Federalism: The Early American Republic, 1788–1800, Oxford Univ. Press, 1993 (borrow on archive.org). 

Ellis, Joseph J. His Excellency. George Washington, Alfred A. Knopf, 2005. 

Ellis, Joseph J. Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, Knopf, 2000.

Ferling, John Jefferson and Hamilton: The Rivalry That Forged a Nation Hardcover, Bloomsbury Press, 2013. 

Heidler, David S. & Jeanne T. Washington's Circle: The Creation of the President, Random House, 2015. 

Hunger, Harlow Giles Mr. President: George Washington and the Making of the Nation's Highest Office, De Capo Press, 2013. 

McCullough, David John Adams, Simon & Schuster, 2001. 

McDonald, Forrest, The Presidency of George WashingtonUniv of Kansas Press, 1974.

Meacham, Jon Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power, Random House, 2012.

Miller, John C. Alexander Hamilton and the Growth of the New Nation, Routledge, 2017.

Murphy, Jim An American Plague: The True and Terrifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793, Clarion Books, 2003.

O'Brien, Coner C. The Long Affair: Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution, 1785-1800, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1996.

Powell, J.H. Bring out your dead; the great plague of yellow fever in Philadelphia in 1793, Univ. of Pa. Press, 1949. 

Sears, Louis M. George Washington and the French Revolution, Wayne State Univ. Press, 1960.

Spero, Patrick The Scientist Turned Spy: André Michaux, Thomas Jefferson, and the Conspiracy of 1793, Univ of Va Press, 2024.

Staloff, Darren Hamilton, Adams, Jefferson: The Politics of Enlightenment and the American FoundingHill and Wang, 2005.

Unger, Harlow G. "Mr. President": George Washington and the Making of the Nation's Highest Office, Da Capo Press, 2013.

Vaughan, Harold C. The Citizen Genêt affair, 1793; a chapter in the formation of American foreign policy, New York: F. Watts, 1970 (borrow on Achive.org

Watson, Robert P. America's First Plague: The Deadly 1793 Epidemic that Crippled a Young Nation, Rowman & Littlefield, 2023. 

Winik, Jay The Great Upheaval: America and the Birth of the Modern World, 1788-1800, Harper Collins, 2007.

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.


Sunday, March 22, 2026

ARP381 Citizen Genêt Affair

Back in Episode 363, we covered the beginning of the French Revolution, which began in 1789.  Over the next few years, the United States, and most of Europe, watched with interest as France became more and more radical.  

France Goes to War

The so-called reign of terror had not yet begun in France, although thousands had already died in street violence and executions.  In 1792, even Lafayette had been declared an enemy of France.  He tried to flee to America but was taken prisoner by the Austrians.

Citizen Genet
I cannot go though all the details here, but in December of 1792, French officials put King Louis on trial for treason.  They found him guilty, and on January 21, 1793, led the former monarch to the guillotine and separated his head from his body.

The French revolutionary government's execution of their sovereign was the final straw for Britain, which recalled its diplomats.  French leaders had announced their intention to spread the revolution to all of Europe.  France invaded Belgium, which at that time had been part of Austria.  Both Austria and Prussia had gone to war with France in early 1792. The British Navy blockaded French ports.  On February 1, France declared war on both Britain and the Netherlands.  A few weeks later, France also went to war with Spain.

The French Republic was at war with most of the rest of Europe.  Meanwhile the US simply watched events unfold.  The 1778 treaty that the US signed with France obligated either party to help the other in time of war.  But everyone knew that really meant France was helping the US.  President Washington maintained a neutral stance, but as the European war was building, there would be increased pressure for the US to assist its ally.  There was some debate in America as to whether the treaty even applied any more.  After all, the treaty had been made with King Louis, the guy the current government had  just killed.  But the real debate was over whether to support this revolution against monarchy, just as the US had done, or whether to stay out of European wars altogether.

Democratic-Republicans, led by Jefferson, who had been the ambassador to France when the Revolution began, saw France’s fight with Europe as an effort to spread liberty, opposed by the old-world forces of monarchy.  The Federalists, led by men such as Hamilton, saw the French Revolution bringing anarchy and violence that the US needed to avoid.

