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In 1815, a week after his fruitless return to Paris, Napoleon Bonaparte left Malmaison for Rochefort where he evaded English coast guards to board a vessel that carried him to the United States.
Napoleon's Escape to North America, Reboot
by Ed, Eric Oppen and Jackie RoseTravelling to Bolton, Massachusetts, he resided at the home of the merchant Sampson Vryling Stoddard (S.V.S.) Wilder, a noted member of the small American community in Paris. He was an acquaintance of both Talleyrand and Lafayette, and in addition to the influence of their political thought, had been deeply impressed by the changes brought about in society and politics under Napoleonic Rule. Compelled to act after the tragic defeat at Waterloo, he provided the fallen Emperor with his valet's passport.
Wilder dreamt of a meeting of minds with President Madison, a potential co-belligerent who had declared war on England in 1812. But Napoleon had set his mind on a new vision shortly after after he visited Malmaison where Josephine had died only thirteen months before. And so over the next six months he collected all his relatives around him, forming the nucleus of a national union, a second France. They headed West to found a Bonapartist dynasty that would dominate Mexican politics for the next two millenia.
This blog is a reboot of an article with the same name in which Napoleon didn't make it.
Related posts from the same era that you may also like

"American Napoleon" born in New Orleans | Napoleon's Command Change before the "Battle of Bautzen" | Crushing Prussian defeat at "Valmy" |
The Assassination of "Napoleon Bonaparte" | Napoleon Pardons "Duke of Enghien" | British purchase of "French Louisiana" |
"Napoleon Bonaparte" Crowned Holy Roman Emperor | Napoleon's Escape to "North America" | "Napoleon" Victorious at Waterloo |
Napoleon Defeated at "Eylau" | "Napoleon Bonaparte" crowned Holy Roman Emperor | "Jean-Paul Marat" survives assassination attempt |
© Today in Alternate History, 2013-. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.




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