Revolutions - 4.02- The Web of Tension
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And welcome to revolutions.
Episode 4.2, The Web of Tension.
So last time, we introduced Sandomang, the French colony that occupied the western third of the island of Hispaniola.
We also introduced the main groups who inhabited the island, the whites, the free colors, and the slaves.
Now, I did my best last week to discuss each group in isolation from each other, because today I want to vote.
focus in on the relationships between and within the groups. Relationships that formed a complicated
web of tension that defined the island in the late 18th century as France approached the French
revolution, and Sendomang approached what would one day be known as the Haitian revolution.
Now, we could start practically anywhere, but let's start first with the tension between Sendomang
collectively and the mother country, France. And in the context of this relationship, France is always
called the metropole, which simply means the parent state of a colony. So when I say
metropole, I just mean France proper. We'll start here, because it is the tension between
San Doming and the metropole that will eventually kickstart the revolution in 1791. So in the big
picture, the French overseas empire was governed by mercantilist theory, which essentially means that
trade between the mother country and the colonies should be done entirely in-house and operate for the
benefit of the metropole. The purpose of a mercantilist colonial empire was to produce goods
that could then be exchanged with other mercantilist empires, the British, the Dutch, the Spanish,
with the balance of trade, hopefully, in your favor. That is, you wanted them to give you more gold
for your stuff than you gave them for their stuff. The object of the mercantilist system was to
accumulate more gold than everyone else. In the French colonial context, this meant that the
planters of Sandomang labored under a restrictive framework called the exclusive.
Promulgated by the great-controller General Jean-Baptiste Colbert during the reign of Louis XIV.
The gist was that all colonial exports had to be sold back to France and all colonial imports had to be bought from France.
And it's safe to say that in the whole history of Sandomang, the colonists hated the exclusive
because it depressed the price of their exports and increased the price of their imports.
Without any outside competition, the French merchant houses in the Atlantic port cities paid less for sugar, coffee, and indigo than the planters believed they could get in an open market, and then those same merchant houses charged more for goods and provisions and machinery than the stuff was really worth.
It was incredibly frustrating for the colonists.
And what was doubly frustrating was that fully three quarters of Sendomang sugar and coffee were destined to be re-exported to other countries.
So rather than the colonists selling directly to British traders, they had to sell it for far less to French merchants, who then marked up the price and pocketed the profits of exportation.
And since the merchants back in France were growing incredibly rich, thanks to their monopoly, they had way better access to the inner circles of court, and so despite colonial protests, the exclusive stayed put.
Now, key point. How did the colonists know they were being undercut and overcharged?
Well, that's easy. Despite the exclusive, the colonists carried on a robust contraband trade with
everybody. There was a thriving internal economy in the new world, and Sendomang was right in the
middle of it, buying and selling was Spanish Cuba, British Jamaica, the British colonists up in America.
It was all off the books and winked at, but it was a key part of everyone's colonial economy.
And even more than that, it was critical to those economies because sometimes French merchants
couldn't meet colonial demand and where else were you going to get the stuff you needed to survive,
but from the British and the Dutch and the Spanish, who were all quite happy to trade with Sandomang
and try to break the exclusive. Now, the first true revolt that hit Sandomang was actually in
opposition to restrictive trade policy set by the metropole. In the 1720s, one of those odious
state-chartered monopolies so beloved by mercantilists, the company of the Occident, was granted
all kinds of special monopoly privileges over Sandomang.
Tension in the colony finally blew up in late 1723 as a group of angry women stormed the company
headquarters in La Cap and smashed it up. Then the next night there was further rioting and a company
owned plantation was burned to the ground. This unrest then spread out over months until the powers
that be back in Versailles decided to back off and withdraw some of the privileges.
Now, if this incident sounds a bit familiar, you're right.
because this resembles nothing, if not the conflicts between London and its North American colonies in the run-up to the American Revolution.
This mob action in 1723 is precisely the same sort of action that the Boston merchants got up to over the T Act, which was what?
Trade privileges for a state-chartered monopoly.
And as we will see, in almost every way, almost, the big whites in Sandomeng are basically the same type of colonists with the same basic ideas as the men who ran the American
revolution. These are the major planters and the principal local merchants, and their
aims are going to be free trade and self-government. George Washington and John Hancock
were big whites. So that brings us to our next big tension, which is between the royal
administrators who ran the colony and tried to enforce the exclusive, and the big whites, who
were starting to believe that they should run the colony. Now, as we discussed last time, Sandelman
started out as an unruly pirate base.
So the administration of the colony reflected the need for a strong hand to impose order.
The governor general was a soldier, and the colony was essentially run under military rule,
which is to say that justice was heavy-handed and verdicts arbitrary.
As time progressed, and the colony evolved into being a settled planter society,
the leading big whites came to resent their treatment and started advocating for more self-government
and more respect for their individual rights.
I mean, they were reading their John Locke about property and Montesquieu about constitutional government,
and they were looking on jealously at their British counterparts in Jamaica and North America,
who enjoyed a degree of self-government, and they said, why not us too?
So to keep the big whites in check, the royal administrators tended to exploit one of the main lines of tension within the colonial white community,
the mutual loathing of the big whites and the small whites.