Even before France went to war with most of Europe, there were Americans who were willing to get involved. George Rogers Clark was corresponding with French officials in the fall of 1792, discussing plans to cooperate in an effort to seize the Mississippi Valley from Spain. French officials saw this as a way to recover their Louisiana Territory.  Clark and his fellow frontiersmen saw it as an opportunity to open up the Mississippi River for trade.  French leaders also made plans to raise American volunteers to help them recover Quebec from the British and the Floridas from Spain.  Even if none of these efforts succeeded, they would at least force France’s enemies to send resources to America that could not be used in the European war against France.

American Relations

The American Minister in France was no fan of the Revolution. Gouverneur Morris had gone to France in 1789 as a private citizen.  He mostly spent his time trying to make commercial deals that would make him rich by helping wealthy Europeans buy land in America.  

In 1790, President Washington asked him, as long as he was there, if he could go to Britain to try to push the government on its compliance with the peace treaty that ended the war.  Specifically, Americans wanted to be paid for the slaves and other property that the British Army took with them at the end of the war.  They also wanted Britain to abandon its outposts in the Northwest Territory, outposts that were being used to stir up Indians against western settlements.  Morris found British officials completely uninterested in doing anything and eventually returned to France.  He bounced back and forth between Britain and France until 1792, when Washington asked him to serve as Ambassador to France.  At the time, the revolution had been going on for several years.  The king was essentially a prisoner, but still the titular leader of the country. The Girondins were running the government. They believed in a republic. They were more radical than folks like Lafayette, who supported a constitutional monarchy, but were relatively moderate compared to other factions in the convention.

After the king’s execution at the beginning of 1793, the Girondins were replaced by the more radical Jacobins. This was when most of Europe went to war with France.  Despite all that, Morris presented his credentials to the new government, indicating that the United States would recognize the French Republic.  This was not Morris’ idea.  Washington, urged by Jefferson and overruling Hamilton’s objections, had sent orders that Morris must present his credentials to the new French government. 

Morris complied, but personally, he was increasingly horrified by the radicalism of the French Revolution.  Many American supporters of the revolution called him a monarchist.  Jefferson, who still supported the revolution, grew increasingly frustrated with Morris’ reports, which evinced an increasing hostility toward the revolution. Despite this division, Morris remained as Ambassador.  The US didn’t seem interested in replacing him with anyone else.

Morris had gotten the job originally because America had not had an Ambassador to France since Thomas Jefferson had left in 1789.  That's when he returned to America and received appointment as Secretary of State.  The French Ambassador to the US had also been recalled in 1789 since he was a holdover from King Louis’ ministry.  

France sent a new ambassador to the US in 1791.  Jean Baptiste, chevalier de Ternant, was considered a moderate choice.  Ternant had served as a volunteer officer in the Continental Army and was already well acquainted with many of the American leaders.  But he was also an appointment of a much more moderate French Government.  In 1793, France recalled Ternant.

America was still unsure how to react to all of this. Jefferson still believed it was critical to the world that the French Revolution succeed, but even he realized that the United States did not have the resources to enter a European War with its old ally.  On April 19, 1793, cabinet members discussed the issue. Hamilton insisted that the United States remain neutral and that Americans not take any action that would interfere with the war between France and Britain.  Jefferson agreed with a formally neutral stance, but still thought there were things they could do to benefit France. Just as a "neutral" France had given a wink and a not to American activities in France, even before France went to war with Britain. 

Both Jefferson and Hamilton represented their parties and regions in these matters.  New England and New York had profitable trade with Britain.  Siding with France would cost them dearly as trade would end, and the British navy would capture their merchant vessels.  As a result, most northern representatives, which tended to band together under Hamilton’s Federalists, wanted to keep out of this war entirely and keep trading with Britain. Southern states tended to support the idea of a free French Republic and were willing to provide support to their old ally.  These Democratic-Republicans would not be harmed as much by the loss of British trade and were more amenable to the alliance with France.

In April, Washington agreed with Hamilton that the US needed to issue a proclamation of neutrality.  Jefferson objected for several reasons, not the least of which was that Congress should make this decision.  But Congress was not in session and the country needed an announced policy now.  

Citizen Genêt

Around the same time that Washington issued his proclamation of neutrality in April of 1793, a new Ambassador from France landed in America.  Edmund Charles Genêt arrived in Charleston, South Carolina.

Genêt was only thirty years old.  Although he had received his appointment under the Girondin government, he was a radical republican.  His father had worked as an interpreter in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs under King Louis.  While that was the official position, the elder Genêt spent a great deal of time collecting intelligence for agents of the king, including Vergennes.  This made him a valuable official with access to the highest positions of power.

