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Anti-French sentiment in the United States or Francophobia is characterized by disapproval of many or all things French. It often takes the form of moral censure ("treacherous" or "cowardly") corresponding with tensions in Franco-U.S. relations. In its extreme form it is characterized by undertones of chauvinism, nationalism, and jingoism.
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"Francophobia" in the U.S. reverses the earlier pattern of a "Francophilia." In patriotic American contexts, France was characterized as the first ally of the American revolutionaries. When the Marquis de Lafayette toured the United States in ( 1824- 1825), he was accorded a hero's welcome as the first American celebrity, and numerous new settlements were named Lafayette, Fayette and FayettevilleFayetteville is the name of several places in the United States of America. These places are generally so named in honor of the Marquis de la Fayette (sometimes referred to as the Marquis de Lafayette , French hero of the American Revolution. There are al.
Harvard UniversityHarvard University is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA and a member of the Ivy League. It was founded on September 8, 1636 by a vote of the Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, making it the oldest post-secondary s professor and former U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury A. Piatt Andrew summed up this Francophile tradition, when he wrote:By the time of George WashingtonGeorge Washington ( February 22, 1732— December 14, 1799), also called Father of his Country 1 was an American general and Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War ( 1775 1783) and later the first President of the Unite's presidency, however, an ideological split was already emerging between Francophobe and Francophile sentiment, with John AdamsJohn Adams ( October 30, 1735 July 4, 1826) was the first ( 1789- 1797) Vice President of the United States, and the second ( 1797- 1801) President of the United States. His son, John Quincy Adams, was the sixth President of the United States ( 1825- 1829, Alexander HamiltonAlexander Hamilton ( January 11, 1755 or 1757 1 July 12, 1804) was an American statesman, journalist, and lawyer. He is credited as being America's greatest constitutional lawyer. As the principal author of the Federalist Papers, he successfully defended and their fellow FederalistThe term federalist can refer to different ideologies, depending on the locale. It usually has a link, close or not, to the concept of federalism. In Europe, especially in places like Switzerland, a federalist is a proponent of regional autonomy within as taking a skeptical view of France, even as Thomas Jefferson and other Democratic-Republicans urged closer ties. In the 1790s, the French, under a new post-revolutionary government, accused the United States of collaborating with the English and proceeded to impound UK-bound US merchant ships. Attempts at diplomacy lead to the 1797 XYZ Affair in which three French agents approached American delegates requesting a tribute of $250,000. This lead to a state of Quasi-War, an undeclared war fought entirely at sea between the United States and France from 1798 to 1801. Relations improved after the rise of Napoleon, culminating when Thomas Jefferson agreed to the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.
With the influx of Irish immigrants in the 1840s and the rise of a populist sub-culture hostile to Britain, France became a rallying-point, though an ambivalent one, for its republicanism was tarnished. American cultured classes embraced French styles and luxuries after the Civil War: Americans trained as architects in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, French haute cuisine reigned at elite American tables, and upper class women in the U.S. followed Parisian clothing fashions. Following World War I, a generation of rich American expatriates and bohemians settled in Paris. The stock-market crash and the Great Depression put a damper on international lifestyles, and a change in temper of internal French politics during the interbellum sent many politically fastidious Americans home.
The First World War had also brought the British and the Americans closer together; and a millenium old British reservation against the French was easily conducted by the common language. Reservations against the function of the French parliamentarism, against Catholicism and most of all against a clearly perceived French arrogance, that in the eyes of many English speakers greatly exaggerated France's role in the ending of the World War, and in world politics after that, weakened the emotional ties between American Francophiles and the French. Additionally, French attitudes against Weimar Germany, combining fear and a wish for dominance, were by many seen as the major obstacle for a lasting European peace, as it mobilized the Germans into revanchism and militarism.