Commemoration , and
François Joseph Paul de Grasse, commemorating 150th anniversary of the victory at Yorktown, 1781 President
Theodore Roosevelt unveiled a
statue of Rochambeau by Ferdinand Hamar as a gift from France to the United States on 24 May 1902, standing in
Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C. The ceremony was a great demonstration of friendship between the two nations. France was represented by ambassador
Jules Cambon, Admiral Fournier, General Henri Brugère, and a detachment of sailors and marines from the battleship
Gaulois. Representatives of the Lafayette and Rochambeau families also attended. A
Rochambeau fête was held simultaneously in Paris. There is a Rochambeau monument at French Hill in
Marion, Connecticut, close to the
Asa Barnes Tavern, the eighth campsite of his troops through Connecticut in 1781. In 1867, the French Navy named a
casemate ironclad frigate
Rochambeau. In 1911,
CGT named a transatlantic liner . In 1942, the US Navy named a
troopship . In 2009, President Barack Obama signed the Omnibus Public Land Management Act with a provision to designate the
Washington–Rochambeau Revolutionary Route as a
national historic trail. A bridge was named for Rochambeau in the complex of bridges known as the
14th Street Bridge (Potomac River) connecting Washington, D.C., with Virginia. A mansion on the campus of Brown University is named Rochambeau House and houses the French Department.
Memoirs Rochambeau's
Mémoires militaires, historiques et politiques, de Rochambeau was published by
Jean-Charles-Julien Luce de Lancival in 1809. Part of the first volume was translated into English and published in 1838 under the title
Memoirs of the Marshal Count de R. relative to the War of Independence in the United States. His correspondence during the American campaign was published in 1892 in H. Doniol's
History of French Participation in the Establishment of the United States. ==Motto and coat of arms==