And lastly, to argue that this semmingly weaker policy in no way
lessens the service the Haitian Revolution played to the United STates,
but actually is a more glorious story than the false one it replaces.
The Setting Leading to the Leclerc Expedition
The Haitian Revolution began in 1791. Influenced by the French
Revolution's recognition of the Rights of Man, driven by the excessive
cruelty of French slavery, the slaves rose up in August of 1791. (4)
Toussaint Louverture, over 40 when the revolution broke out, rose in power
and by 1793 was a leading general of the revolution, along with
Jean-Francois and Biassou. The three had sided with the Spanish against
the French and were sheltered in the Spanish part of the island (the
Spanish colony of Santo Domingo). The Spanish also supplied weapons and
other material support to the rebels.
However, Toussaint returned to the French side when he became convinced
that there was a better chance for emancipation with them. French
Commissioner Sonthonax had emancipated the slaves and the Directory in
Paris recognized this emancipation in Feb. 1794. By April of that year,
shortly after word arrived back from France of the Directory's
emancipation, Toussaint switched sides and began to war against both the
Spanish and British, and to war for France.
By July of 1801 Toussaint had emerged as the leading figure in Saint-
Domingue, and seemed headed toward declaring an independent republic. He
had defeated the Spanish and British, maneuvered the French Commissioners
out of the colony, defeated Andre Rigaud in a Civil War, taken possession
of the eastern portion of the island which had recently been ceded to
France by Spain, eradicated slavery on the entire island and promulgated a
constitution in which he was declared governor general for life.
Both Britain and the United States treated with Toussaint as though he
were the head of an independent state, though Toussaint's constitution and
public demeanor was to claim that he was a loyal French citizen who had
saved the colony for France.
Virtually no one believed Toussaint's claims of loyalty to France.
Britain and the United States wanted to deal with Toussaint to ensure an
end of French privateering from Saint-Dominguan waters. Both nations hoped
to contain the slave rebellion to Saint-Domingue alone. Both nations
strove to out do one another in establishing trade relations with
Toussaint's government, in defiance of France's regulations for the
colony. Thus Napoleon might well be excused if he took with a healthy dose
of salt Toussaint's claims of being a loyal son and protector of French
rights in Saint-Domingue. (5)
The Origins of Napolean's West Indian Polity Preceded
Him
Nonetheless, the general policy which Napoleon followed was not created
by him, but by the Directory before Napoleon became First Consul.
Napoleon's own coup d'etat in France took place on Nov. 9, 1799. But the
essence of what would soon become Napoleon's West Indian policy was
already in place.
In 1795 the Directory acquired Santo Domingo, though they never sought
to take possession. Also they began to seek retrocession of Louisiana.
They recognized that Saint-Domingue was the golden goose of their West
Indian possessions, but that it could not be reliably supplied from France
because the British fleet controlled the Caribbean. New Orleans was
recognized as the necessary supply center from which needed food stuffs
could be more easily shipped to Saint-Domingue than from France.
The Directory, as Napoleon later on, perceived Toussaint to be a threat
to the continued colonial status of Saint-Domingue. Just as the Directory
tried to rid itself of Napoleon himself by sending him off to Egypt, so it
sought to rid itself of Toussaint by involving him in disastrous foreign
adventures. On May 23, 1799 Edward Stevens, Consul General of the U.S. to
Saint-Domingue, wrote to General Maitland, formerly the head of the
British forces: "The Agency of San-Domingo had received positive orders
from the Executive Directory to invade both the Southern States of America
and the island of Jamaica. Gen. Toussaint Louverture was consulted on the
best mode of making the attack. (Korngold, p. ix.)
