Mr. Hay to Mr. Porter .

No. 1000.]

Sir: I inclose herewith an autograph letter from the President to President Loubet, with an office copy thereof, tendering an invitation to the Government and people of France to unite with the Government and people of the United States in a tit and appropriate dedication of the monument of Marshal de Rochambeau to be unveiled in the city of Washington on May 24, 1902.

I inclose also, with copies for your tiles, letters addressed to Comte Rene de Rochambeau and Mr. Gaston de Sahune de Lafayette, through whom, as prominent representatives of the Rochambeau and Lafayette families, a like invitation is extended to those families.

These invitations are extended in pursuance of a joint resolution of Congress of March 21, 1902, copies of which I transmit herewith.

You will deliver the President’s letter to the President of the French Republic, and will ask for an audience for that purpose. In communicating the invitations to the President of France and to the Rochambeau and Lafayette families, you will appropriately express the grateful feelings which prompted this action, and will express the President’s hope that the invitations will be accepted.

The visitors who may represent the French Republic on the occasion referred to, as well as the members of the Rochambeau and Lafayette families who may come as private citizens, will be entertained as the guests of the American Government and people.

If the invitations be accepted, I shall be pleased to have you telegraph the fact and date of acceptance.

I am, etc.,

John Hay.
[Inclosure 1.]

The President of the United States to the President of France .

Great and Good Friend: I have the honor to inform you that the Congress of the United States has adopted a joint resolution authorizing and requesting me to extend to the Government and people of France a cordial invitation to unite with the Government and people of the United States in a fit and appropriate dedication of the monument of Marshal de Rochambeau, to be unveiled in the city of Washington on the 24th day of May, 1902. It becomes, therefore, my agreeable duty to tender, in the name of the Government and people of the United States, this invitation to the Government and people of France.

I trust that Your Excellency will see in this action another proof of the lasting gratitude of the American Government and people for the inestimable services rendered by France during the war of our revolution, and that the occasion will serve to join together still more firmly the ties which since that time have united the two countries.

I avail myself of this opportunity to assure Your Excellency of my fervent desire for the prosperity and happiness of yourself and of the Government and people of France.

Written at Washington this 27th day of March, 1902.

Your good friend,

Theodore Roosevelt.

By the President:
John Hay,
Secretary of State.

[Page 410]
[Inclosure 2.]

Mr. Hay to Mr. de Lafayette, and, with appropriate changes, to Count de Rochambeau .

Sir: Animated by a sense of profound gratitude for the inestimable services rendered to the United States during their war of revolution by your renowned ancestor, the Congress of the United States, by a joint resolutiou of March 21, 1902, authorized and requested the President to extend to the family of the Marquis de Lafayette a cordial invitation to unite with the Government and people of the United States in a fit and appropriate dedication of the monument of Marshal de Rochambeau to be unveiled in the city of Washington on May 24, 1902.

It is with more than ordinary pleasure that I fulfill the duty of transmitting this invitation to you and through you to the family of the Marquis de Lafayette.

I have instructed the ambassador of the United States at Paris to convey this to you in a fitting manner, and to say that the members of this illustrious family who may do us the honor to visit the United States upon this occasion will be welcomed as guests of the nation.

I have, etc.,

John Hay.

(Inclosure 3.—Public Resolution—No. 11.)

JOINT RESOLUTION authorizing and requesting the President to extend to the Government and people of France and to the families of Marshal de Rochambeau and Marquis de Lafayette an invitation to join the Government and people of the United States in the dedication of the monument of Marshal de Rochambeau to be unveiled in the city of Washington.

Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the President be, and is hereby, authorized and requested to extend to the Government and people of France and the family of Marshal de Rochambeau, commander in chief of the French forces in America during the war of independence, and to the family of Marquis de Lafayette, a cordial invitation to unite with the Government and people of the United States in a fit and appropriate dedication of the monument of Marshal de Rochambeau to be unveiled in the city of Washington on the twenty-fourth day of May, nineteen hundred and two; and for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this resolution the sum of ten thousand dollars is hereby appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, the same, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State.