Haitian revolution

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In 1791 revolution broke out in the French colony of Saint Domingue, later called Haiti. The Haitian Revolution resounded in communities surrounding the Atlantic Ocean. One of the wealthiest European outposts in the New World, the Caribbean island's western third had some of the largest and most brutal slave plantations. Slave laborers cultivated sugar, coffee, indigo, and cotton, and they endured horrible death rates, requiring constant infusions of slaves from Africa. In 1789 roughly 465,000 black slaves lived in the French colony on the island, along with fewer than 31,000 whites. In addition, there were about 23,000 free blacks and mixed-race people called gens de couleur, who might own land and accrue wealth but had no political rights. In 1791 this tense racial situation exploded. The French Revolution (1789-99) led to a civil war in Saint Domingue that had a bewildering array of desertions, betrayals, massacres, and invasions. Throughout the convoluted course of events, two larger trends emerged: First, the ideals of the rights of man extended further and further into Haitian society; and, second, slaves rejected their bondage and became committed to their freedom. In May 1791 the French Convention granted political rights to gens de couleur whose parents were born free, but this act only seemed to create even more agitation, antagonizing whites and opening up new possibilities for slaves. By the summer, slave uprisings had broken out in various parts of Saint Domingue, and royalists began to organize in opposition to the republicans of the French Revolution. In reward for their service in defending the republic, the French government extended political rights to the gens de couleur, regardless of birth, in April 1792...

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... keep their slaves (Pennsylvania had already passed a gradual-emancipation act). On the other hand, South Carolina admitted many masters and their slaves. Among African Americans the memory and example of Haiti remained strong. Black seamen brought news of the rebellion to various ports from New England down to the Carolinas. The Haitian Revolution also inspired free black activism: In 1797 Boston's Prince Hall encouraged his brethren to unify and remember the Haitian rebels as they fought racial prejudice in the United States. Gabriel's Rebellion (1800) in Virginia may have been inspired in part by events in Saint Domingue; several of the slaves involved in the Deslondes Revolt in Louisiana in 1811 were reportedly from Saint Domingue; and Denmark Vesey, who led a slave revolt in 1822 in Charleston, South Carolina, promised his followers support from Haiti.

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