Stevens, writing to Secretary of State Timothy Pickering, saw that this
was a double edged order--if it succeeded, France would win a great prize
in Jamaica, but, if it didn't it would be rid of Toussaint:
"Success would forever separate from Great Britain one of her most
valuable colonies and diminish her resources. Should they [Toussaint and
his army] fail, they will fall victims to their rashness and presumption
or like Bonaparte and his army cease to be objects of dread and jealousy
to the Government of France. The old system might then be restored in
St. Domingo and slavery reestablished. (Korngold, p. 164)
Toussaint wisely refused this order. However, it has always seemed to
me that this direct plot, insincere as it may have been on the Directory's
part, is not an unlikely source of the beginnings of the linear plot
theory which I described above. The mistake of this interpretation would
be putting the plot into Napoleon's mouth, and believing it a sincere plot
to invade the United States, rather than an attempt to rid France of
Toussaint. (6)
The Linear Plot Theory and the American Federalists
Napoleon may have inherited the essence of his West Indian policy, but
he immediately turned up the heat. Having taken over in November of 1799,
by August the following year he had already begun negotiations with Spain
for the retrocession of Louisiana. France receive the Territory in a
secret treaty on October 1, 1800, less than one year after Napoleon's
ascension to power in France. However, it never actually took control from
the Spanish.
At the same time Napoleon was working to put his West Indian policy
into effect. On September 30, 1800, the day before the retrocession treaty
with Spain, the French and Americans signed a treaty ending their two year
old quasi-war. This left the British, with whom France was at war, as the
major stumbling block to Napoleon's plans. It was another whole year
before Napoleon managed a peace treaty with Britain, freeing him from the
dangers of the British navy in the Caribbean. Just six days after their
treaty was signed Napoleon began the plans for an invasion force to be
sent to Saint-Domingue.
The British and American attitudes toward Saint-Domingue had been
mixed. The British invaded Saint-Domingue in September of 1793, thinking
they could achieve an easy victory in concert with the Spanish and pick up
a valuable colony. However, after Toussaint and yellow fever (7) soundly
defeated them by 1798, the British sought special trade relations with
Toussaint, and were prepared to help him against the French, encouraging
his independence movement. The only fear the British had, which was shared
by the Americans, was that an independent Haiti would spread the concept
of a servile revolution. Such a revolution was extremely dangerous to the
slave colonies of the British West Indies.
The American position was more complex. First the Adams, then Jefferson
administrations had to walk a tight rope of conflicting interests. On the
one hand the New England area desperately wanted and needed trade with San
Domingue. They traded salted fish, clothing, manufactured goods, weapons
and arms for molasses and sugar cane, mainly for the important rum
distilleries of the American NOrtheast.
On the other hand, the U.S. was extremely worried about the impact of a
free Haiti on the Southern states and the political implications for the
administration which would support such relationships. On March 12, 1799
Secretary of State Pickering wrote to Rufus King, American minister to
Great Britain: "A Saint Domingue under France was more dangerous. Blacks
would stick to agriculture and not go to sea. But 'France with an army of
those black troops might conquer all the British Isles and put in jeopardy
our Southern States."' (Logan, p. 84.)
There are several noteworthy things about this memo. First of all, it
was written prior to Napoleon's coup d'etat, again underlining that the
linear plot theory preceded Napoleon. Secondly, it is important to note
the belief that as long as Haiti had no sea power, (8) it could not
effectively spread its revolution. Finally, there are suggestions in the
literature that the whole concept of a French plot to attack the U.S. may
have been an American invention.
The leading proponent of this view is Ludwell Montague who argues that
the Federalists were vehemently opposed to Revolutionary France. Both
Thomas Pickering, Secretary of State under John Adams, and Alexander
Hamilton were convinced that it would be possible to keep an independent
Haiti from becoming a maritime nation, thus reducing any real threat it
might pose to other slave nations. At the same time an independent Haiti,
on their view, could be induced to halt piracy from La Tortue and to allow
lucrative trade with the American Northeast. The problem was, how to
convince the Southern states to support such a policy. The belief in a
French plot to use San Domingue as a jumping off place to invade the U.S.
through Louisiana was a convenient fiction to float their anti-French
policy. What made the plot particularly workable for the Federalist was
the claim that Toussaint himself had refused to obey the Directory's order
for a foreign adventure against the United States. Thus he was seen as the
lesser of two evils. (Montague, p. 39 ff)
I believe there is a strong case to say that the linear plot theory was
itself an American Federalist concoction to justify it's anti-French
policy without seeming pro-black or pro-Haitian. (9) Rather, Haiti could
be seen as the first line of defense against an imperialist France. The
primary support for this claim is that the story fits the Federalists'
purposes, and that there is virtually no textual evidence at all that
supports the linear plot, and much which shows it is sheer non-sense.
