Convention between the French Republic and the United States of America, 1800.

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Convention between the French Republic and the United States of America, 1800.

A document drawn up between representatives of France and the United States in order to settle differences between the two countries. France was represented by Joseph Bonaparte, Charles Pierre Claret Fleurieu, and Kerre Louis Roederer. Chief Justice of the United States, Oliver Ellsworth, William Richardson Davie, and William Vans Murray were the delegates from the United States. Handwritten copy.

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SNAC Resource ID: 7968432

Related Entities

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France

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In 1782 the Continental Congress directed Benjamin Franklin, the American minister to France, to negotiate a convention concerning the exchange of consuls. The convention was signed by Franklin and the French foreign minister, the comte de Vergennes, on 29 July 1784, but rejected by Congress because it did not adhere to the scheme Congress had established. Congress directed Franklin's successor, Thomas Jefferson, to renegotiate, and on 14 November 1788 he and Vergennes's successor, the comte de ...

Convention of Mortefontaine 1800.

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United States 1797-1801.

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