As a young man, Genêt, a commoner, was able to mix with nobility and had visited the royal court at Versailles.  His sister had become lady-in-waiting to Queen Marie Antoinette.  

When his father died in 1781, eighteen year old Edmund took over his position in the ministry.  He was not as impressive as his father had been in collecting intelligence.  After he managed to miss the secret treaty that the Americans worked out with Britain in 1782 to end the war, he got pushed aside.

Thanks to his connections at court, particularly his sister who had the ear of the Queen, he obtained a new position at Court of Catherine the Great in Russia, where he regularly butted heads with the monarchist French Ambassador. His radical views got him thrown out of Russia.  He returned to Paris as a hero of the revolution.  His foreign policy experience combined with his revolutionary fervor allowed him a choice of diplomatic posts.  He chose America.

Genêt’s instructions included establishing a new commercial treaty with America to provide much needed supplies.  He was also supposed to try to secure advance repayment of America’s war debt to France.  Also, France wanted the US to comply with the 1778 treaty of amity and commerce, which gave France the right to fit out privateers in American ports and bring captured prizes into port for condemnation and sale.

These should not have been controversial.  After all, France had granted the Americans the same privileges in French ports during the Revolutionary War, and openly after France had gone to war with Britain. 

Genêt also received secret orders.  Officials hoped that he could enlist an army of both American citizens and Native Americans to build up an army that would launch invasions into British Canada as well as Spanish Louisiana and Florida.  If the US government failed to go along with these plans, he was authorized to foment revolution in America, topple the Washington administration, and install a French puppet state. Genêt brought with him 250 blank letters of marque, with plans to unleash a privateers army from US ports against British shipping.

These secret instructions made clear that French officials had no respect for Americans.  Part of the instructions read “Americans are like children. They are especially childish in politics, indeed very much like spoiled children—always rather difficult to manage. . . . The man who succeeds in managing them will be able to exercise that mastery for a long time.”  They were aware that President Washington would not go along with the French plans They did, however, believe that most of Congress would get on board with invasions of Canada, Louisiana, and Florida

Arrival in America

Genêt’s decision to land in Charleston was intentional.  He knew that the United States was divided, but that support for France was strongest in the south.  After his landing on April 8, he remained there for at least ten days, mingling with Charleston society and encouraging American support for French liberty.  As Ambassador, he should have landed in Philadelphia first and presented his credentials.  But Genêt believed he needed to get the support of the people before the government would support him.  Charleston was the largest city in the south, where support for the French Revolution was the strongest. 

The Revolutionary leaders in France had banned the use of titles.  Even Monsieur was considered counter-revolutionary.  Everyone greeted one another as “citizen.”  Genêt carried that tradition to America, and asked to be called simply “Citizen Genêt.”

In Charleston, Genêt commissioned four American ships to act as privateers. These ships had American crews, but would sail forth and attack British shipping.  If they brought back prizes, they were to ignore American officials and apply to the French Consul in Charleston for disposal of the prizes.  Genêt also began trying to recruit American volunteers in Charleston to arrange for a military invasion of East Florida.

Having set things in motion, Genêt began to travel north.  When he did leave Charleston, he did not take a ship, as would have been the normal mode of travel.  Instead, he purchased horses and coaches, and rode overland, stopping at every town and village along the way to drum up support for France.  He was celebrated along the way.  South Carolina Governor William Moultrie, who supported Genêt’s mission, personally escorted Genêt as far as Camden.  When Genêt entered any town, he would have his agents precede him.  They would ring church bells and fire cannons to bring crowds out into the streets.  They would provide barrels of free rum to keep the locals happy.  By the time Genêt arrived, there would be cheering crowds to greet him.  These receptions convinced Genêt that the people were on his side.

Genêt received some words of warning.  He stopped at the plantation of Ralph Izard in South Carolina. Izard warned him that the Administration was not likely going to enter a war on behalf of France, and that it likely would not honor the terms of the 1778 treaty.  Genêt also met with the Governor Henry Lee when he arrived in Virginia.  The man known as Light Horse Harry from the Revolution, provided a great reception.  Lee, a southern Federalist, made clear to Genêt that the US was determined to remain neutral.  Genêt pushed back, arguing that the two countries were tied in a fight for liberty, and that if the forces of monarchy defeated France, they would come for the US next.

