Before the war As the new French ambassador in Washington, Jean Jules Jusserand succeeded
Jules Cambon who, in Madrid, was replacing his brother
Paul Cambon, himself nominated in London. Jusserand took up his position on 7 February 1903. Jusserand was elected an International Member of the
American Philosophical Society in 1907. In 1911, he was admitted as an Honorary Member of the
Society of the Cincinnati in the State of New Jersey. He was elected an International Honorary Member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1912. He soon won
Roosevelt's sympathy, in addition to the President's successors'. Thus, during 22 years, Jusserand was the French politic spokesperson alongside 5 presidents of the United States (Roosevelt,
Taft,
Wilson,
Harding and
Coolidge), especially he had served as Dean of the Diplomatic Corps from May 1913 to January 1925. As in June 1905, the French and German concurrence over Morocco's domination nearly lead to a war. Jusserand used his influence on Roosevelt in order to play an efficient role in the
Algeciras Conference. The support that was brought by the United States and the United Kingdom to France helped the French access to the
Cherifian Empire (known today as the Moroccan Empire.). Everything happened in a very friendly and courteous manner, several American and French personalities considered that the ambassador had "saved the peace".
During the war Jean Jules Jusserand played an important role in the
United States's entry into the war. As early as 1914, he campaigned for the entry of the United States to support
France. It was a period of anguish and concern for Jusserand because the American public's opinion was very divided. It took the Americans more than three years to enter the war, being triggered by the submarine campaign launched by Germany. On 12 March 1917, the
House of Representatives authorised the arming of commercial vessels. Following the attack on two US ships by German
U-boats, the US president realised on 20 March that the US was in fact at war with Germany. The United States would not be able to limit its intervention to the naval domain alone. On 2 April, he announced to
Congress that he wished to go to war alongside the
Entente, sending troops on French soil, thus directly entering the conflict. The US Senate approved this resolution by 82 votes to 6. On 6 April 1917, the US was officially at war. On 28 June 1917, the first American division landed at
Saint-Nazaire. Jean Jules Jusserand said on this occasion: "For the first time, a neutral nation has decided to enter the conflict without prior bargaining, without having laid down a condition." On 10 May 1917, French Prime Minister
Georges Clemenceau sent him a telegram to congratulate him on his action, saying "All you have said is excellent." On 5 September, the United States of America participated in their first offensive against Germany. On 11 November, during an allied offensive, the armistice was signed, thus ending the
First World War. He helped to support of professor
Thomas Garrigue Masaryk legions especially in Russia and in negotiation for independent Czechoslovak state in America from May to October 1918. For the Versailles negotiations, President Wilson was accompanied in France by Jean Jules Jusserand, whom he trusted. As a matter of fact, Wilson was the first incumbent US president to come to Europe. The Paris Peace Conference, beginning on 18 January 1919, culminated in the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June, establishing a seemingly definitive peace. After a brief period of harmony lasting only 22 years, another world conflict ensued in 1939. However, Jusserand had no influence on this Second World War, dying in 1932.
After the war (left) in the United States in 1922 Even after the
First World War, Jean Jules Jusserand was still fighting to maintain the peace obtained after so many efforts and sacrifices. He accompanied the American
President Woodrow Wilson to the
Paris Peace Conference (1919), during which was signed the
Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919. When the Polish army invaded Ukraine, a Russian counter-attack reached Warsaw, where there was a rise in revolutionary ideas. France sent Jusserand at the head of a diplomatic and military mission to save the Polish. He remained the French ambassador to Washington for the next five years under presidents
Warren G Harding and
Calvin Coolidge. During this time, he published a dozen books in French and English, on various subjects. Later on he returned to France, where he spent some time with his wife in
Saint-Haon-le-Châtel, their property in
Forez. In 1923, Jean Jules Jusserand presided and delivered a speech during the inauguration ceremony for the American war memorial. At the age of seventy, he retired.
Émile Daeschner succeeded him in 1924, followed by
Henry Bérenger on 1 January 1925. On 10 January 1925, a farewell banquet was organised in his honour by the American government in order to express their esteem and gratitude. This ceremony brought together the most important political, scientific and cultural figures of the United States. He was also awarded a medal for his deeds. In 1930, Jean Jules Jusserand published his last book,
The evolution of the American sentiment during the war (''L'évolution du sentiment américain pendant la guerre''). He died in 1932 in Paris at the age of 77, following a lengthy bout of kidney disease. His national funeral took place in
Notre-Dame, and his body rests in the family home in
Saint-Haon-le-Châtel. == Alliance Française ==