Treaty of Alliance (1778)

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American Revolutionary War

Clockwise from top left: Battle of Bunker Hill, Death of Montgomery at Quebec, Battle of Cowpens, "Moonlight Battle"
Date 1775–1783
Location Eastern North America (present-day United States and Canada), Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean Sea, Caribbean Sea
Result Treaty of Paris and the establishment of the United States of America
Territorial
changes
Britain recognizes independence of the United States, cedes East Florida, West Florida, and Minorca to Spain and Tobago to France
Combatants
American Patriots
France
Spanish Empire
Dutch Republic
Oneida and Tuscarora tribes
Polish volunteers
Prussian volunteers
Kingdom of Great Britain
Iroquois Confederacy
Hessian mercenaries
Loyalists
Commanders
George Washington
Nathanael Greene
Gilbert de La Fayette
Comte de Rochambeau
Bernardo de Gálvez
Tadeusz Kościuszko
Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben
King George III
Sir William Howe
Sir Henry Clinton
Lord Cornwallis
John Burgoyne
Johann Rall
Joseph Brant
(more commanders)

The Franco-American Alliance (also called the Treaty of Alliance) was a pact between France and the Second Continental Congress, representing the United States government, signed in Paris by French and U.S. officials in May 1778. It stated that the two countries agreed to aid each other into the indefinite future in the event of British attack. Further, neither country would make amends with London until the independence of the Thirteen Colonies was recognized. The treaty also stated that neither the Americans nor the French would conclude treaties with other nations unless diplomats from both countries were present during negotiations. It was mutually beneficial for only five years, from the years 1778 to 1783 and was abrogated late in the year 1799 in the aftermath of "the XYZ Affair".

As the American Revolutionary War was already underway, the treaty's primary purpose was to formally provide for French participation in the war. The treaty came about following the success of Congressional forces in the Battle of Saratoga (New York), when French leaders were convinced that the Americans could indeed prevail against their former British rulers. It engaged France directly in the conflict and produced a tremendous advantage, both financial and psychological, for the Americans. This would later prove decisive at the final major battle, the siege of Yorktown, when the presence of both French land and naval forces in the Continental Army convinced the British General, Cornwallis, that a continuation of his campaign was hopeless. Scholars generally agree that the Alliance was in large part responsible for the severely impoverished French economy during the reign of Louis XVI Bourbon and therefore, provides an explanation for the raucous popular unrest which generated the Revolution of 1789.

  • Hoffman, Ronald; Albert, Peter J., eds. Diplomacy and Revolution : the Franco-American Alliance of 1778 (Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia, 1981); [ISBN 0-8139-0864-7].
  • Ross, Maurice. Louis XVI, Forgotten Founding Father, with a survey of the Franco-American Alliance of the Revolutionary period (New York: Vantage Press, 1976); [ISBN 0-533-02333-5].
  • Corwin, Edward Samuel. French Policy and the American Alliance of 1778 (New York: B. Franklin, 1970).


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