Le Boudoir de Marie-Antoinette

Prenons une tasse de thé dans les jardins du Petit Trianon
 
AccueilAccueil  PortailPortail  RechercherRechercher  Dernières imagesDernières images  S'enregistrerS'enregistrer  Connexion  
-16%
Le deal à ne pas rater :
Friteuse sans huile NINJA Foodi Dual Zone 7,6 L 2400W à 135€
135.01 € 159.99 €
Voir le deal

 

 How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America

Aller en bas 
AuteurMessage
Maria Cosway

Maria Cosway


Nombre de messages : 733
Date d'inscription : 05/07/2015

How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America Empty
MessageSujet: How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America   How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America Icon_minitimeDim 6 Déc - 23:30

Dear friends of the Boudoir, you may find this story interesting... Very Happy

How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America

During the time of the French Revolution, there was a shipping company in Wiscasset Maine which had contracts for trading in Paris. It was owned by Colonel James Swan, and one of his Captains was a man called Stephen Clough. He sailed a ship called The Sally back and forth between Maine and France. The Sally was docked at the port of Le Havre in the summer of 1792 when King Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette and their children were arrested. Royalist sympathizers decided to try to rescue the King and his family. They came up with the idea of putting them on a ship to America. Since the Sally was there and was a known, legitimate trading ship, Captain Clough was recruited into the plot as the getaway pilot. Now the plotters just had to come up with a plan to get the royals out of prison.

After their arrest, the King and Queen had been taken to the Temple prison and put in separate cells. The palace was ransacked and the royal possessions were sold in the street. Captain Clough and others bought them up and placed them on the Sally so the royals would feel more comfortable when they reached their new American home.

It seems, however, that the royal supporters took too long to plan the escape and, in December 1792, Louis XVI was brought to trial, the next month the guillotine claimed his royal head. His supporters stepped up their efforts to try to save the Queen and her two children.

In August 1793, a plot was formed and prison guards were bribed. A note was sent to the Queen on paper wrapped around the stem of a carnation. She replied by pricking a message in the paper with a pin, but the guard, who had been paid off, had a change of heart, so he showed the note to his superiors and Marie Antoinette’s fate was sealed.

The Queen was immediately moved to the Conciergerie, a more secure prison to await her fate. In October, she was tried and, of course, found guilty of treason. Her head rolled into the same basket as her husband’s before her. With no further hope of saving the queen, Captain Clough sailed back to Maine with his boat load of French finery and, the story goes, the royal family’s cats.


Before it had all gone wrong, Captain Clough had sent a letter to his wife. He knew better than to arrive home with an unexpected house guest – he would have been in big trouble. Of course, when Mrs Clough got the news, she started cleaning, painting and decorating her home, and word leaked out to the townsfolk that a queen would be arriving. Everyone did their best to spruce up the place and all the ladies were fitted out in new dresses.

Unfortunately, the Sally arrived in the Wiscasset harbor without the Queen. It was, however, filled with fine French things: carved furniture, velvet and silk draperies, wallpaper, rich fabrics, etc. Captain Clough and Swan divided up the cargo. The Clough house was papered with royal wallpaper and filled with gilded furniture. It soon became known as the Marie Antoinette House. About 9 months after Mr Clough’s return, Mrs Clough gave birth to a little girl who was given the middle name of Antoinette in memory of the almost house-guest queen.



How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America Marie-10
Marie Antoinette Clough house

The Marie Antoinette house still stands in Wiscasset. It was built in 1744 and originally stood on Squam Island, but was moved to its current location in 1838. Today it’s a private residence and not open to the public.
http://www.thegoodlifefrance.com/how-queen-marie-antoinette-almost-escaped-to-america/

_________________
Who knows what lies beneath ?
Revenir en haut Aller en bas
 
How Queen Marie-Antoinette Almost Escaped to America
Revenir en haut 
Page 1 sur 1

Permission de ce forum:Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets dans ce forum
Le Boudoir de Marie-Antoinette :: Marie-Antoinette au fil du temps :: La Reine de France : 1774-1792-
Sauter vers: