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J. Hector St. John de Crèvecœur

Michel Guillaume Jean de Crèvecœur (French pronunciation: [miʃɛl ɡijom ʒɑ̃ kʁɛvkœʁ]; December 31, 1735 – November 12, 1813), naturalized in New York as John Hector St. John, was a French-American author, diplomat, and farmer.

J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur
Born(1735-12-31)December 31, 1735
Normandy, France
DiedNovember 12, 1813(1813-11-12) (aged 77)
Sarcelles, France
Other namesMichel Guillaume Jean de Crèvecoeur
OccupationWriter
Known forPro-American writings during the time of the American Revolution
SpouseMehitable Tippet

Biography edit

Crèvecœur was born on December 31, 1735, in Caen, Normandy, France, to the Comte and Comtesse de Crèvecœur (Count and Countess of Crèvecœur). In 1755 he migrated to New France in North America. There, he served in the French and Indian War as a cartographer in the French Colonial Militia, rising to the rank of lieutenant. Following the defeat of the French Army by the British in 1759, he moved to the Province of New York, where he took out citizenship, adopted the English-American name of John Hector St. John, and in 1770 married an American woman, Mehitable Tippet, the daughter of a New York merchant. He bought a sizable farm in the Greycourt area of Chester, NY, a small town in Orange County, New York. He named his farm "Pine Hill" and prospered as a farmer. He also traveled about, working as a surveyor.[1] He started writing about life in the American colonies and the emergence of an American society.

In 1779, during the American Revolution, St. John tried to leave the country to return to France because of the faltering health of his father. Accompanied by his son, he crossed British-American lines to enter British-occupied New York City, where he was imprisoned as an American spy for three months without a hearing. Eventually, he was able to sail for Britain, and was shipwrecked off the coast of Ireland.[1] From Britain, he sailed to France, where he was briefly reunited with his father. After spending some time recovering at the family estate, he visited Paris and the salon of Sophie d'Houdetot.[2]

Author edit

In 1782, in London, he published a volume of narrative essays entitled Letters from an American Farmer. The book quickly became the first literary success by an American author in Europe and turned Crèvecœur into a celebrated figure. He was the first writer to describe to Europeans – employing many American English terms – the life on the American frontier and to explore the concept of the American Dream, portraying American society as characterized by the principles of equal opportunity and self-determination. His work provided useful information and understanding of the "New World" that helped create an American identity in the minds of Europeans by describing an entire country rather than another regional colony. The writing celebrated American ingenuity and the uncomplicated lifestyle. It described the acceptance of religious diversity in a society being created from a variety of ethnic and cultural backgrounds. He applied the Latin maxim "Ubi panis ibi patria" (Where there is bread, there is my country) to early American settlers. He once praised the middle colonies for "fair cities, substantial villages, extensive fields...decent houses, good roads, orchards, meadows, and bridges, where an hundred years ago all was wild, woody, and uncultivated."

The original edition, published near the end of the American Revolutionary War, was rather selective in the letters that were included, omitting those that were negative or critical. Norman A. Plotkin argues "it was intended to serve the English Whig cause by fostering an atmosphere conducive to reconciliation."[3] The book excluded all but one of the letters written after the beginning of the war and also earlier ones that were more critical. Crèvecœur himself sympathized with the Whig cause. His wife's family remained loyal to the Crown and later fled to Nova Scotia. With regard to French politics, Crèvecœur was a liberal, a follower of the philosophes, and dedicated his book to Abbé Raynal, who he said "viewed these provinces of North America in their true light, as the asylum of freedom; as the cradle of future nations, and the refuge of distressed Europeans."[4] Plotkin notes that "extremists in the American colonies who violated this principle, incurred Crèvecœur's harshest criticism, although the severest of these criticisms were considered unsuitable for publication at the time."[5]

In 1883, his great-grandson, Robert de Crèvecoeur, published a biography[6] for which he used previously unpublished letters and manuscripts passed down by the family. Although it received little notice in France, its existence came to the attention of W. P. Trent of Columbia University, who in 1904 published a reprint of Letters of an American Farmer.[7] In 1916, Crèvecœur's first American biographer, Julia Post Mitchell,[8] who had access to all the manuscripts, was able to make a more balanced assessment, writing that Crèvecoeur addressed "problems in political economy which European governments were trying in vain to solve." He was "...illustrating his theories from American conditions," and was not just "...a garruluous apologist of American life."[9] The additional manuscripts were published in 1925.[10]