It took nearly a month for Genêt to reach the nation’s capital, as had been the case in smaller towns, the people of Philadelphia turned out as if they were greeting a conquering hero.  In order to emphasize his republican credentials, Genêt exited his coach before arriving in Philadelphia, and caught a public coach into town.  By doing this, he bypassed a reception committee that consisted of about five hundred carriages.  When locals discovered his arrival he was once again celebrated with the ringing of church bells and the firing of cannons.  Some estimates say that as many as 10,000 people turned out in the streets to cheer the new representative of France.

The crowd serenaded him at his hotel by singing La Marseillaise and other songs of the French Revolution.  A welcome committee threw him a lavish dinner which included Governor Mifflin and one hundred other prominent citizens from the city.  Notably though, neither President Washington nor any of his cabinet attended the banquet.  

Genêt enjoyed the celebrations in town for two days before arranging a meeting with the president. The public celebrations had been enthusiastic. His meeting with the president was not.  The meeting took place at the executive mansion.  Members of the cabinet were also present.  Jefferson had escorted Genêt to the office.  Hamilton and Knox were already there. Historians have described the meeting as having an air of hostility and unmistakable iciness.  

Washington received Genêt’s credentials, officially recognizing the French Republic as the sovereign government of France.  Genêt could not help but notice the two large portraits of King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette that hung in the president’s house.  He took offense at the honored display of these enemies of the French Revolution.  Washington offered no apology for honoring the king who made the American Revolution a success.

Washington assured Genêt that the 1778 treaty remained in force and would be honored, but that the US would not involve itself in offensive wars that France had started.  Genêt requested that the US provide him payment of the outstanding debt of nearly $2.5 million that the US still owed France.  He also requested the loan of canons from the US Department of War.  Hamilton and Knox knew that he planned to use these resources for organized armies in America to invade Canada, Louisiana, and Florida.  They absolutely refused to cooperate.

Starting a War

Genêt saw this not as neutrality but as the United States effectively working to further the British war against France.  British ships regularly stopped American merchant vessels at sea and confiscated French goods, yet the US would not allow French ships to confiscate British goods.

Genêt realized the administration would not be any help.  He opted to bypass the government and simply continue efforts on his own to bring the war against Britain and Spain to America.

He continued to outfit privateers, including one ship in Philadelphia, in direct defiance of the President.  Ultimately, he would commission twelve privateers which would go on to capture eighty British ships.  French consuls in US ports condemned and sold these prizes, raising money for Genêt.

The Ambassador used that money, and also drawing on credit against US debt to France, to begin raising his armies.  He granted George Rogers Clark a commission as a major general in his Legion of Revolution.  Clark was tasked with raising an army that would capture New Orleans and open the Mississippi River.  This was something the western settlements had been demanding from the US government for years, and this opportunity to do so would attract many volunteers for an army.

Genêt also granted a commission to Elijah Clarke, who had served under Andrew Pickens in Georgia during the Revolutionary War.  Clarke was tasked with invading East Florida. Genêt believed he could recruit an army of 5000 volunteers to take the Spanish colony. There were few Spanish forces in that region, only a few hundred at St. Augustine.  Many of the other non-Indians in Florida at that time were settlers from Georgia. Genêt also made plans to recruit agents and arm volunteers in French-speaking Canada in order to provoke a revolution there against British rule.

It quickly became clear that Genêt was bent on bringing the European war to America.  Conducting acts of war against British and Spanish territories in America would inevitably force those countries to declare war against the United States.

Genêt openly defied the Washington Administration, taking out newspaper ads to recruit volunteers for his privateers.  He used the democratic societies around the country to spread pro-French propaganda and identify potential military recruits.  He even hired defense attorneys for men who were being prosecuted for serving on his privateer ships.

When administration officials confronted Genêt about his actions, he simply refused to back down. Genêt believed that he had to rekindle the flame of liberty in America and that they would overcome their fears of Britain.  Genêt also reported to officials in France that he thought Hamilton was acting as a British agent, but that he could probably be bought off.

Next week, the Washington Administration must end this push toward a new war, while also dealing with a deadly epidemic that strikes Philadelphia.

