The Haitian
Revolution
An essay by
FRANKLIN W. KNIGHT
The Haitian Revolution represents
the most thorough case study of revolutionary change
anywhere in the history of the modern world.1
In ten years of sustained internal and international
warfare, a colony populated predominantly by
plantation slaves overthrew both its colonial status
and its economic system and established a new
political state of entirely free individuals—with
some ex-slaves constituting the new political
authority. As only the second state to declare its
independence in the Americas, Haiti had no viable
administrative models to follow. The British North
Americans who declared their independence in 1776
left slavery intact, and theirs was more a political
revolution than a social and economic one. The
success of Haiti against all odds made social
revolutions a sensitive issue among the leaders of
political revolt elsewhere in the Americas during
the final years of the eighteenth century and the
first decades of the nineteenth century.2
Yet the genesis of the Haitian Revolution cannot be
separated from the wider concomitant events of the
later eighteenth-century Atlantic world. Indeed, the
period between 1750 and 1850 represented an age of
spontaneous, interrelated revolutions, and events in
Saint Domingue/Haiti constitute an integral—though
often overlooked—part of the history of that larger
sphere.3
These multi-faceted revolutions combined to alter
the way individuals and groups saw themselves and
their place in the world.4
But, even more, the intellectual changes of the
period instilled in some political leaders a
confidence (not new in the eighteenth century, but
far more generalized than before) that creation and
creativity were not exclusively divine or accidental
attributes, and that both general societies and
individual conditions could be rationally
engineered.5
Although the eighteenth century
was experiencing a widespread revolutionary
situation, not all of it ended in full-blown,
convulsing revolutions.6
But everywhere, the old order was being challenged.
New ideas, new circumstances, and new peoples
combined to create a portentously "turbulent time."7
Bryan Edwards, a sensitive English planter in
Jamaica and articulate member of the British
Parliament, lamented in a speech to that body in
1798 that "a spirit of subversion had gone forth
that set at naught the wisdom of our ancestors and
the lessons of experience."8
But if Edwards's lament was for the passing of his
familiar, cruel, and constricted world of privileged
planters and exploited slaves, it was certainly not
the only view.
For the vast majority of
workers on the far-flung plantations under the tropical sun
of the Americas, the revolutionary situation presented an
opportunity to change fundamentally their personal world,
and maybe the world of others equally unfortunate.9
Nowhere was the contrast sharper than in the
productive and extremely valuable French Caribbean
colony of Saint Domingue between 1789 and 1804. The
hundreds of thousands of African slaves and tens of
thousands of legally defined free coloreds found the
hallowed wisdom and experiential "lessons" of Bryan
Edwards to be a despicably inconvenient barrier to
their quest for individual and collective liberty.
Their sentiments were motivated not only by a
difference of geography and culture but also by a
difference of race and condition.
Within fifteen turbulent
years, a colony of coerced and exploited slaves successfully
liberated themselves and radically and permanently
transformed things. It was a unique case in the history of
the Americas: a thorough revolution that resulted in a
complete metamorphosis in the social, political,
intellectual, and economic life of the colony. Socially, the
lowest order of the society—slaves—became equal, free, and
independent citizens. Politically, the new citizens created
the second independent state in the Americas, the first
independent non-European state to be carved out of the
European universal empires anywhere. The Haitian model of
state formation drove xenophobic fear into the hearts of all
whites from Boston to Buenos Aires and shattered their
complacency about the unquestioned superiority of their own
political models.10
To Simón Bolívar, himself of partial African
ancestry, it was the Euro-American model of
revolution that was to be avoided by the
Spanish-American states seeking their independence
after 1810, and he suggested the best way was to
free all slaves.11
Intellectually, the ex-colonists gave themselves a
new name—Haitians—and defined all Haitians as
"black," thereby giving a psychological blow to the
emerging intellectual traditions of an increasingly
racist Europe and North America that saw a
hierarchical world eternally dominated by types
representative of their own somatic images. In
Haiti, all citizens were legally equal, regardless
of color, race, or condition. Equally important, the
example of Haiti convincingly refuted the ridiculous
notion that still endures among some social
scientists at the end of the twentieth century that
slavery produced "social death" among slaves and
persons of African descent.12
And in the economic sphere, the Haitians
dramatically transformed their conventional tropical
plantation agriculture, especially in the north,
from a structure dominated by large estates (latifundia)
into a society of minifundist, or
small-scale, marginal self-sufficient producers, who
reoriented away from export dependency toward an
internal marketing system supplemented by a minor
export sector.13
These changes, however, were not accomplished
without extremely painful dislocations and severe
long-term repercussions for both the state and the
society.14
If the origins of the revolution
in Saint Domingue lie in the broader changes of the
Atlantic world during the eighteenth century, the
immediate precipitants must be found in the French
Revolution.15
The symbiotic relationship between the two were
extremely strong and will be discussed later, but
both resulted from the construction of a newly
integrated Atlantic community in the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries.
The broader movements of
empire building in the Atlantic world produced the dynamic
catalyst for change that fomented political independence in
the United States between 1776 and 1783. Even before that,
ideas of the Enlightenment had agitated the political
structures on both sides of the Atlantic, overtly
challenging the traditional mercantilist notions of imperial
administration and appropriating and legitimating the
unorthodox free trading of previously defined interlopers
and smugglers.16
The Enlightenment proposed a rational basis for
reorganizing state, society, and nation.
