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In time for July 4, replica of 18th-century French frigate arrives in NY
A view of crew members on the yardarms on board the Hermione, a replica of the frigate that ferried the Marquis de Lafayette to America in 1780 during the Revolutionary War, docked at South Street Seaport July 1, 2015 in New York. After sailing up the US east coast from Yorktown, Virginia, the Hermione, arrived Wednesday in New York where she will participate in the American national holiday July 4. AFP PHOTO/Timothy A. Clary
The original three-masted Hermione brought the general to America to rally US rebels fighting for independence from Britain.
To much fanfare and applause, the ship docked at Pier 15 in south Manhattan on the East River.
The Hermione replica, which took almost two decades to build, left from France's western coast on April 18 and retraced the 3,700-mile (6,000-kilometer) journey across the Atlantic.
It arrived June 5 for a first stop in Yorktown, Virginia, where American forces led by General George Washington and French soldiers scored a decisive victory over the British in 1781, prompting their capitulation. The original Hermione was used in that battle.
On its way to New York, the ship stopped over in Mount Vernon, which is near Washington, then in Annapolis and Baltimore, both in Maryland, and in Philadelphia. It will move on to Boston and then to Canada.
In New York, the Hermione will be escorted by hundreds of sail and motor boats past the Statue of Liberty during a July 4 maritime procession to mark Independence Day.
Craig Stapelton, a former US ambassador to France, and Bertrand Lortholary, the French consul general in New York, were to preside over a welcoming ceremony later Wednesday in New York.
New York was the last city liberated by Washington's troops, in 1783.
The metropolis now known as the Big Apple served briefly as US capital, from 1785 to 1790. — Agence France-Presse
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