marquis de Lafayette
| "If
the liberties of the American people are ever destroyed, they
will fall by the hands of the clergy." - Lafayette |
|

|
- Born
in France to a wealthy noble family
- Father
was killed by British in Battle of Minden
- Joined
Freemasons at age 17
- Joined
the American Revolution at age 19
- Tactical
skill and French alliances helped clinch victory at Yorktown
|
Born
into an ancient family of French warriors, the Marquis de Lafayette
inherited an inclination for gallant adventures along with a vast
estate. When he time came to prove his mettle, it was not at the
service of France, but the rebellious American colony improvising
a new government an ocean way. Just 19 years old and speaking
only a few words of English when he presented himself in Philadelphia
in 1776, his inauspicious entry into merican history belied the
monumental effect of his passion, instinctive skill, and connections.
A
Noble Birth
At
his birth in 1757, the Marquis de Lafayette was baptized Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert
du Motier de La Fayette, a mantle of monikers meant to confer
the protection of like-named saints. The family was one of France's
oldest, its generations seeded by soldiers who took up swords
in battles of legend, in the crusades and alongside Joan of Arc.
In 1759, British forces killed his father in the Battle of Minden.
At just 2 years old, the death of his father set his first toddler's
step on the path to America, a quest fueled by dual desires for
vengeance and revolutionary ideals.
Newly
widowed, his mother moved to Paris, leaving her son in the care
of his grandmother, whose generous and fair-minded treatment of
her peasants imprinted the forming character of the young Lafayette.
After her altruistic example, America's revolutionary principles
were natural conclusions.
Masonic
Influences
In 1775, Lafayette's admission to the Masonic Military Lodge acquainted
him with America's pursuit of liberty. The colonists' struggle
was the catalyst that led him to cast his fortunes, both figurative
and literal, with the Americans. Their noble pursuit, coupled
with lingering French resentment of the British after the Seven
Years War, made eager volunteers of many Frenchmen, the Marquis
de Lafayette among their number.
Joining
the Revolution
Colonial
Williamsburg's Mark Schneider interprets Lafayette's instinct
for strategy.
After purchasing the ship La Victoire and setting a course to
America, Lafayette learned his first English phrases during his
54 days at sea. His June, 1777 landfall in South Carolina brought
him within several days' ride of his grail: the twin opportunity
to exact a pound of flesh from the British, and to satisfy his
DNA's demand that he raise his sword before the oppressor of his
age.
Congress
declined his services when Lafayette presented himself in Philadelphia,
but his earnestness, and his assurance that he would serve at
his own expense, won him the rank of major general. He quickly
fell into the company of George Washington, and the two formed
a bond of will and philosophy so strong that Washington came to
regard Lafayette as his son, a relationship reciprocated by the
young Frenchman.
The
Battle of Yorktown
On a visit to France in 1779, Lafayette won formal French support
for the American cause, a diplomatic coup that vivified Revolutionary
forces. Lafayette's tactical cunning and fearlessness in battle
saved the Revolution many times, but his French connections were
played to their greatest advantage at the 1781 Battle of Yorktown.
Lafayette cornered Britain's Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown in a
triangular trap comprised of French reinforcements to the west,
American troops to the east, and the York River to the north.
After a siege of several days, Cornwallis capitulated on October
19, 1781. This fatal blow to British forces ensured the American
Revolution was all but won.
Source:
http://www.history.org/Almanack/people/bios/biolafayette.cfm