17
The leading thinkers promoted and popularized new
ideas of individual and collective liberty, of
political rights, and of class equality—and even, to
a certain extent, of social democracy—that
eventually included some unconventional thoughts
about slavery.18
But their concepts of the state remained rooted in
the traditional western European social experience,
which did not accommodate itself easily to the
current reality of the tropical American world, as
Peggy Liss shows in her insightful study Atlantic
Empires.19
Questions about the moral,
religious, and economic justifications for slavery and the
slave society formed part of this range of innovative ideas.
Eventually, these questions led to changes in jurisprudence,
such as the reluctantly delivered judgment by British Chief
Justice Lord William Mansfield in 1772 that the owner of the
slave James Somerset could not return him to the West
Indies, implying that, by being brought to England, Somerset
had indeed become a free man. In 1778, the courts of
Scotland declared that slavery was illegal in that part of
the realm. Together with the Mansfield ruling in England,
this meant that slavery could not be considered legal in the
British Isles. These legal rulings encouraged the formation
of associations and groups designed to promote amelioration
in the condition of slaves, or even the eventual abolition
of the slave trade and slavery.20
Even before the declaration
of political independence on the part of the British North
American colonies, slavery was under attack by a number of
religious and political leaders from, for example, the
Quakers and Evangelicals, such as William Wilberforce
(1759–1833), Thomas Clarkson (1760–1846), and Granville
Sharp (1735–1813). Antislavery movements flourished both in
the metropolis and in the colonies.21
In 1787, Abbé Grégoire (1750–1831), Abbé Raynal
(1713–1796), the marquis de Lafayette (1757–1834),
and others formed an antislavery committee in France
called the Société des Amis des Noirs, which took up
the issue in the recently convened Estates General
in 1789 and later pushed for broadening the basis of
citizenship in the National Assembly.22
Their benevolent proposals, however, were overtaken
by events.
The intellectual changes
throughout the region cannot be separated from changes in
the Caribbean. During the eighteenth century, the Caribbean
plantation slave societies reached their apogee. British and
French (mostly) absentee sugar producers made headlines in
their respective imperial capitals, drawing the attention of
political economists and moral philosophers.23
The most influential voice among the latter was
probably Adam Smith (1723–1790), whose Wealth of
Nations appeared in the auspicious year of 1776.
Basing his arguments on the comparative costs of
production, Smith insisted that, "from the
experience of all ages and nations, I believe, that
the work done by free men comes cheaper in the end
than that performed by slaves."24
Slavery, Smith further stated, was both uneconomical
and irrational not only because the plantation
system was a wasteful use of land but also because
slaves cost more to maintain than free laborers.25
The plantation system had, by
the middle of the eighteenth century, created some strange
communities of production throughout the Caribbean—highly
artificial constructs involving labor inputs from Africa and
managerial direction from Europe producing largely imported
staples for an overseas market. These were the plantation
communities producing sugar, coffee, cotton, and tobacco.26
Elsewhere, I have referred to this unintended
consequence of the sugar revolutions as the
development of exploitation societies—a tiered
system of interlocking castes and classes all
determined by the necessities, structure, and rhythm
of the plantations.27
French Saint Domingue prided itself, with
considerable justification, on being the richest
colony in the world. According to David Geggus,
Saint Domingue in the 1780s accounted for "some 40
percent of France's foreign trade, its 7,000 or so
plantations were absorbing by the 1790s also 10–15
percent of United States exports and had important
commercial links with the British and Spanish West
Indies as well. On the coastal plains of this colony
little larger than Wales was grown about two-fifths
of the world's sugar, while from its mountainous
interior came over half the world's coffee."28
The population was structured like a typical slave
plantation exploitation society in tropical America.
Approximately 25,000 white colonists, whom we might
call psychological transients, dominated the social
pyramid, which included an intermediate subordinate
stratum of approximately the same number of free,
miscegenated persons referred to throughout the
French Caribbean colonies as gens de couleur,
and a depressed, denigrated, servile, and exploited
majority of some 500,000 workers from Africa or of
African descent.29
These demographic proportions would have been
familiar to Jamaica, Barbados, or Cuba during the
acme of their slave plantation regimes.30
The centripetal cohesive force remained the
plantations of sugar, coffee, cotton, and indigo and
the subsidiary activities associated with them. The
plantations, therefore, joined the local society and
the local economy with a human umbilical cord—the
transatlantic slave trade—that attached the colony
to Africa. Economic viability depended on the
continuous replenishing of the labor force by
importing African slaves.31
Nevertheless, the system was both sophisticated and
complex, with commercial marketing operations that
extended to several continents.32
If whites, free colored, and
slaves formed the three distinct castes in the French
Caribbean colony, these caste divisions overshadowed a
complex system of class and corresponding internal class
antagonisms, across all sectors of the society. Among the
whites, the class antagonism was between the successful
so-called grands blancs, with
their associated hirelings—plantation overseers,
artisans, and supervisors—and the so-called
petits blancs—small merchants' representatives,
small proprietors, and various types of hangers-on.