There are a couple of diplomatic memos which suggest that two of
Jefferson's minions did believe the plot. Minister to Paris, Edward
Livingstone wrote to King on December 30, 1801: "I know that the armament
destined in the first instance for Hispaniola is to proceed to Louisiana
provided Toussaint makes no opposition." (Montague. p. 43)
In another letter Tobias Lear, the new American consul in Cape Francois
claimed to have "...obtained positive information that some of Leclerc's
regiments were destined for Louisiana, but at the same time he was able to
observe that no troops could be spared from Saint Domingue for an
indefinite period." (Montague, p. 43)
However, even if Livingstone and Lear were sincere and correct in their
intelligence, (10) this does not support the linear plot theory. The
French had not yet taken possession of Louisiana from the Spanish. This
area was constantly beset with problems from hostile Indians as well as
disgruntled settlers. It is reasonable to expect that they would need some
protection of their interests once they repossessed Louisiana. Also,
Napoleon was quite aware of Jefferson's opposition to the French in
Louisiana. But we cannot forget that Louisiana was a French possession,
and legally re-taking it from the Spanish is not an invasion of the United
States, however much Jefferson might have disliked it. Again, fearing a
French presence in Louisiana is one thing, believing that the French were
on their way to Washington is totally another.
NAPOLEON'S WEST INDIAN POLICY, THE LACLERC
SECRET INSTRUCTIONS AND THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE
I have tried to establish that the French West Indian policy was not an
invention of Napoleon's, but something he inherited from the Directorate.
Perhaps the clearest evidence that Napoleon's strategy called for the San
Domingue-center plan, and not the linear plot, comes from his secret
instructions to Laclerc. (11) The primary aim of the instructions is to
tell Laclerc how Napoleon wants Toussaint subdued, slowly, with flattery
to lower his guard, and then with ruthlessness. This is exactly what
Laclerc seems to have achieved. Napoleon's primary mistake was to think
that the elimination of Toussaint was the immediate end of the revolution.
But, more to the point of this story is that the secret instructions
make clear that Napoleon was out to re-establish Saint-Domingue in all her
prior glory. This he recognized required the reintroduction of slavery and
the complete return of the old regime.
He tells Leclerc:
"The Spaniards, the British and the Americans are equally worried to
see a Black Republic. The admiral and the major general will write
memorandums to the neighboring establishments in order to let them know
the goal of the government, the common advantage for the Europeans to
destroy the Black Rebellion and the hope to be seconded." (Roloff, p.
249)
Later on he is more specific:
"Commerce must, during the 1st, 2nd and 3rd periods be accessible to
Americans, but after the 3rd period, Frenchmen only will be admitted and
the ancient rules from before the Revolution will be put back into
force." (Roloff, p. 252-253)
In order for France to recapture the grandeur that was Saint-Domingue,
Napoleon needed to put down the black rebellion, reestablish slavery, and
equally importantly, refuse all trade with Britain and the United States.
When Saint-Domingue was producing her fabulous wealth for France it was
because the exclusif was in effect, that is, Saint-Domingue was required
to trade exclusively with France, both for her imports and exports.
Certainly Louisiana played an important role in Napoleon's policy. As
Henry Adams says:
"St. Domingo, like all the West Indies, suffered as a colony under a
serious disadvantage, being dependent for its supplies on the United
States--a dangerous neighbor both by its political example and its
commercial and maritime rivalry with the mother country. The First
Consul hoped to correct this evil by substituting Louisiana for the
United States as a source of supplies for St. Domingo."&bbsp; (Adams,
"Napoleon," p. 124)
Napoleon's vision is a Saint-Domingue-centered vision. She was to be
the great producer of wealth, reverting to her slave status. Louisiana was
important to the plan, but Louisiana was relegated to the role of an
agricultural supplier for the hungry slaves of Saint-Domingue, and as a
front-line protector from allowing the United States a trade foot in the
door. Nonetheless, Napoleon's West Indian policy looks first and foremost
to Saint-Domingue.
