Marquis de Choisy

Claude Gabriel, Marquis de Choissey (French: Claude Gabriel de Choisy) was a French general who served in Poland in the 1770s, and then in North America during the American Revolutionary War.

Marquis de Choisy
Born27 January 1723
Moulins, Kingdom of France
Died1800
Montfermeil
Allegiance Kingdom of France
Service/branch French Army
Years of service1741–1793
RankLieutenant General
Commands held
Battles/wars

De Choissey was at the siege of Yorktown in command of Lauzun's Legion and General George Weedon's Virginia militia, and at Gloucester, Virginia, under the command of Rochambeau, opposite Banastre Tarleton. Awarded the Libertas Americana medal for his service, he returned to France in 1783 and retired from active duty in 1793.

Capture of Cracow

France was allied with Poland against Russia, in the Bar Confederation. On 2 February 1772, he led 270 men, in the capture of Kraków Poland, from 1,500 Russians. A small party entered through a sewer, surprised the guard, and opened the postern gate. Not being reinforced in time, they retreated to the citadel, Wawel Castle.[1] They held it through a siege of several weeks against 18,000 Russians,[2] until it fell to Suvorov on 28 April 1772.[3]

On 24 March 1772, he was appointed Brigadier General of Infantry, and in 1779 appointed to be Mestre of the Camp for the Fourth Regiment Chasseurs a Cheval.

Joining the Expédition Particulière

Competition was fierce among French officers to join the expedition to America, to gain fame and promotion. Marquis de Choisy arrived at Brest with five others officers to join the Army, but was turned away. Then he sailed, with ten officers, on the Sybille for Santo Domingo, changing ships to La Gentille, arriving at Newport on 29 September 1780.[4]

Tensions ran high among officers in camp; he sought to reconcile officers who had fought a duel.[5]

On 29 October, Rochambeau sent Brigadier General Choisy with Lauzun's Legion, as they marched from Rhode Island to Head of Elk, Maryland, traveled by water to Alexandria, Virginia, and marched to Gloucester Courthouse.[6]

Battle of Gloucester, Virginia

Gloucester point was an obvious escape route from Yorktown. Marquis de Choisy was assigned the Virginia militia, Lauzun's Legion, and 800 French Marines. Opposite them was Tarleton's Legion, Simcoe's Rangers, the 80th Foot regiment, and the Erb Prinz (Prince Hereditaire) regiment.[7]

On 4 October 1781, Marquis de Choisy was marching towards Gloucester by the Severn road (Route 17), while John Mercer, with the Virginia militia, "veterans", took the York River road. Tarleton, who had crossed the river the night before, led a covering force for a "grand forage", for supplies.[8]

Lauzun and Tarleton charged and countercharged over the open ground. Tarleton was unhorsed, and Lauzun's Legion skirmished allowing the infantry to fire upon the British. Tarleton withdrew within his lines, and the French pursued, before being ordered to withdraw by the Marquis de Choisy.[9][10] This clash between Tarleton and Lauzun marks the largest Cavalry engagement in the American Revolution. The British lost killed or wounded one officer and eleven men; the French lost two officers and fourteen hussars.[11]

Marquis de Choisy wrote Washington:

Sir, I have the hounor to inform you that by our arrival at Saoul's Tavern we have met with the ennemi who was in number about 500 men Cavalry and Infantry, that the Cavalry of the Duc of Lauzun has attaqued them, pierced through and that we have had a great advantage on them We can esteem they have 30 men killed or wounded The 200 men grenadier Americans who were the only Infantry advanced enough to have part in the affair and who have behaved excedingly well have killed one officer who was at the head of the Infantry of the ennemi. T'is a general report that Tarleton has been wounded. The ennemi have retired to Gloucester and we are quickly in our Camp where I expect you will join to morrow as we have already agreed.

I have the hounor to be your Most humble servant,

Choisy[12]

After the battle

Washington corresponded with him about captured horses after the battle.[13]

There was some controversy, about horses and lodging, and returning runaway slaves.[14]

He returned to France with the Comte de Rochambeau, from Annapolis, sailing in January, 1783.

He was presented the medal, Libertas Americana, by Benjamin Franklin.[15] He was promoted to Maréchal de Camp (major general) on 5 December 1781, and commander of the Armee du Nord in 1791.[16] He was awarded the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Louis. He was promoted to be Lieutenant General, 20 May 1791, and honorably retired on 4 February 1793.[17]

General of the French Revolution

The revolutionary government, which had just published, on 26 October 1791[18] the decree cementing Avignon and Comtat Venaissin with France, dispatched "civil police chiefs" who were escorted by troops placed under the command of the general Choisy (with the 9th regiment of dragoons).[19] Arriving on the spot, they ordered, after the Massacres of La Glacière, arrests, but on 19 March 1792, a general amnesty was voted by the National Assembly putting a rest to the inquiry.

See also

References

  1. William Russell, The History of Modern Europe, p.539
  2. Imbert de Saint-Amand, The Youth of the Duchess of Angoulême, p. 237
  3. Arthur Hassall, The Balance of Power, 1715-1789, p. 312
  4. Robert A. Selig, Ph. D., The Washington - Rochambeau Revolutionary Route in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1781 - 1783, p.56 Archived 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
  5. "Lauberdière Journal, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, The Connecticut Experience (1781)". Archived from the original on 2008-08-27. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  6. Robert E. Selig, The Duc de Lauzun and his Legion
  7. John D. Grainger, The Battle of Yorktown, 1781, p.104
  8. Henry Phelps Johnston, The Yorktown Campaign and the Surrender of Cornwallis, 1781, p. 129
  9. "History of Lauzun's Legion".
  10. Richard M. Ketchum, Victory at Yorktown, p. 216
  11. Washington Irving, Life of George Washington, p. 612
  12. D. Carter, Battle of the Hook...the history Archived 2009-01-08 at the Wayback Machine
  13. Washington, George, 1732-1799, The writings of George Washington from the original manuscript sources, Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library
  14. Samuel F. Scott, From Yorktown to Valmy, p.79
  15. Lester C. Olson, Benjamin Franklin's Vision of American Community, p. 163
  16. Robinet, Jean François Eugène; Robert, Adolphe; Le Chaplain, Julien (1899). Dictionnaire historique et biographique de la révolution et de l'empire, 1789-1815. Ouvrage rédigé pour l'histoire générale. Robarts - University of Toronto. Paris Librairie historique de la révolution et de l'empire.
  17. Asa Bird Gardiner, The order of the Cincinnati in France, p.78
  18. René Moulinas, History of the Revolution d' Avignon, p. 206
  19. Antoine-Vincent Arnault, Antoine Jay, Etienne de Jouy, Norvins, New biography of the contemporaries, or historical and reasoned Dictionary of all the men who, since the French revolution, acquired of the celebrity by their actions, their writings, their errors or their crimes, either in France, or in the foreign countries, Paris, historical Bookshop, 1822, p 181
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.