The antagonism was palpable. At the same time, all
whites shared varying degrees of fear and mistrust
of the intermediate group of gens de couleur,
but especially the economically upwardly mobile
representatives of wealth, education, and polished
French culture.33
For their own part, the free non-whites had seen
their political and social abilities increasingly
circumscribed during the two or so decades before
the outbreak of revolution. Their wealth and
education certainly placed them socially above the
petits blancs. Yet theirs was also an
internally divided group, with a division based as
much on skin color as on genealogy. As for the
slaves, all were distinguished—if that is the proper
terminology—by their legal condition as the lifetime
property of their masters, and were occasionally
subject to extraordinary degrees of daily control
and coercion. Within the slave sector, status
divisions derived from a bewildering number of
factors applied in an equally bewildering number of
ways: skills, gender, occupation, location (urban or
rural, household or field), relationship to
production, or simply the arbitrary whim of the
master.34
The slave society was an
extremely explosive society, although the tensions could be,
and were, carefully and constantly negotiated between and
across the various castes.35
While the common fact of owning slaves might have
produced some mutual interest across caste lines,
that occurrence was not frequent enough or strong
enough to establish a manifest class solidarity.
White and free colored slaveowners were often
insensitive to the basic humanity and civil rights
of the slaves, but they were forced nevertheless to
negotiate continuously the way in which they
operated with their slaves in order to prevent the
collapse of their world. Nor did similar race and
color facilitate an affinity between free non-whites
and slaves. Slaves never accepted their legal
condemnation, but perpetual military resistance to
the system of plantation slavery was inherent
neither to Saint Domingue in particular nor to the
Caribbean in general.36
So when and where the system broke down resulted
more from a combination of circumstances than from
the inherent revolutionary disposition of the
individual artificial commercial construct.
Without the outbreak of the
French Revolution, it is unlikely that the system in Saint Domingue
would have broken down in 1789. And while Haiti
precipitated the collapse of the system regionally,
it seems fair to say that a system such as the
Caribbean slave system bore within itself the seeds
of its own destruction and therefore could not last
indefinitely. As David Geggus points out,
More than
twenty [slave revolts] occurred in the years
1789–1832, most of them in the Greater
Caribbean. Coeval with the heyday of the
abolitionist movement in Europe and chiefly
associated with Creole slaves, the phenomenon
emerged well before the French abolition of
slavery or the Saint-Domingue uprising, even
before the declaration of the Rights of Man. A
few comparable examples occurred earlier in the
century, but the series in question began with
an attempted rebellion in Martinique in August
1789. Slaves claimed that the government in
Europe had abolished slavery but that local
slaveowners were preventing the island governor
from implementing the new law. The pattern would
be repeated again and again across the region
for the next forty years and would culminate in
the three large-scale insurrections in Barbados,
1816, Demerara, 1823, and Jamaica, 1831.
Together with the Saint-Domingue insurrection of
1791, these were the biggest slave rebellions in
the history of the Americas.37
In the case of Saint Domingue—as later in the cases
of Cuba and Puerto Rico—abolition came from an
economically weakened and politically isolated
metropolis.
The local bases of the society
and the organization of political power could not
have been more different in France and its overseas
colonies. In France in 1789, the political estates
had a long tradition, and the social hierarchy was
closely related to genealogy and antiquity. In Saint
Domingue, the political system was relatively new,
and the hierarchy was determined arbitrarily by race
and the occupational relationship to the plantation.
Yet the novelty of the colonial situation did not
produce a separate and particular language to
describe its reality, and the limitations of a
common language (that of the metropolis) created a
pathetic confusion with tragic consequences for
metropolis and colony.
The basic divisions of French
society derived from socioeconomic class distinctions. The
popular slogans generated by the revolution—Liberty,
Equality, Fraternity and the Rights of Man—did not express
sentiments equally applicable in both metropolis and colony.38
What is more, the Estates General, and later the
National Assembly, simply could not understand how
the French could be divided by a common language.
And yet they hopelessly were.
The confusion sprung from two
foundations. In the first place, the reports of grievances (cahiers
de doléances) of the colonies represented
overwhelmingly not the views of a cross-section of
the population but merely those of wealthy
plantation owners and merchants, especially the
absentee residents in France. Moreover, as the
French were to find out eventually, the colony was
quite complex geographically. The wealthy,
expatriate planters of the Plain du Nord were a
distinct numerical minority. The interests and
preoccupations of the middling sorts of West
Province and South Province were vastly different.
In the second place, each segment of the free
population accepted the slogans of the revolution to
win acceptance in France, but they then
particularized and emphasized only such portions as
applied to their individual causes. The grands
blancs saw the Rights of Man as the rights and
privileges of bourgeois man, much as the framers of
North American independence in Philadelphia in 1776.
Moreover, grands blancs saw liberty not as a
private affair but rather as greater colonial
autonomy, especially in economic matters. They also
hoped that the metropolis would authorize more free
trade, thereby weakening the restrictive effects of
the mercantilist commerce exclusif with the
mother country. Petits blancs wanted
equality, that is, active citizenship for all white
persons, not just the wealthy property owners, and
less bureaucratic control over the colonies. But
they stressed a fraternity based on a whiteness of
skin color that they equated with being genuinely
French. Gens de couleur also wanted equality
and fraternity, but they based their claim on an
equality of all free regardless of skin color, since
they fulfilled all other qualifications for active
citizenship. Slaves were not part of the initial
discussion and sloganeering, but from their
subsequent actions they clearly supported liberty.
