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Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours papers

Creation: 1789-1854
 Collection
Accession: 2248

Abstract

Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739-1817) was a French political economist, writer, publisher, and public administrator. In 1802, he held various government posts under Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821). In 1803, he aided President Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826) in negotiations for the Louisiana Purchase, a land deal transferring ownership of more than 530 million acres of territory to the United States from France. The principal item of this collection is a letter to James Monroe, minister plenipotentiary to negotiate the Louisiana Purchase, dated May 7, 1803. The letter is encased in a leather bound portfolio containing the original handwritten French letter, a typed English translation, and three other items.

Dates

  • Creation: 1789-1854

Creator

Extent

5 item(s)

Biographical Note

Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739-1817) was a French political economist, writer, publisher, and public administrator. He was an advocate for a national educational system and promoted Franco-American trade relations.

Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours was born in Paris on December 14, 1739. He was apprenticed as a watchmaker, but during the early 1760s he began to study and write on economic matters. In 1767 du Pont de Nemours coined the term Physiocracy, which means the rule of nature, to describe the complex doctrine of French economist, François Quesnay (1694-1774), which is now recognized as the first modern school of economics.

In July 1774, the du Pont family departed for Poland, where du Pont de Nemours was to serve the Polish monarch in various capacities, including that of honorary councilor. He was shortly recalled to France, however, and commissioned as Inspecteur Général du Commerce, a position he held until its abolition in 1788. During the late 1770s, he was an economic advisor to Jacques Necker (1732-1804) a Genevan banker who served as finance minister for King Louis XVI (1754-1793) from 1789 to 1790 but held a number of other posts in regard to finances for the royal treasury between 1777 and 1789.

In the early 1780s, du Pont de Nemours was involved in the negotiations leading to the Anglo-French Commercial Treaty of 1786. The treaty reduced tariffs on goods between France and Britain. In 1786, he was appointed Counseiller d'Etat by King Louis XVI. In this position he acted as a government official of administrative law. The following year he served as secretary of the first Assemblée des Notables at Versailles to consult on matters of state.

At the onset of the French Revolution, du Pont de Nemours served as a member of the Assemblée Nationale Constituante (1789-1791). The purpose of the assembly was to discuss a new constitution and taxation system. He allied himself with the moderate Girondist faction. Girondists were initially part of the Jacobin Club, an anti-royalist group who supported the abolition of the monarchy, a creation of parliament, an introduction of a constitution, a separation of powers, and an establishment of a republic. The Girondins supported the end of the monarchy; however, they were against the revolution and many opposed the execution of the King, who was arrested in August 1792 and put to death on January 21, 1793.

After the leader of the Jacobin party, Maximilien Robespierre (1758-1794) took power, Girondin deputies and members of other opposing movements were arrested, put on trial, and many were executed. This time period is known as the Reign of Terror. Du Pont was arrested in July 1794, but he escaped the guillotine upon Robespierre's fall at the end of the month.

In 1795 du Pont de Nemours was chosen as a member of the Counseil des Anciens (Council of Elders), the upper house of the French legislature. Following the Coup d'état of September 4, 1795, he was again arrested and held for one night.

The du Ponts began to explore the possibility of emigration to the United States. On January 3, 1800, accompanied by his sons, Victor Marie du Pont (1767-1827) and Eleuthère Irénée du Pont (1771-1834), he arrived in America. Du Pont de Nemours and his sons established the commission house of Du Pont de Nemours, Pere et Fils & Cie. in New York.

Du Pont de Nemours and his wife returned to France in 1802, and he held various government posts under Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821). In 1814 he became a member of the provisional government which deposed Napoleon and exiled him to Elba. Upon Napoleon's return, du Pont de Nemours again fled to America, where he died at the home of his son, Eleuthère Irénée du Pont in Delaware on August 7, 1817.

Scope and Contents

The principal item in this collection of Du Pont de Nemours papers is a letter written to James Monroe (1751-1836), minister plenipotentiary to negotiate the Louisiana Purchase, dated 17 Floréal 11 (May 7, 1803). The letter is encased in a leather-bound portfolio bearing the title, "Louisiana Purchase Letter, Du Pont de Nemours, Paris, 1803." In the letter, du Pont de Nemours offers his congratulations on the Purchase. The bulk of the letter is concerned with the advisability of charging lower duties on imports through the port of New Orleans than at East Coast ports to compensate for the costs of ascending the Mississippi in the pre-steamboat era. The portfolio contains a typed English translation ahead of the letter itself.

The portfolio also contains three other items. The first is a copy of a French state paper, "Des privileges exclusifs en général & dequelque un dentréux en particulier." It appears to have been removed or copied for the use of du Pont de Nemours. Representatives of the Third Estate had been asked to solicit the views of their constituents on which exclusive grants made under the Ancien Regime conformed to the doctrines of the Rights of Man and which should be abolished. The citizens of Nemours advocated for the abolition of all exclusive privileges, including patents and copyrights, as well as more traditional forms of monopolies.

The other two pieces are not related to du Pont de Nemours or his descendants. The first is a letter signed "Dupont" on French Ministry of War stationery dated December 18, 1799. The second is a letter in German written from Halle on November 23, 1854 and signed "J. F. Dupont."

Access Restrictions

This collection is open for research.

Language of Materials

English

French

German

Finding Aid & Administrative Information

Title:
Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours papers
Description rules:
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description:
English
Script of description:
Latin

Repository Details

Repository Details

Part of the Manuscripts and Archives Repository

Contact:
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Wilmington Delaware 19807 USA
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