The Haitian Revolution: History of A Successful Slave Revolt
The Haitian Revolution: History of A Successful Slave Revolt
The Haitian Revolution: History of A Successful Slave Revolt
History of a Successful
Slave Revolt
• The Haitian Revolution was the only successful black slave
revolt in history, and it led to the creation of the second
independent nation in the Western Hemisphere, after the
United States. Inspired in large part by the French Revolution,
diverse groups in the colony of Saint-Domingue began fighting
against French colonial power in 1791. Independence was not
fully achieved until 1804, at which point a complete social
revolution had taken place where former slaves had become
leaders of a nation.
Background and Causes
• By 1791, slaves and mulattoes were fighting separately for their own
agendas, and white colonists were too preoccupied with maintaining
their hegemony to notice the growing unrest among slaves.
Throughout 1791, slave revolts grew in numbers and frequency, with
slaves torching the most prosperous plantations and killing fellow
slaves who refused to join their revolt.
• The Haitian Revolution is considered to have begun officially on
August 14, 1791 with the Bois Caïman ceremony, a vodou ritual
presided over by Boukman, a maroon leader and vodou priest from
Jamaica. This meeting was the result of months of strategizing and
planning by slaves in the northern area of the colony who were
recognized as leaders of their respective plantations.
• Due to the fighting, the French National Assembly revoked the
decree granting limited rights to affranchis in September 1791,
which only spurred on their rebellion. That same month, slaves
burned one of the colony's most important cities, Le Cap, to the
ground. The following month, Port-au-Prince was burned to the
ground in fighting between whites and affranchis.
• 1792-1802
• The Haitian Revolution was chaotic. At one time there were six
different parties warring simultaneously: slaves, affranchis,
working-class whites, elite whites, invading Spanish, and
English troops battling for control of the colony, and the French
military. Alliances were struck and quickly dissolved. For
example, in 1792 blacks and affranchis became allies with the
British fighting against the French, and in 1793 they allied with
the Spanish.
• Furthermore, the French often tried to get slaves to join their
forces by offering them freedom to help put down the
rebellion. In September 1793, a number of reforms took place in
France, including the abolition of colonial slavery. While
colonists began negotiating with slaves for increased rights, the
rebels, led by Touissant Louverture, understood that without
land ownership, they could not stop fighting.
• Throughout 1794, the three European forces took control of
different parts of the island. Louverture aligned with different
colonial powers at different moments. In 1795, Britain and
Spain signed a peace treaty and ceded Saint-Domingue to the
French. By 1796, Louverture had established dominance in the
colony, though his hold on power was tenuous. In 1799, a civil
war broke out between Louverture and the affranchis. In 1800,
Louverture invaded Santo Domingo (the eastern half of the
island, modern-day Dominican Republic) in order to bring it
under his control.
• Between 1800 and 1802, Louverture tried to rebuild the
destroyed economy of Saint-Domingue. He reopened
commercial relations with the U.S. and Britain, restored
destroyed sugar and coffee estates to operating condition, and
halted the wide-scale killing of white people. He even discussed
importing new Africans to jump-start the plantation economy.
In addition, he outlawed the very popular vodou religion and
established Catholicism as the colony's main religion, which
angered many slaves. He established a constitution in 1801 that
asserted the colony's autonomy with respect to France and
became a de-facto dictator, naming himself governor-general
for life.
The Final Years of the Revolution
• Dessalines created the Haitian flag in 1803, whose colors represent the
alliance of blacks and mulattoes against whites. The French began to
withdraw troops in August 1803. On January 1, 1804, Dessalines published
the Declaration of Independence and abolished the colony of Saint-
Domingue. The original indigenous Taino name of the island, Hayti, was
restored.
• Dessalines created the Haitian flag in 1803, whose colors represent the
alliance of blacks and mulattoes against whites. The French began to
withdraw troops in August 1803. On January 1, 1804, Dessalines published
the Declaration of Independence and abolished the colony of Saint-
Domingue. The original indigenous Taino name of the island, Hayti, was
restored.
Reference
• "History of Haiti: 1492-
1805." https://library.brown.edu/haitihistory/index.html
• Knight, Franklin. The Caribbean: The Genesis of a Fragmented
Nationalism, 2nd edition. New York: Oxford University Press,
1990.
• MacLeod, Murdo J., Lawless, Robert, Girault, Christian
Antoine, & Ferguson, James A. "Haiti."
https://www.britannica.com/place/Haiti/Early-
period#ref726835