 - - -

Next Episode 382 Yellow Fever & Genet's Downfall (coming soon)

Previous Episode 380 Fugitive Slave Act of 1793

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Further Reading

Websites

The Citizen Genêt Affair, 1793–1794 https://history.state.gov/milestones/1784-1800/citizen-Genêt

Genêt Affair https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/Genêt-affair

“John Jay and the Genêt Affair [Editorial Note],” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jay/01-05-02-0271

SHERIDAN, EUGENE R. “The Recall of Edmond Charles Genêt: A Study in Transatlantic Politics and Diplomacy.” Diplomatic History, vol. 18, no. 4, 1994, pp. 463–88. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/24912307

Ammon, Harry. “The Genêt Mission and the Development of American Political Parties.” The Journal of American History, vol. 52, no. 4, 1966, pp. 725–41. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1894343 

Ammon, Harry. “Agricola versus Aristides: James Monroe, John Marshall, and the Genêt Affair in Virginia.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 74, no. 3, 1966, pp. 312–20. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4247222

Henderson, Archibald. “Isaac Shelby and the Genet Mission.” The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, vol. 6, no. 4, 1920, pp. 451–69. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1886469

Neutrality Proclamation of 1793 https://www.mountvernon.org/education/primary-source-collections/primary-source-collections/article/neutrality-proclamation-of-1793

“Edmond Charles Genêt to Alexander Hamilton, 19 July 1793,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Hamilton/01-15-02-0089

“Henry Lee to George Washington, 14 June 1793,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-13-02-0059

Free eBooks
(from archive.org unless noted)

A message of the President of the United States to Congress relative to France and Great Britain, Philadelphia: Childs and Swaine, 1793. 

The Mangourit Correspondence in Respect to Genet's Projected Attack Upon the Floridas, 1793-94 [Google Books]. 

Bassett, John Spenser The Federalist System, 1789-1801, New York: Harper & Bros, 1906. 

Genêt, George Clinton Washington, Jefferson, and "Citizen" Genêt, 1793, New York: 1899. 

Michaux, André Journal of André Michaux, 1793-1796, Cleveland: A.H. Clark Co. 1904. 

Minnigerode, Meade Jefferson Friend of France 1793: The Career of Edmond Charles Genêt 1763-1834, GP Putnam’s Sons, 1928.

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Ammon, Harry The Genet Mission, W.W. Norton & Co. 1973. 

Burstein, Andrew and Nancy Isenberg Madison and Jefferson, Random House, 2010

Chernow, Ron Alexander Hamilton, Penguin Press, 2004. 

Chernow, Ron Washington, A Life, Penguin Press, 2010. 

Chervinsky, Lindsay M. The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution, Belknap Press, 2020. 

Dillon, Mark. C. The First Chief Justice: John Jay and the Struggle of a New Nation, State Univ. of New York Press, 2022.

Dugatkin, Lee A. The Botanist and Citizen Genêt: André Michaux’s 1793 Expedition to the Pacific and America’s First Diplomatic Crisis, Butler Books, 2025. 

Elkins, Stanley M. and Eric McKitrick, The Age of Federalism: The Early American Republic, 1788–1800, Oxford Univ. Press, 1993 (borrow on archive.org). 

Ellis, Joseph J. His Excellency. George Washington, Alfred A. Knopf, 2005. 

Ellis, Joseph J. Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, Knopf, 2000.

Ferling, John Jefferson and Hamilton: The Rivalry That Forged a Nation Hardcover, Bloomsbury Press, 2013. 

Heidler, David S. & Jeanne T. Washington's Circle: The Creation of the President, Random House, 2015. 

Hunger, Harlow Giles Mr. President: George Washington and the Making of the Nation's Highest Office, De Capo Press, 2013. 

McCullough, David John Adams, Simon & Schuster, 2001. 

McDonald, Forrest, The Presidency of George Washington, Univ of Kansas Press, 1974.

Meacham, Jon Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power, Random House, 2012

O'Brien, Coner C. The Long Affair: Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution, 1785-1800, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1996.

Sears, Louis M. George Washington and the French Revolution, Wayne State Univ. Press, 1960.

Spero, Patrick The Scientist Turned Spy: André Michaux, Thomas Jefferson, and the Conspiracy of 1793, Univ of Va Press, 2024.

Staloff, Darren Hamilton, Adams, Jefferson: The Politics of Enlightenment and the American Founding, Hill and Wang, 2005.

Unger, Harlow G. "Mr. President": George Washington and the Making of the Nation's Highest Office, Da Capo Press, 2013.

Vaughan, Harold C. The Citizen Genêt affair, 1793; a chapter in the formation of American foreign policy, New York: F. Watts, 1970 (borrow on Achive.org

Winik, Jay The Great Upheaval: America and the Birth of the Modern World, 1788-1800, Harper Collins, 2007.

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.