It was not the liberty of the whites, however.
Theirs was a personal freedom that undermined their
relationship to their masters and the plantation,
and jeopardized the wealth of a considerable number
of those who were already free.39
In both France and its
Caribbean colonies, the course of the revolution took
strangely parallel paths. The revolution truly began in both
with the calling of the Estates General to Versailles in the
fateful year of 1789.40
Immediately, conflict over form and representation
developed, although it affected metropolis and
colonies in different ways. In the metropolis, the
Estates General, despite not having met for 175
years, had an ancient history and tradition, albeit
almost forgotten. The various overseas colonists who
assumed they were or aspired to be Frenchmen and to
participate in the deliberations and the unfolding
course of events did not really share that history
and that tradition. In many ways, they were new men
created by a new type of society—the plantation
slave society. Their experience was quite distinct
from that of the planters and slaveowners in the
British Caribbean. In Jamaica, Edward Long was an
influential and wealthy member of British society as
well as an established Jamaican planter. Bryan
Edwards was a long-serving member of the Jamaica
Legislature and after 1796 a legitimate member of
the British Parliament, representing simultaneously
a metropolitan constituency and overseas colonial
interests.41
At first, things seemed to
be going well for the French colonial representatives, as
the Estates General declared itself a National Assembly in
1789 and the National Assembly proclaimed France to be a
republic in August 1792. In France, as James Billington puts it, "the subsequent history of armed
rebellion reveals a seemingly irresistible drive
toward a strong, central executive. Robespierre's
twelve-man Committee of Public Safety (1793–94),
gave way to a five-man Directorate (1795–99), to a
three-man Consulate, to the designation of Napoleon
as First Consul in 1799, and finally to Napoleon's
coronation as emperor in 1804."42
In the colonies, the same movement is discernible
with a major difference—at least in Saint Domingue.
The consolidation of power during the period of
armed rebellion gravitated toward non-whites and
ended up in the hands of slaves and ex-slaves or
their descendants.
With the colonial situation
far too confusing for the metropolitan legislators to
resolve easily, the armed revolt in the colonies started
with an attempted coup by the grands blancs in the
north who resented the petits blancs–controlled
Colonial Assembly of St. Marc (in West Province)
writing a constitution for the entire colony in
1790. Both white groups armed their slaves and
prepared for war in the name of the revolution.43
When, however, the National Assembly passed the May
Decree enfranchising propertied mulattos, they
temporarily forgot their class differences and
forged an uneasy alliance to forestall the
revolutionary threat of racial equality. The
determined desire of the free non-whites to make a
stand for their rights—also arming their slaves for
war—made the impending civil war an inevitable
racial war.
The precedent set by the superordinate free
groups was not lost on the slaves, who comprised the
overwhelming majority of the population. If they
could fight in separate causes for the antagonistic
free sectors of the population, they could fight on
their own behalf. And so they did. Violence, first
employed by the whites, became the common currency
of political change. Finally, in August 1791, after
fighting for nearly two years on one or another side
of free persons who claimed they were fighting for
liberty, the slaves of the Plain du Nord applied
their fighting to their own cause. And once they had
started, they refused to settle for anything less
than full freedom for themselves. When it became
clear that their emancipation could not be sustained
within the colonial political system, they created
an independent state in 1804 to secure it. It was
the logical extension of the collective slave revolt
that began in 1791.
But before that could
happen, Saint Domingue
experienced a period of chaos between 1792 and 1802.
At one time, as many as six warring factions were in
the field simultaneously: slaves, free persons of
color, petits blancs, grands blancs,
and invading Spanish and English troops, as well as
the French vainly trying to restore order and
control. Alliances were made and dissolved in
opportunistic succession. As the killing increased,
power slowly gravitated to the overwhelming majority
of the population—the former slaves no longer
willing to continue their servility. After 1793,
under the control of Pierre-Dominique Toussaint
Louverture, ex-slave and ex-slaveowner, the tide of
war turned inexorably, assuring the victory of the
concept of liberty held by the slaves.44
It was duly, if temporarily, ratified by the
National Assembly. But that was neither the end of
the fighting nor the end of slavery.
The victory of the slaves in
1793 was, ironically, a victory for colonialism and the
revolution in France. The leftward drift of the revolution
and the implacable zeal of its colonial administrators,
especially the Jacobin commissioner Léger Félicité Sonthonax, to eradicate all traces of
counterrevolution and royalism—which he identified
with the whites—in Saint Domingue facilitated the
ultimate victory of the blacks over the whites.45
Sonthonax's role, however, does not detract from the
brilliant military leadership and political
astuteness provided by Toussaint Louverture. In
1797, he became governor general of the colony and
in the next four years expelled all invading forces
(including the French) and gave it a remarkably
modern and democratic constitution. He also
suppressed (but failed to eradicate) the revolt of
the free coloreds led by André Rigaud and Alexander
Pétion in the south, captured the neighboring
Spanish colony of Santo Domingo, and freed its small
number of slaves. Saint Domingue was a new society
with a new political structure. As a reward,
Toussaint Louverture made himself governor general
for life, much to the displeasure of Napoleon
Bonaparte.
