Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Jean Monnet House

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Phone
  
+33 1 34 86 12 43

Address
  
Haute Vallée de Chevreuse Natural Regional Park, 7 Chemin du Vieux Pressoir, 78490 Bazoches-sur-Guyonne, France

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–5PMTuesday10AM–5PMWednesday10AM–5PMThursday10AM–5PMFriday10AM–5PMSaturday10AM–5PMSunday10AM–5PMMonday10AM–5PMSuggest an edit

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Musée Maurice Ravel, Maison Louis Carré, Fondation Jean Dubuffet, Maison des Jardies, Maison de Léon et Jeanne B

Profiles

The Jean Monnet House is a country farmhouse located in Houjarray, Yvelines, France. The house and surrounding land became Jean Monnet’s property in 1945 upon his return to France after living abroad for several years. Previously owned by a Swedish pre-war director in France Ivan Bratt, this house is located near Montfort-l'Amaury, 27 miles west of Paris.

Contents

Characteristics of the Property

The house contains a ground floor and a first floor, and the roof is constructed of thick thatched straw. The exterior of the structure is cream, and the windows are protected by light blue shutters. The surrounding garden is wide and open, sloping down away from the house and into the trees which line the property.

Francois Duchene described Monnet's residence as follows: "From now on...the long, low thatched house, Le Carrefour des Buttes (The Crossing on the Mounds), set at the top of a field with a few trees, was the settled family home...The hamlet of Houjarry the house stands in is at the edge of the forest of Rambouillet, twenty-seven miles west of Paris."

During the Life of Jean Monnet

Monnet purchased the property in 1945, and spent the rest of his life with the farmhouse as his and his wife's primary residence. Monnet spent much of his time thinking and writing on the future of Europe, or taking long walks in the garden and forest surrounding his home.

Over the years, many of Europe's political figures and dignitaries visited Monnet at his country home. As a result, some of the foundational ideas of Europe were considered and created at the House of Jean Monnet.

In April 1950, Jean Monnet, Robert Schuman, and several other "founding fathers of Europe" drafted the May 1950 Declaration, which Schuman would present as a proposal for the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC). This declaration created the foundation for the development of the European Community.

Over the years, many important political figures, including Robert Schuman, Walter Hallstein, Paul-Henri Spaak, Konrad Adenauer, and René Pleven, visited Jean Monnet's home and discussed politics and the potential for a common future in Europe. Jean Monnet invited his friends, including Dwight D. Eisenhower, George Ball, and Edward Heath, visiting Paris to join him at his farmhouse on Sundays. Journalists, including the likes of Walter Lippmann, Hubert Beuve-Méry and his neighbor Pierre Viansson-Ponté, also visited Monnet at his home for long and engaging long conversations.,

Jean Monnet died at his home in Houjarray on 16 March 1979.

Acquisition by the European Parliament

In 1982, the European Parliament considered that the Monnet House was a common heritage of Europeans. The Parliament bought the house, restored it and later asked the Jean Monnet Association to recreate the house as it was during Monnet's life, as well as to handle administration and events.

The Jean Monnet Association

In 1987, former collaborators and close friends of Jean Monnet formed the Friends of Jean Monnet Association. The goal of the Association was "to contribute its support for all activities and projects aimed at reviving and transmitting the memory of Jean Monnet, his work and his teachings. To this end, it gathers information on these activities and projects and ensures their communication to all interested people or media."

The Association has progressively implemented and developed courses and activities on topics of European construction at the Jean Monnet House. In 1987, the House received 100 visitors; in 1998, almost 17,000 people visited the House. As of 2010, the team of the Jean Monnet Association organizes about 250 lectures per year on European history and current events.

Today, the Jean Monnet Association works, through on-site tours and conferences, to teach the public about Jean Monnet and the construction of the European Union.

References

The Jean Monnet House Wikipedia