Perhaps one of the strongest arguments against the linear plot and for
the Saint-Domingue-center plot is the Louisiana Purchase. Napoleon was
soundly defeated in Saint-Domingue and Haiti was born of the ashes of that
battle. But, if Louisiana had been the actual target, then Napoleon could
have extricated himself earlier and by-passed Saint-Domingue to continue
on toward his main target. He would have reasoned that it was not
Toussaint who defeated him, but yellow fever, which was a favorite
explanations of many white racists. (see note # 7 again). He would have
given up on Saint- Domingue as unfit for Frenchmen, and moved on to
Louisiana. What he did in fact, however, was to sell Louisiana as soon as
it became clear that he was not going to retake Saint-Domingue. What's the
point in an excellent supply depot if there's nothing to supply.
Henry Adams gives evidence that Napoleon was considering selling
Louisiana as early as April, 1803, seven months before the French finally
surrendered in Haiti. (Adams HISTORY, p. 329) Adams sums up the situation
succinctly:
"Without that island the system had hands, feet, and even a head, but
no body. Of what use was Louisiana, when France had clearly lost the
main colony which Louisiana was meant to feed and fortify?... Not only
had the island of St. Domingo been ruined by the war, its plantations
destroyed, its labor paralyzed, and its population reduced to
barbarism...but...the army dreaded service in St. Domingo, where certain
death awaited every soldier; the expense was frightful; a year of war
had consumed fifty thousand men and money in vast amounts, with no other
result than to prove that at least as many men and as much money would
be still needed before any return could be expected for so lavish an
expenditure. In Europe war could be made to support war; in St. Domingo
peace alone could but slowly repair some part of this frightful waste."
(Adams, HISTORY, P. 311-312).
The deal to sell the Louisiana Territory was well underway in the last
days of the Leclerc expedition, and was actually concluded before the
French left Saint-Domingue, though the official sale, like the official
birth of Haiti, is in 1804.
Haiti's Contribution to the United States
The interesting and ironic part of this story is that what at first
seems to be the weaker and less glorious of the plots is actually the
stronger and more glorious position for Haiti. On the linear plot theory,
Napoleon was headed for the United States through Louisiana with a quick
stop over in Saint-Domingue. Then, Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian
masses stopped the French dead in their tracks. The French, beaten and
discouraged, spared the United States and returned home.
But notice that what makes this story interesting is the assumption
that the most important entity is the United States and not Haiti. What is
glorious is that the tiny, insignificant nation of Haiti saved the
important great giant with its unlikely victory over the French forces.
However, on the Saint-Domingue-center theory, Haiti is the key and
center of Napoleon's whole West Indian strategy. Louisiana, which recall
is not the United States, but a French colony, is an important supply
depot, but secondary to the whole plot. The United States is a competitive
nation, trying to cut into France's trade relations with its richest
colony.
Certainly the United States feared France's presence in Louisiana,
especially with the imperialist Napoleon Bonaparte on the throne. But it
was the lost trade with Saint-Domingue that most frightened the U.S.
Jefferson recognized this. He was himself a Republican and not a
Federalist, and was president during Napoleon's attack on Saint-Domingue.
He seems not to have feared that Napoleon had designs the United States.
Nonetheless he had a clear idea of the interrelation between Louisiana,
Saint-Domingue, France and the U.S. On April 18, 1802 he wrote Edward
Livingstone, American Minister in Paris, that New Orleans "...is the one
single spot, the possessor of which is our natural and habitual
enemy...The day that France takes possession of New Orleans fixes the
sentence which is to restrain her forever within her low water mark...From
that moment we must marry ourselves to the British fleet and nation."