Diplomat edit

The success of his book in France had led to his being taken up by an influential circle, and he was appointed the French consul for New York, including the areas of New Jersey and Connecticut. Crèvecœur returned to New York City as the newly appointed French consul in November 1783. Anxious to be reunited with his family, he learned that his farm had been destroyed in an Indian raid, his wife was dead, and his two younger children missing. He stayed in the house of his friend William Seton,[11] who, as the last royal public notary for the city and province of New York, had helped to secure his release in 1780 from the British prison in the city. Principal of the import-export mercantile firm the William Seton Company, Seton helped Crevecoeur locate his children, who were safe and living with a family in Boston.[12] The following spring, he was able to reunite with his children. For most of the 1780s, Crèvecœur lived in New York City.

St. Peter's, New York edit

At that time, New York City was the national capital and most of the resident Catholics were connected to the diplomatic corps. Initially they met for services at the home of the Spanish consul. Their numbers increased with seafaring people, merchants, emigrants from the Spanish West Indies, and a few Acadians. They then rented space at Vauxhall Gardens, a garden and entertainment venue located along the North River on Greenwich Street between Warren and Chambers Streets.[13] In 1785, Portuguese consul Jose Roiz Silva, Spanish consul Tomas Stoughton and others sought to rent the vacant Exchange building and deemed Crevecoeur the best one to make the approach.

Although Crevecoeur was relatively indifferent to religion, he was sympathetic to the idea of liberty of conscience, and a friend of Lafayette. When the proposal was rejected, Crevecoeur was insulted and became very active in working for the establishment of the first Catholic church in the city. He later served as president of the first Board of Trustees of St. Peter's Church on Barclay Street.[13]

Later life edit

In 1784, he published a two-volume version of his Letters from an American Farmer, enlarged and completely rewritten in French. A three-volume version followed in 1787. Both his English and his French books were translated into several other European languages and widely disseminated throughout Europe. For many years, Crèvecœur was identified by European readers with his fictional narrator, James, the 'American farmer', and held in high esteem by readers and fellow-writers across Europe.

By the time he published another three-volume work in 1801, entitled Voyage dans la Haute-Pensylvanie et dans l'état de New-York, however, his fame had faded and the damages of the French Revolution and its aftermath had made people less interested in the United States. His book was ignored. An abbreviated German translation appeared the following year. An English translation was not published until 1964. Much of de Crevecoeur's best work has been published posthumously, most recently as More Letters from the American Farmer: An edition of the Essays in English Left Unpublished by Crèvecœur, edited by Dennis D. Moore (Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 1995).

Particularly concerned about the condition of slaves, he joined the Société des Amis des Noirs (Society of the Friends of the Blacks), founded in Paris.

Crèvecœur was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1789.[14]

In 1789, during a stay in France, he was trapped by the political upheaval that was quickly turning into the French Revolution. At risk as an aristocrat, he went into hiding, while secretly trying to gain passage to the United States. The necessary papers were finally delivered to him by the new American ambassador to France, James Monroe. At the end of his life Crèvecœur returned to France and settled permanently on land he inherited from his father. On November 12, 1813, he died in Sarcelles, Val d'Oise, France.

The town of St. Johnsbury, Vermont, is named after him, as suggested by Ethan Allen.

Primary works edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Moore, Andrew. "The American Farmer as French Diplomat", Journal of the Western Society for French History, Vol. 39, 2011
  2. ^ "Houdetot", Dictionnaire de Rousseau, (ed. Raymond Trousson and Frédéric S. Eigeldinger), Paris: Champion, 1996, p. 421
  3. ^ Plotkin 1964, p. 391.
  4. ^ Letters from an American Farmer, 1782, Dedication.
  5. ^ Plotkin 1964, p. 392.
  6. ^ Saint John de Crèvecoeur : sa vie et ses ouvrages (1735–1813), 1883 (in French)
  7. ^ Letters from an American Farmer, 1904, with a prefatory note by W. P. Trent and an introduction by Ludwig Lewisohn.
  8. ^ St Jean de Crèvecœur, New York, 1916. OCLC 5757565.
  9. ^ Quoted by Plotkin 1964, p. 404.
  10. ^ Saint-John de Crèvecœur, Sketches of Eighteenth Century America, More "Letters from an American Farmer", edited by Henri L. Bourdin, H. Gabriel, and Stanley T. Williams (New Haven, 1925).
  11. ^ De Courcy, Henry. Catholic Church in the United States, T.W. Strong, 1856, p. 354  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. ^ Mitchell, Julia Post. St. Jean de Crèvecoeur (New York: Columbia University Press, 1916)  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  13. ^ a b Meehan, Thomas F., "a Century of Catholic Laymen in New York", Messenger, 1908, p. 438  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  14. ^ "Michel G. St. J. de Crevecoeur". American Philosophical Society Member History. American Philosophical Society. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  • Guy Wilson Allen and Roger Asselineau, An American Farmer: The Life of St. John de Crevecoeur, New York: Viking Penguin, 1987