Why did the revolution follow
such a unique course in Saint Domingue and eventually culminate in
the abolition of slavery? Carolyn Fick presents a
plausible explanation:
It can be argued therefore
that the abolition of slavery in Saint Domingue resulted from a
combination of mutually reinforcing factors that
fell into place at a particular historical
juncture. No single factor or even combination
of factors—including the beginning of the French
Revolution with its catalytic ideology of
equality and liberty, the colonial revolt of the
planters and the free coloreds, the context of
imperial warfare, and the obtrusive role of a
revolutionary abolitionist as civil
commissioner—warranted the termination of
slavery in Saint Domingue in the absence of
independent, militarily organized slave
rebellion . . .
From the vantage point of
revolutionary France the abolition of slavery seems
almost to have been a by-product of the revolution and
hardly an issue of pressing concerns to the nation. It
was Sonthonax
who initiated the abolition of slavery in Saint
Domingue, not the Convention. In fact, France only
learned that slavery had been abolished in Saint
Domingue when the colony's three deputies, Dufay,
Mills, and Jean-Baptiste Mars Bellay (respectively a
white, a mulatto, and a former free black), arrived
in France in January, 1794 to take their seats and
asked on February 3 that the Convention officially
abolish slavery throughout the colonies . . .
The crucial link then,
between the metropolitan revolution and the black revolution
in Saint Domingue seems to reside in the conjunctural and
complementary elements of a self-determined, massive
slave rebellion, on the one hand, and the presence
in the colony of a practical abolitionist in the
person of Sonthonax, on the other.46
Such "conjunctural and complementary elements" did
not appear elsewhere in the Americas—not even in the
neighboring French colonies of Martinique and
Guadeloupe.
The reality of a
semi-politically free Saint-Domingue
with a free black population ran counter to the
grandiose dreams of Napoleon to reestablish a viable
French-American empire. It also created what Anthony
Maingot has called a "terrified consciousness" among
the rest of the slave masters in the Americas.47
Driven by his desire to restore slavery and
disregarding the local population and its leaders,
Napoleon sent his brother-in-law General Charles
Victor Emmanuel Leclerc with about 10,000 of the
finest French troops in 1802 to accomplish his aim.
It was a disastrously futile effort. Napoleon
ultimately lost the colony, his brother-in-law, and
most of the 44,000 troops eventually sent out to
conduct the savage and bitter campaign of reconquest.
Although Touissant was treacherously spirited away
to exile and premature death in France, the
independence of Haiti was declared by his former
lieutenant, now the new governor general,
Jean-Jacques Dessalines, on January 1, 1804. Haiti,
the Caribbean, and the Americas would never be the
same as before the slave uprising of 1791.
The impact of the Haitian Revolution
was both immediate and widespread. The antislavery
fighting immediately spawned unrest throughout the
region, especially in communities of Maroons in
Jamaica, and among slaves in St. Kitts. It sent a
wave of immigrants flooding outward to the
neighboring islands, and to the United States and
Europe. It revitalized agricultural production in
Cuba and Puerto Rico. As Alfred Hunt has shown,
Haitian emigrants also profoundly affected American
language, religion, politics, culture, cuisine,
architecture, medicine, and the conflict over
slavery, especially in Louisiana.48
Most of all, the revolution deeply affected the
psychology of the whites throughout the Atlantic
world. The Haitian Revolution undoubtedly
accentuated the sensitivity to race, color, and
status across the Caribbean.
Among the political and
economic elites of the neighboring Caribbean states, the
example of a black independent state as a viable alternative
to the Maroon complicated their domestic relations. The
predominantly non-white lower orders of society might have
admired the achievement in Haiti, but they were conscious
that it could not be easily duplicated. "Haiti represented
the living proof of the consequences of not just black
freedom," wrote Maingot, "but, indeed, black rule. It was the latter
which was feared; therefore, the former had to be
curtailed if not totally prohibited."49
The favorable coincidence of time, place, and
circumstances that produced a Haiti failed to
materialize again. For the rest of white America,
the cry of "Remember Haiti" proved an effective way
to restrain exuberant local desires for political
liberty, especially in slave societies. Indeed, the
long delay in achieving Cuban political independence
can largely be attributed to astute Spanish
metropolitan use of the "terrified consciousness" of
the Cuban Creoles to a scenario like that in Saint
Domingue between 1789 and 1804.50
Nevertheless, after 1804, it would be difficult for
the local political and economic elites to continue
the complacent status quo of the mid-eighteenth
century. Haiti cast an inevitable shadow over all
slave societies. Antislavery movements grew stronger
and bolder, especially in Great Britain, and the
colonial slaves themselves became increasingly more
restless. Most important, in the Caribbean, whites
lost the confidence that they had before 1789 to
maintain the slave system indefinitely. In 1808, the
British abolished their transatlantic slave trade,
and they dismantled the slave system between 1834
and 1838. During that time, free non-whites (and
Jews) were given political equality with whites in
many colonies. The French abolished their slave
trade in 1818, although their slave system,
reconstituted by 1803 in Martinique and Guadeloupe,
limped on until 1848. Both British and French
imperial slave systems—as well as the Dutch and the
Danish—were dismantled administratively. The same
could be said for the mainland Spanish-American
states and Brazil. In the United States, slavery
ended abruptly in a disastrous civil war. Spain
abolished slavery in Puerto Rico (where it was not
important) in 1873. The Cuban case, where slavery
was extremely important, proved far more difficult
and also resulted in a long, destructive civil war
before emancipation was finally accomplished in
1886. By then, it was not the Haitian Revolution but
Haiti itself that evoked negative reactions among
its neighbors.