(Logan, P.134)
Jefferson was confident that the French would not succeed in Saint-
Domingue, and supplied Toussaint with arms, munitions and food, regarding
him, as the Federalist linear plot did too, as the first line of defense
against Napoleonic aggression. But the aggression Jefferson feared was not
a direct threat to United States territorial integrity, but an undesired
and untenable French presence in Louisiana. He believed that Toussaint
would put up considerable resistance, and he counted on pressing affairs
in Europe to turn Napoleon from his West Indian policy.
Thus on the Saint-Domingue-center theory Haiti becomes much more
important than it would otherwise. It is recognized by Napoleon, and the
French Directorate before him, as the most important factor of its West
Indian's policy, and more important than Louisiana. At the same time, the
heroic fighting of the Haitians presents Louisiana to the United States on
a silver platter. Consequently, the part of the story which the Haitians
so love to acknowledge -- their contribution to the well being of the
United States -- is well preserved.
Finally, this view emphasizes that in the relative importance of
nations, there was a time when Haiti was not important for what she did or
didn't do for the big brother across the gulf stream, but extremely
important in her own right, sought after by Napoleon himself. The
seemingly "lesser" view becomes the more significant when viewed from this
perspective.
FOOTNOTES
- At times when technically referring to the colony of San Domingue, I
will use the name Haiti. I am quite aware that Haiti was officially born
on Jan. 1, 1804. However, she was effectively independent from 1798,
except for the brief period after Toussaint's so-called retirement. At
times in my story where the text calls for the emphasis that the action
was one taken by the independent forces, I will use the name Haiti or
Haitians, even before the legal date arrives.
- Whether the plot was to move from New Orleans to Philadelphia or to
Washington depends in which administration one locates the plot. For
most of John Adams' presidency the capital was Philadelphia. Washington
became the seat of government in July, 1800, just before Thomas
Jefferson became president.
- Some of the historians who seem to lean strongly toward the linear
plot theory are: Robert and Nancy Heinl, Carl Lokke, Wenda Parkinson and
Charles Tansill.
- When the slaves first rebelled in August of 1791 they were not
asking for emancipation, but only an additional day each week to
cultivate their garden plots. (Korngold, p. 29)
- Napoleon had already decided upon his West Indian strategy, which
was, in this sense, much more important than the person of Toussaint
Louverture. However, just a few days after Napoleon had ordered the
mounting of the expedition against San Domingue, General Stevens arrived
in Paris with Toussaint's printed constitution, naming him Governor
General for life and virtually making San Domingue a free nation with
only the loosest ties to France. This constitution, and particularly the
fact that it had already been printed and distributed, was too much for
Napoleon, who could brook no threat to his own dominance. He wanted the
head of this man whom he called "the gilded African."
- It is interesting to note, however, that in 1799 Commissioner Roume
did in fact send agents to Jamaica to stir up the slaves. One agent,
Sasportas, died a heroic death in Jamaica and, ironically, the British
became frightened of Toussaint! (Korngold, p. 177-178)
- Perhaps one of the most difficult and interesting scholarly
questions concerning the Haitian Revolution is what was the relative
impact of Toussaint's leadership and the Haitian fighters and what was
the impact of yellow fever? This is a problem which has not been
adequately settled in the literature.
- The British secret convention with Toussaint also includes this
prohibition against a Haitian navy. (Montague, p. 38) Also, when
Jefferson proposed independence under 3 powers early in 1802, the French
Minister of Marine, Pichon, quotes Jefferson as saying: "Provided that
the Negroes are not permitted to possess a navy, we can allow them
without danger to exist and we can moreover continue with them very
lucrative commercial relations." (Logan, p. 126). However, Logan seems
to think the Haitian Revolution was more of a threat than did either
Britain or the United States. As long as Haiti could have no navy they
seemed to believe her servile revolution could be contained. Logan,
waxing eloquent about the impact of the revolution, places it much
higher on the historical scale of importance: "It would perhaps not be
too much to say that the specter of a free Negro Republic that owed its
independence to a successful slave revolt frightened slave holding
countries as much as the shadow of Bolshevist Russia alarmed
capitalistic countries in 1917." (Logan, p. 72)
- Montague's description is the best I have read of this alleged
"discovery." "How, indeed, had the Federalists hoped to hold the South
in line while they negotiated with the 'First of the Blacks?' They
'discovered' that France had ordered an invasion of the Southern States
from Saint Domingue, to carry thither the tide of black revolt, that
Toussaint had refused to obey, and that Rigaud had undertaken the task.