Selected criticism edit

  • Gay W. Allen, An American Farmer, New York: Penguin Books, 1987
  • David Eisermann: Crèvecoeur oder Die Erfindung Amerikas, Rheinbach-Merzbach: CMZ-Verlag, 1985
  • Thomas Hallock, From the Fallen Tree: Frontier Narratives, Environmental Politics, and the Roots of a National Pastoral, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2003
  • Daniel Patterson, ed. Early American Writers: A Biographical Encyclopedia, Westport: Greenwood Press, 2008. "J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur." Thomas Patchell. 96–104.
  • Norman A. Plotkin, "Saint-John de Crevecoeur Rediscovered: Critic or Paneygyrist?", French Historical Studies, vol. 3, no. 3 (Spring 1964), pp. 390–404. JSTOR 285950.
  • Paul P. Reuben. "Chapter 2: Early American Literature: 1700–1800 – St. Jean De Crevecoeur", PAL: Perspectives in American Literature – A Research and Reference Guide )
  • Alan Taylor, "The American Beginning: The Dark Side of Letters from an American Farmer," New Republic July 18, 2013

Primary sources edit

  • de Crevecoeur, J. Hector St. John. Letters From an American Farmer and Other Essays edited by Dennis D. Moore (Harvard University Press; 2012) 372 pages; combines an edition of the famous 1782 work with his other writings

External links edit

  • Works by J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about J. Hector St. John de Crèvecœur at Internet Archive
  • , American Studies, University of Virginia.
  • Saint John de Crèvecoeur : sa vie et ses ouvrages (1735–1813), 1883 biography (in French) by his great grandson Robert de Crèvecœur
  • J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur Papers. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.

