11 April 1803 A.D. France Offers to Sell Louisiana Territory to the US for $11.250 Million—Napoleon: “The sale assures forever the power of the United States…”
11 April 1803 A.D. France Offers to Sell Louisiana Territory to the US
for $11.250 Million—Napoleon: “The sale assures forever the power of the
United States…”
Editors. “1803 – In one of the great surprises in diplomatic history, French Foreign
Minister Charles Maurice de Talleyrand makes an offer to sell all of Louisiana
Territory to the United States.” This Day in U.S. Military
History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/04/11/april-11/. Accessed 10 Apr 2015.
1803 – In one of the great surprises in
diplomatic history, French Foreign Minister Charles Maurice de Talleyrand makes
an offer to sell all of Louisiana Territory to the United States.
Talleyrand was no fool. As the foreign minister to French Emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte, he was one of the most powerful men in the world. Three years
earlier, Talleyrand had convinced Napoleon that he could create a new French
Empire in North America. The French had long had a tenuous claim to the vast
area west of the Mississippi River known as Louisiana Territory. In 1800,
Napoleon secretly signed a treaty with Spain that officially gave France full
control of the territory. Then he began to prepare France’s mighty army to
occupy New Orleans and bolster French dominion. When President Thomas Jefferson
learned of Napoleon’s plans in 1802, he was understandably alarmed. Jefferson
had long hoped the U.S. would expand westward beyond the Mississippi, but the
young American republic was in no position militarily to challenge France for
the territory. Jefferson hoped that his minister in France, Robert Livingston,
might at least be able to negotiate an agreement whereby Napoleon would give
the U.S. control of New Orleans, the gateway to the Mississippi River. At
first, the situation looked bleak because Livingston’s initial attempts at
reaching a diplomatic agreement failed. In early 1803, Jefferson sent his young
Virginia friend James Monroe to Paris to assist Livingston. Fortunately for the
U.S., by that time Napoleon’s situation in Europe had changed for the worse. War
between France and Great Britain was imminent and Napoleon could no longer
spare the military resources needed to secure control of Louisiana Territory.
Realizing that the powerful British navy would probably take the territory by
force, Napoleon reasoned it would be better to sell Louisiana to the Americans
than have it fall into the hands of his enemy. After months of having
fruitlessly negotiated over the fate of New Orleans, Livingston again met with
Talleyrand on this day in 1803. To Livingston’s immense surprise, this time the
cagey French minister coolly asked, “What will you give for the whole?” He
meant not the whole of New Orleans, but the whole of Louisiana Territory.
Quickly recognizing that this was an offer of potentially immense significance for
the U.S., Livingston and Monroe began to discuss France’s proposed cost for the
territory. Several weeks later, on April 30, 1803, the American emissaries
signed a treaty with France for a purchase of the vast territory for
$11,250,000. A little more than two weeks later, Great Britain declared war on
France. With the sale of the Louisiana Territory, Napoleon abandoned his dreams
of a North American empire, but he also achieved a goal that he thought more
important. “The sale [of Louisiana] assures forever the power of the United
States,” Napoleon later wrote, “and I have given England a rival who, sooner or
later, will humble her pride.”
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