Franklin W.
Knight is Leonard and Helen R. Stulman Professor of
History at Johns Hopkins University and president of
the Latin American Studies Association. Knight's
research interests focus on the general history of
Latin America and the Caribbean as well as on
American slave systems. His major publications
include Slave Society in Cuba during the
Nineteenth Century (1970), The Caribbean: The
Genesis of a Fragmented Nationalism, 2d rev. edn.
(1990), The Modern Caribbean, co-edited with
Colin A. Palmer (1989), Atlantic Port Cities:
Economy, Culture, and Society in the Atlantic World,
1650–1850, co-edited with Peggy K. Liss (1991),
and The Slave Societies of the Caribbean
(1997). He was also co-translator of Sugar and
Railroads, A Cuban History, 1740–1840 by Oscar
Zanetti and Alejandro Garc|f8a (1998). Knight is
currently writing a monograph, Spanish American
Creole Society in Cuba, 1740–1840, and the Rise of
American Nationalism. This article is based on a
panel presentation at the Latin American Studies
Association Congress in Guadalajara, Mexico, in
1997.
Notes
1 The
bibliography on the Haitian Revolution is large and
growing. For a sample, see Colin Blackburn, The
Overthrow of Colonial Slavery, 1776–1848
(London, 1988); Philip D. Curtin, "The Declaration
of the Rights of Man in Saint-Domingue, 1788–1791," Hispanic American Historical Review 30 (May
1950): 157–75; David Brion Davis, The Problem of
Slavery in the Age of Revolution, 1770–1823
(Ithaca, N.Y., 1975), 27–179; Alex Dupuy, Haiti
in the World Economy: Class, Race, and
Underdevelopment since 1700 (Boulder, Colo.,
1989); Carolyn Fick, The Making of Haiti: The
Saint Domingue Revolution from Below (Knoxville,
Tenn., 1990); John Garrigus, "A Struggle for
Respect: The Free Coloreds in Pre-Revolutionary
Saint Domingue, 1760–69" (PhD dissertation, Johns
Hopkins University, 1988); David Geggus, Slavery,
War, and Revolution: The British Occupation of Saint
Domingue 1793–1798 (London, 1982); Geggus, "The
Haitian Revolution," in The Modern Caribbean,
Franklin W. Knight and Colin A. Palmer, eds. (Chapel
Hill, N.C., 1989), 21–50; Eugene D. Genovese,
From Rebellion to Revolution: Afro-American Slave
Revolts in the Making of the Modern World (Baton
Rouge, La., 1979); François Girod, De la société
Creole: Saint-Domingue au XVIIIe
siècle (Paris, 1972); Robert Debs Heinl and
Nancy Gordon Heinl, Written in Blood: The Story
of the Haitian People, 1492–1971 (Boston, 1978);
Alfred N. Hunt, Haiti's Influence on Antebellum
America: Slumbering Volcano in the Caribbean
(Baton Rouge, 1988); C. L. R. James, The Black
Jacobins: Toussaint L'Ouverture and the San Domingo
Revolution (1938; New York, 1963); David
Nicholls, From Dessalines to Duvalier: Race,
Colour and National Independence in Haiti
(Cambridge, 1979); Thomas O. Ott, The Haitian
Revolution, 1789–1804 (Knoxville, 1973); George
Tyson, Jr., ed., Toussaint L'Ouverture
(Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1973); M. L. E. Moreau de
Saint Méry, Description topographique, physique,
civil, politique et historique de la partie
Française de l'isle de Saint Domingue
(Philadelphia, 1796); P, My Odyssey: Experiences
of a Young Refugee from Two Revolutions, Althéa
de Peuch Parham, ed. and trans. (Baton Rouge, 1959).
2 See
especially Jorge I. Domínguez, Insurrection or
Loyalty: The Breakdown of the Spanish American
Empire (Cambridge, Mass., 1980), 146–69; Lester
D. Langley, The Americas in the Age of
Revolution, 1750–1850 (New Haven, Conn., 1996),
159–77.
3 See R. R.
Palmer, The Age of the Democratic Revolution,
2 vols. (Princeton, N.J., 1959); Langley, The
Americas in the Age of Revolution; James H.
Billington, Fire in the Minds of Men: Origins of
Revolutionary Faith (New York, 1980).
4 For an
example, see Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall,
"Regenerating France, Regenerating the World: The
Abbé Grégoire and the French Revolution, 1750–1831"
(PhD dissertation, Stanford University, 1998).
5 Franklin W.
Knight, "The Disintegration of the Slave Systems,
1772–1886," in General History of the Caribbean,
Vol. 3: The Slave Societies of the Caribbean,
Knight, ed. (London, 1997), 322–45.
6 A case in
point is England, where the revolutionary situation
was diffused through reformist politics.
7 The phrase
is taken from the title of A Turbulent Time: The
French Revolution and the Greater Caribbean,
David Barry Gaspar and David Patrick Geggus, eds.
(Bloomington, Ind., 1997).
8 Quoted in
J. H. Parry, Philip Sherlock, and Anthony Maingot,
A Short History of the West Indies, 4th edn.
(New York, 1987), 136.