hector, john, crèvecœur, other, uses, crèvecœur, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, october, 2019. For other uses see Crevecœur disambiguation This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Michel Guillaume Jean de Crevecœur French pronunciation miʃɛl ɡijom ʒɑ de kʁɛvkœʁ December 31 1735 November 12 1813 naturalized in New York as John Hector St John was a French American author diplomat and farmer J Hector St John de CrevecoeurBorn 1735 12 31 December 31 1735Normandy FranceDiedNovember 12 1813 1813 11 12 aged 77 Sarcelles FranceOther namesMichel Guillaume Jean de CrevecoeurOccupationWriterKnown forPro American writings during the time of the American RevolutionSpouseMehitable Tippet Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Author 1 2 Diplomat 1 2 1 St Peter s New York 1 3 Later life 2 Primary works 3 References 4 Selected criticism 5 Primary sources 6 External linksBiography editCrevecœur was born on December 31 1735 in Caen Normandy France to the Comte and Comtesse de Crevecœur Count and Countess of Crevecœur In 1755 he migrated to New France in North America There he served in the French and Indian War as a cartographer in the French Colonial Militia rising to the rank of lieutenant Following the defeat of the French Army by the British in 1759 he moved to the Province of New York where he took out citizenship adopted the English American name of John Hector St John and in 1770 married an American woman Mehitable Tippet the daughter of a New York merchant He bought a sizable farm in the Greycourt area of Chester NY a small town in Orange County New York He named his farm Pine Hill and prospered as a farmer He also traveled about working as a surveyor 1 He started writing about life in the American colonies and the emergence of an American society In 1779 during the American Revolution St John tried to leave the country to return to France because of the faltering health of his father Accompanied by his son he crossed British American lines to enter British occupied New York City where he was imprisoned as an American spy for three months without a hearing Eventually he was able to sail for Britain and was shipwrecked off the coast of Ireland 1 From Britain he sailed to France where he was briefly reunited with his father After spending some time recovering at the family estate he visited Paris and the salon of Sophie d Houdetot 2 Author edit In 1782 in London he published a volume of narrative essays entitled Letters from an American Farmer The book quickly became the first literary success by an American author in Europe and turned Crevecœur into a celebrated figure He was the first writer to describe to Europeans employing many American English terms the life on the American frontier and to explore the concept of the American Dream portraying American society as characterized by the principles of equal opportunity and self determination His work provided useful information and understanding of the New World that helped create an American identity in the minds of Europeans by describing an entire country rather than another regional colony The writing celebrated American ingenuity and the uncomplicated lifestyle It described the acceptance of religious diversity in a society being created from a variety of ethnic and cultural backgrounds He applied the Latin maxim Ubi panis ibi patria Where there is bread there is my country to early American settlers He once praised the middle colonies for fair cities substantial villages extensive fields decent houses good roads orchards meadows and bridges where an hundred years ago all was wild woody and uncultivated The original edition published near the end of the American Revolutionary War was rather selective in the letters that were included omitting those that were negative or critical Norman A Plotkin argues it was intended to serve the English Whig cause by fostering an atmosphere conducive to reconciliation 3 The book excluded all but one of the letters written after the beginning of the war and also earlier ones that were more critical Crevecœur himself sympathized with the Whig cause His wife s family remained loyal to the Crown and later fled to Nova Scotia With regard to French politics Crevecœur was a liberal a follower of the philosophes and dedicated his book to Abbe Raynal who he said viewed these provinces of North America in their true light as the asylum of freedom as the cradle of future nations and the refuge of distressed Europeans 4 Plotkin notes that extremists in the American colonies who violated this principle incurred Crevecœur s harshest criticism although the severest of these criticisms were considered unsuitable for publication at the time 5 In 1883 his great grandson Robert de Crevecoeur published a biography 6 for which he used previously unpublished letters and manuscripts passed down by the family Although it received little notice in France its existence came to the attention of W P Trent of Columbia University who in 1904 published a reprint of Letters of an American Farmer 7 In 1916 Crevecœur s first American biographer Julia Post Mitchell 8 who had access to all the manuscripts was able to make a more balanced assessment writing that Crevecoeur addressed problems in political economy which European governments were trying in vain to solve He was illustrating his theories from American conditions and was not just a garruluous apologist of American life 9 The additional manuscripts were published in 1925 10 Diplomat edit The success of his book in France had led to his being taken up by an influential circle and he was appointed the French consul for New York including the areas of New Jersey and Connecticut Crevecœur returned to New York City as the newly appointed French consul in November 1783 Anxious to be reunited with his family he learned that his farm had been destroyed in an Indian raid his wife was dead and his two younger children missing He stayed in the house of his friend William Seton 11 who as the last royal public notary for the city and province of New York had helped to secure his release in 1780 from the British prison in the city Principal of the import export mercantile firm the William Seton Company Seton helped Crevecoeur locate his children who were safe and living with a family in Boston 12 The following spring he was able to reunite with his children For most of the 1780s Crevecœur lived in New York City St Peter s New York edit At that time New York City was the national capital and most of the resident Catholics were connected to the diplomatic corps Initially they met for services at the home of the Spanish consul Their numbers increased with seafaring people merchants emigrants from the Spanish West Indies and a few Acadians