Edmond-Charles Genêt
Edmond-Charles Genêt, a French diplomat, nearly brought the United States back into war with Great Britain and other enemies of Revolutionary France.
Engraved portrait of Edmond Charles Edouard Genet by Gille-Louis Chretien after Jean Fouquet, 1793; image courtesy Albany Institute of History and Art; Public Domain.
Edmond-Charles Genêt came to the United States in 1793 as French envoy during Jefferson's term as secretary of state. Genet attempted to draw the United States into aggressions on land and sea, against Spain and Holland.
His disregard for the authority of the United States government, particularly Washington's power as president, led Jefferson to complain to James Madison:
Never, in my opinion, was so calamitous an appointment made, as that of the present minister of F[rance] here. Hotheaded, all imagination, no judgment, passionate, disrespectful and even indecent towards the P[resident] in his written as well as verbal communications .... He renders my position immensely difficult.1
After suffering through Genet's many diplomatic and political indiscretions, Jefferson, Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Henry Knox (Washington's Secretary of War) agreed that to maintain peace between the United States and France, Genet's appointment must be recalled. Jefferson particularly feared that Genet's threatened appeals to the people of the United States would "enlarge the circle of those disaffected to his country."2 Jefferson summarized the minister's actions in his report to the French government:
When the government forbids their citizens to arm and engage in the war, he undertakes to arm and engage them. When they forbid vessels to be fitted in their ports for cruising on nations with whom they are at peace, he commissions them to fit and cruise. When they forbid an unceded jurisdiction to be exercised within their territory by foreign agents, he undertakes to uphold that exercise and to avow it openly.3
Genet was removed from his post in the same year in which he began.4 He remained in the United States and became an American citizen.
- Text from Stein, Worlds, 205
Footnotes
- Jefferson to Madison, July 7, 1793, in PTJ, 26:444. Transcription available at Founders Online.
- Jefferson to James Monroe, June 28, 1793, in PTJ, 26:393. Transcription available at Founders Online.
- Jefferson to Gouverneur Morris, August 16, 1793, in PTJ, 26:707. Transcription available at Founders Online.
- Malone, Jefferson, 3:128-30.