9 The quest
for individual and collective freedom was widespread
among all slaves, and occasionally new views of
society and social relations embraced both slave and
free, but rarely did these revolts involve the
establishment of a state as in the case of Haiti. In
Coro in western Venezuela in 1795, a free republic
was declared that would have fundamentally altered
the social status quo, but it had a very short
existence. See Domínguez, Insurrection or Loyalty,
55–56, 151–60.
10 See John
Lynch, The Spanish-American Revolutions,
1808–1826 (New York, 1973).
11 Langley,
The Americas in the Age of Revolution,
196–200.
12 Orlando
Patterson, Slavery and Social Death: A
Comparative Study (Cambridge, Mass., 1982). The
idea may also be found in Fick, Making of Haiti,
27: "To assure the submission of slaves and the
mastership of the owners, slaves were introduced
into the colony and eventually integrated into the
plantation labor system within an overall context of
social alienation and psychological, as well as
physical violence. Parental and kinship ties were
broken; their names were changed; their bodies were
branded with red-hot irons to designate their new
owners; and the slave who was once a socially
integrated member of a structured community in
Africa had, in a matter of months, become what has
been termed a 'socially dead person.'" It is hard to
accept such a totally nullifying experience for
Africans in the Americas for two reasons. The first
is that Africans constructed the new American
communities along with their non-African colonists,
and permanently endowed the new creations with a
wide array of influences from speech to cuisine to
music to new technology. The various bodies of slave
laws were a patent recognition that although slaves
were property, they were also people requiring
severe police control measures. Non-Africans
established social contacts with them, and their
mating produced a melange of demographic hybridity
throughout the Americas. In the second place,
Africans produced offspring in the Americas, and
these formed viable communities
everywhere—communities that were duly recognized in
law and custom. The development of viable
Afro-American communities throughout the Americas
does not in any way negate the fact that slavery was
a dehumanizing experience permeated with violence
and exploitation. Nevertheless, the image of "social
death" is greatly exaggerated.
13 Dupuy,
Haiti in the World Economy, 55–57.
14 Franklin
W. Knight, The Caribbean: The Genesis of a
Fragmented Nationalism, 2d edn. (New York,
1990), 196–219.
15 See
Gaspar and Geggus, Turbulent Time.
16 These
changes have been examined more thoroughly in
Atlantic Port Cities: Economy, Culture, and Society
in the Atlantic World, 1650–1850, Franklin W.
Knight and Peggy K. Liss, eds. (Knoxville, Tenn.,
1991).
17 While
there is a wide range of opinion on exactly when the
Enlightenment started, there is better consensus on
what it was: a major demarcation in the emergence of
the modern age and the French Revolution. See Franco
Venturi, The End of the Old Regime in Europe,
1768–1776: The First Crisis, R. Burr Litchfield,
trans. (Princeton, N.J., 1989); Peter Gay, The
Enlightenment: An Interpretation, 2 vols. (New
York, 1967–69).
18 See
David Brion Davis, The Problem of Slavery in
Western Culture (Ithaca, N.Y., 1966), esp.
391–445.
19 Peggy K.
Liss, Atlantic Empires: The Network of Trade and
Revolution, 1713–1826 (Baltimore, Md., 1983),
105–26.
20
Blackburn, Overthrow of Colonial Slavery,
99–100.
21 Duncan
J. MacLeod, Slavery, Race and the American
Revolution (London, 1974).
22 Ruth F.
Necheles, The Abbé Grégoire, 1787–1831: The
Odyssey of an Egalitarian (Westport, Conn.,
1971), 71–90.
23 See, for
example, Eric Williams, Capitalism and Slavery
(Chapel Hill, N.C., 1944); Robert Louis Stein,
The French Sugar Business in the Eighteenth Century
(Baton Rouge, La., 1988); and Patrick Villiers, "The
Slave and Colonial Trade in France Just before the
Revolution," in Slavery and the Rise of the
Atlantic System, Barbara L. Solow, ed.
(Cambridge, 1991), 210–36.
24 Adam
Smith, The Wealth of Nations (1776), abbrev.
edn. (New York, 1974), 184.
25 The
debate over relative labor costs of free and
enslaved workers has not ended. See Did Slavery
Pay? Hugh G. J. Aitken, ed. (Boston, 1971);
Robert Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman, Time on the
Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery
(Boston, 1974).
26 Except
tobacco, the primary export crops were all
introduced into the Americas by Europeans. Sugar
cane came from India via the Mediterranean and the
African Atlantic Islands. Coffee was Arabian in
origin. Cotton was Egyptian.
27 Knight,
Caribbean, 74–82
28 Geggus,
Slavery, War, and Revolution, 6.
29 The
demographic proportions varied considerably
throughout the Caribbean. For figures, see Knight,
Caribbean, 366–67.
30 Knight,
Caribbean, 120–58.
31 See
Philip D. Curtin, The Atlantic Slave Trade: A
Census (Madison, Wis., 1969); John Thornton,
Africa and Africans in the Formation of the Atlantic
World, 1450–1680 (Cambridge, 1992); Colin A.
Palmer, Human Cargoes: The British Slave Trade to
Spanish America, 1700–1739 (Urbana, Ill., 1981);
Herbert S. Klein, African Slavery in Latin
America and the Caribbean (New York, 1986); Paul
E. Lovejoy, "The Volume of the Transatlantic Slave
Trade: A Synthesis," Journal of African History
23, no. 4 (1982): 473–501; David Eltis, Economic
Growth and the Ending of the Transatlantic Slave
Trade (New York, 1987).