They then rented space at Vauxhall Gardens a garden and entertainment venue located along the North River on Greenwich Street between Warren and Chambers Streets 13 In 1785 Portuguese consul Jose Roiz Silva Spanish consul Tomas Stoughton and others sought to rent the vacant Exchange building and deemed Crevecoeur the best one to make the approach Although Crevecoeur was relatively indifferent to religion he was sympathetic to the idea of liberty of conscience and a friend of Lafayette When the proposal was rejected Crevecoeur was insulted and became very active in working for the establishment of the first Catholic church in the city He later served as president of the first Board of Trustees of St Peter s Church on Barclay Street 13 Later life edit In 1784 he published a two volume version of his Letters from an American Farmer enlarged and completely rewritten in French A three volume version followed in 1787 Both his English and his French books were translated into several other European languages and widely disseminated throughout Europe For many years Crevecœur was identified by European readers with his fictional narrator James the American farmer and held in high esteem by readers and fellow writers across Europe By the time he published another three volume work in 1801 entitled Voyage dans la Haute Pensylvanie et dans l etat de New York however his fame had faded and the damages of the French Revolution and its aftermath had made people less interested in the United States His book was ignored An abbreviated German translation appeared the following year An English translation was not published until 1964 Much of de Crevecoeur s best work has been published posthumously most recently as More Letters from the American Farmer An edition of the Essays in English Left Unpublished by Crevecœur edited by Dennis D Moore Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press 1995 Particularly concerned about the condition of slaves he joined the Societe des Amis des Noirs Society of the Friends of the Blacks founded in Paris Crevecœur was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1789 14 In 1789 during a stay in France he was trapped by the political upheaval that was quickly turning into the French Revolution At risk as an aristocrat he went into hiding while secretly trying to gain passage to the United States The necessary papers were finally delivered to him by the new American ambassador to France James Monroe At the end of his life Crevecœur returned to France and settled permanently on land he inherited from his father On November 12 1813 he died in Sarcelles Val d Oise France The town of St Johnsbury Vermont is named after him as suggested by Ethan Allen Primary works editLetters from an American Farmer Describing Certain Provincial Situations Manners and Customs Not Generally Known and Conveying Some Idea of the Late and Present Interior Circumstances of the British Colonies of North America 1782 Letters from an American Farmer written to W S William Seton squire from the year 1770 to 1781 translated from English by Lettres d un cultivateur americain ecrites a W S William Seton ecuyer depuis l annee 1770 jusqu a 1781 traduites de l anglois par 1784 Memoire sur le Commerce Entre la France et les Etats Unis D Amerique 1784 manuscript rests in the U S Embassy Paris Eighteenth Century Travels in Pennsylvania and New York Voyage dans la Haute Pensylvanie et dans l etat de New York 1801 Sketches of the Eighteenth Century America More Letters From an American Farmer 1925 References edit a b Moore Andrew The American Farmer as French Diplomat Journal of the Western Society for French History Vol 39 2011 Houdetot Dictionnaire de Rousseau ed Raymond Trousson and Frederic S Eigeldinger Paris Champion 1996 p 421 Plotkin 1964 p 391 Letters from an American Farmer 1782 Dedication Plotkin 1964 p 392 Saint John de Crevecoeur sa vie et ses ouvrages 1735 1813 1883 in French Lettersfrom an American Farmer 1904 with a prefatory note by W P Trent and an introduction by Ludwig Lewisohn St Jean de Crevecœur New York 1916 OCLC 5757565 Quoted by Plotkin 1964 p 404 Saint John de Crevecœur Sketches of Eighteenth Century America More Letters from an American Farmer edited by Henri L Bourdin H Gabriel and Stanley T Williams New Haven 1925 De Courcy Henry Catholic Church in the United States T W Strong 1856 p 354 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Mitchell Julia Post St Jean de Crevecoeur New York Columbia University Press 1916 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b Meehan Thomas F a Century of Catholic Laymen in New York Messenger 1908 p 438 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Michel G St J de Crevecoeur American Philosophical Society Member History American Philosophical Society Retrieved 15 December 2020 Guy Wilson Allen and Roger Asselineau An American Farmer The Life of St John de Crevecoeur New York Viking Penguin 1987Selected criticism editGay W Allen An American Farmer New York Penguin Books 1987 David Eisermann Crevecoeur oder Die Erfindung Amerikas Rheinbach Merzbach CMZ Verlag 1985 Thomas Hallock From the Fallen Tree Frontier Narratives Environmental Politics and the Roots of a National Pastoral Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2003 Daniel Patterson ed Early American Writers A Biographical Encyclopedia Westport Greenwood Press 2008 J Hector St John de Crevecoeur Thomas Patchell 96 104 Norman A Plotkin Saint John de Crevecoeur Rediscovered Critic or Paneygyrist French Historical Studies vol 3 no 3 Spring 1964 pp 390 404 JSTOR 285950 Paul P Reuben Chapter 2 Early American Literature 1700 1800 St Jean De Crevecoeur PAL Perspectives in American Literature A Research and Reference Guide https web archive org web 20091012031553 http www csustan edu english reuben pal chap2 creve html Alan Taylor The American Beginning The Dark Side of Letters from an American Farmer New Republic July 18 2013Primary sources editde Crevecoeur J Hector St John Letters From an American Farmer and Other Essays edited by Dennis D Moore Harvard University Press 2012 372 pages combines an edition of the famous 1782 work with his other writingsExternal links editWorks by J Hector St John de Crevecoeur at Project Gutenberg Works by or about J Hector St John de Crevecœur at Internet Archive Letters from an American Farmer American Studies University of Virginia Saint John de Crevecoeur sa vie et ses ouvrages 1735 1813 1883 biography in French by his great grandson Robert de Crevecœur J Hector St John de Crevecoeur Papers General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J Hector St John de Crevecœur amp oldid 1206011100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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