Considering the actual situation in Saint Domingue, the idea was
fantastic. Even Stevens, who had it from a source probably inspired by
Toussaint himself, could take it seriously only by supposing that the
Directory planned to make South Carolina a second Egypt, to rid itself
of Toussaint as it had rid itself of Bonapart. Nevertheless, the South
was asked to believe that Louverture was a true ally, Rigaud a dangerous
enemy." (Montague, p. 39.) [Note that Steven's remark about the 'second
Egypt' was made before Napoleon returned to France and staged his coup
d'etat.]
- Lear was not a Federalist and had replaced Edward Stevens in Cape
Francois on April 28, 1801. The new Secretary of State, James Madison,
had replaced Stevens to lessen the Federalist influence in San Dominguan
policy. (Logan, p. 14)
- These secret instructions were, for a long time unknown or lost.
Finally a German historian, Gustave Roloff, turned them up and presented
them as an appendix to his book DIE KOLONIALPOLITIK NAPOLEONS I. The
translations which I use in the two selections in the body of the paper
were made by Jacques C. Chicoineau, retired professor of French at
Webster University.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRPHY
- Adams, Henry. HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA DURING THE
ADMINISTRATION OF THOMAS JEFFERSON, VOL. 1. The Library of America
Press, 1986.
- Adams, Henry. "Napoleon I. at St. Domingo." in: HISTORICAL ESSAYS BY
HENRY ADAMS. New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1891.
- Alexis, Stephen. BLACK LIBERATOR: THE LIFE OF TOUSSAINT LOUVERTURE.
London: Ernest Benn, 1949.
- Brown, Jonathan. THE HISTORY AND PRESENT CONDITION OF ST. DOMINGO. 2
vols. London: Cass (first published in 1837), 1972.
- Buckley, Roger Norman, ed. THE HAITIAN JOURNAL OF LIEUTENANT HOWARD,
YORK HUSSARS, 1796-1798. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1985.
- Heinl, Robert Debs, Jr. and Nancy Gordon Heinl. WRITTEN IN BLOOD:
THE STORY OF THE HAITIAN PEOPLE, 1492-1971. Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1978.
- Korngold, Ralph. CITIZEN TOUSSAINT. Boston: Little, Brown, 1945.
- Logan, Rayford W. THE DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES WITH
HAITI 1776-1891. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1941.
- Lokke, Carl Ludwig. "Jefferson and the Laclerc Expedition." AMERICAN
HISTORICAL REVIEW, Vol. 33, Jan. 1928.
- Montague, Ludwell Lee. HAITI AND THE UNITED STATES, 17141938.
Durham: Duke University Press, 1940.
- Ott, Thomas. THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION, 1789-1804. Knoxville:
University of Tennessee Press, 1973.
- Parkinson, Wenda. "THIS GILDED AFRICAN": TOUSSAINT L'OUVERTURE.
London: Quartet, 1978.
- Roloff, Gustave. DIE KOLONIALPOLITIK NAPOLEONS I. Munich: Drug and
Berlag von A. Didenbourg, 1899.
- Sloane, William M. "The World Aspects of the Louisiana Purchase."
THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW. Vol. 9, 1904
- Stoddard, T. Lothrop. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION IN SAN DOMINGO. Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1914.
- Treudly, Mary. "The U.S. and Santo Domingo." JOURNAL OF RACE
DEVELOPMENT, Jan. 1, 1916.
- Waxman, Percy. THE BLACK NAPOLEON: THE STORY OF TOUSSAINT LOUVERTURE.
New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1931.
I believe I have a copy of Napoleon's "Secret Instructions" to Leclerc
and will post them as soon as I can.
This is the fourth in a four part series of articles on the Haitian
Revolution written by Bob Corbett.