32 See
Solow, Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic
System; The Atlantic Slave Trade: Effects on
Economics, Societies, and Peoples in Africa, the
Americas, and Europe, Joseph E. Inikori and
Stanley L. Engerman, eds. (Durham, N.C., 1992);
The Uncommon Market: Essays in the Economic History
of the Atlantic Slave Trade, Henry A. Gemery and
Jan S. Hogendorn, eds. (New York, 1979).
33 Garrigus,
"Struggle for Respect."
34
Regardless of the extreme degree of coercion, it is
fatuous to insist that slavery obliterated from
Africans and their descendants the ability to be
creative, socially active, and even to establish
some modicum of self-respect and economic status.
See Roderick A. McDonald, The Economy and
Material Culture of Slaves: Goods and Chattels on
the Sugar Plantations of Jamaica and Louisiana
(Baton Rouge, La., 1993), especially its excellent
bibliography.
35 Philip
D. Curtin, The Rise and Fall of the Plantation
Complex: Essays in Atlantic History (New York,
1990), 103–10, 160–69.
36 Michael
Craton, Testing the Chains: Resistance to Slavery
in the British West Indies (Ithaca, N.Y., 1982).
37 David
Patrick Geggus, "Slavery, War and Revolution in the
Greater Caribbean," in Gaspar and Geggus,
Turbulent Time, 7–8.
38 Curtin,
"Declaration of the Rights of Man," 157–75.
39 Curtin,
"Declaration of the Rights of Man"; Ott, Haitian
Revolution, 28–75.
40 The
French Revolution may be followed in, among others,
Simon Schama, Citizens: A Chronicle of the French
Revolution (New York, 1989); Leo Gershoy, The
French Revolution, 1789–1799 (New York, 1960);
Albert Soboul, The French Revolution, 1787–1799:
From the Storming of the Bastille to Napoleon,
Alan Forest and Colin Jones, trans. (London, 1989);
Gaetano Salvemini, The French Revolution,
1788–1792, I. M. Rawson, trans. (New York,
1954).
41 On Long
and Edwards, see Edward Brathwaite, The
Development of Creole Society in Jamaica, 1770–1820
(Oxford, 1971), 73–79; Elsa Goveia, A Study on
the Historiography of the British West Indies to the
End of the Nineteenth Century (Mexico City,
1956), 53–63.
42
Billington, Fire in the Minds of Men, 22.
43 Carolyn
Fick, "The French Revolution in Saint-Domingue: A
Triumph or a Failure?" in Gaspar and Geggus,
Turbulent Time, 53–55.
44
Toussaint Louverture always wrote his name without
an apostrophe, although many French and non-French
writers have, for reasons unknown, used L'Ouverture.
45 Robert
L. Stein, Léger Félicité Sonthonax: The Lost
Sentinel of the Republic (Rutherford, N.J.,
1985).
46 Fick,
"French Revolution," 67–69.
47 Anthony
P. Maingot, "Haiti and the Terrified Consciousness
of the Caribbean," in Ethnicity in the Caribbean,
Gert Oostindie, ed. (London, 1996), 53–80.
48 Hunt,
Haiti's Influence on Antebellum America.
49 Maingot,
"Haiti," 56–57.
50 For the
"Africanization of Cuba scare," see Philip S. Foner, A History of Cuba and Its Relation with the
United States, 2 vols. (New York, 1963), 2:
45–85; Arthur F. Corwin, Spain and the Abolition
of Slavery in Cuba, 1817–1886 (Austin, Tex.,
1967), 115–21; Luis Martínez-Fernández, Torn
between Empires: Economy, Society, and Patterns of
Political Thought in the Hispanic Caribbean,
1840–1878 (Athens, Ga., 1994), 33–40; Robert L.
Paquette, Sugar Is Made with Blood: The
Conspiracy of La Escalera and the Conflict between
Empires over Slavery in Cuba (Middletown, Conn.,
1988), 184–86, 265–66; Gerald E. Poyo, "With All
and for the Good of All": The Emergence of Popular
Nationalism in the Cuban Communities of the United
States, 1848–1899 (Durham, N.C., 1989), 6–7, 86.
For the impact of the Haitian Revolution elsewhere
in the Caribbean, see Philip D. Curtin, Two
Jamaicas: The Role of Ideas in a Tropical Colony,
1830–1865 (1952; New York, 1970); H. P. Jacobs,
Sixty Years of Change, 1806–1866: Progress and
Reaction in Kingston and the Countryside
(Kingston, 1973), 12–37; Bridget Brereton, A
History of Modern Trinidad, 1783–1962 (Kingston,
1981), 25–51; Hilary Beckles, A History of
Barbados (Cambridge, 1990), 78–79; Edward L.
Cox, Free Coloreds in the Slave Societies of St.
Kitts and Grenada, 1763–1833 (Knoxville, Tenn.,
1984), 76–100; Frank Moya Pons, The Dominican
Republic: A National History (New Rochelle,
N.Y., 1995), 91–164; Valentin Peguero and Danilo de
los Santos, Visión general de la historia
dominicana (Santo Domingo, 1978), 125–78.
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