And the small whites were the guys who struggled as direct overseers and managers out on the plantations or as low-level clerks in the cities.
New arrivals who dreamed of making a fortune were themselves thrust into an exploitive world of their own that kept them locked in place while the big whites made all the money.
Now, it was, of course, possible to rise up through the ranks.
Men did it all the time.
But as often as not, the small white wound up stuck in a demoralizing job with no way out.
So the small whites resented the hell out of the wealthy and arrogant big whites.
And recognizing an opportunity to contain big white ambition and to curry some popular support,
royal administrators were eager to side with small whites when they filed grievances or brought lawsuits against the big whites.
Now the big whites in turn despise the uncouth small whites who were always lying and stealing and loafing around drunk instead of doing their jobs.
And this particular tension between the big and spying,
small whites is going to be really important once the French Revolution gets going.
Because guess who the small whites are? That's right. They are the Song Q Lott. And they are going to be
just as eager as their cousins back home to pin on a revolutionary cockade and overthrow the
hated old order. But just remember, the big whites are not counter-revolutionary royalists.
They are the liberal nobles and the rich bourgeois Z who represented the first revolution,
the Revolution of 1789.
The small whites, meanwhile, represent the second revolution, the Revolution, the Revolution of 1792.
So, in effect, the course of the French Revolution is going to play out in miniature in Sandomang,
with the added bonus of armed free colors and slave armies running around.
Okay, so let's bring in the free colors into our web of tension.
Now, as I said last week, Sandomang was not an explicitly racist society for the first
70-odd years of its existence. It was far less racist than British or Spanish colonies, for example,
and this is one of the reasons why such a large free-colored community was allowed to grow up.
The Code Noirme specifically granted free-colors the same rights as anyone who had been born on native French soil,
even if they themselves were freed slaves who had been born in Africa.
Now, this did not make them immune to racial prejudice, and they were never assimilated into the white elite of the colony.
but despite various social slights, they were able to prosper nicely.
But it was this very prosperity that did finally introduce codified racism into the colony
after the end of the Seven Years' War in 1763.
Now, if you remember from last week, one of the defining features of the Big Whites is that
they were seeking their colonial fortunes with the express intention of then getting out.
Now, this did not apply to all of them.
There were for sure rooted Creole Big Whites, that is, prominent white families now being born in and staying in San Domeng.
But many were taking the money and running.
And many others along the way were at least making regular trips back to France, which was expensive,
or spending a bunch of money on European luxury goods to make their colonial homes feel as European as possible.
Well, guess who wasn't doing any of this?
The free collards.
As the generations unfolded and free-colored wealth accumulated, they tended to reinvest it in the colony, buying more land or improving their existing estates.
They had no great urge to return to France, and they were far less interested in blowing money on European luxuries.
And because they were staying put, and their children were being born and raised in the colony and then they were staying put, the free-colored started to naturally accumulate more power and influence inside the colony.
and it's one of the reasons newly arrived whites were happy to marry into one of these prosperous
free-colored families.
So this was all very troubling to the big whites, who felt their political and social dominance
threatened by the rising free colors.
But no one hated the prosperous free colors more than the small whites.
As a class, the small whites really latched onto racial superiority as the one thing they really
had going for them.
They did not like that their lives were so crappy.
while inferior ex-slaves, barely better than animals, had it so good.
And of course, the prosperous free-colors had no love for the small whites,
who were little better than slaves, and who acted high and mighty without cause or justification.
The free colors derisively referred to the small whites as Negro Blanc, black whites.
Meanwhile, back in the metropole, the colonial office in Versailles was trying to figure out
how to consolidate what was left of their overseas empire after the disastrous losses in the seven years war.
They just had to cede Canada to the British.
Specifically, they wanted to make sure they didn't lose what they had left to, for example, native independence movements.
To address this issue, they turned to a guy named Emilion Petit.
Petit had written a book back in 1750 called American Patriotism that outlined pretty clearly the threat posed.
to the metropole by an emerging creole population in the colonies.
Now, creole just means somebody who's born in the Americas.
So there were white creoles and colored creoles and black creoles.
And the concern was that the creoles collectively would start to create a united local interest
that was in opposition to the metropole.
Petit said if the home government didn't start making reforms,
these guys are liable to try to break away from France.
of being a liberal reformer, Patty said, we need to treat these people not like uncivilized pirates,
but like full subjects of the crown. We need to end arbitrary military rule and give them a measure of
self-government. We need to respect their private property rights. We need to end the exclusive
and open up the colony to free trade. That way, the colonists will feel like full participants
in the system rather than oppressed cogs in a tyrannical machine. But the other key part of
Patti's reforms was to introduce a system of proto-apartheid that divided the whites from the
coloreds. Patee believed that if those two groups joined forces, that it would be a matter of when,
not if, the colony broke away from France. So one side of the coin was building up the self-esteem
of the white colonists by treating them better. The other was abusing and denigrating the free
colored so that the two groups would never recognize how much their interests actually intersected.
So around about 1763, an officially racist regime started being implemented in Sandomang.
In 1764, colors were forbidden from certain prominent professions, medicine, law, government jobs.
In 1773, a freed slave and his or her family was forbidden to take the name of their white patriarch.
This was to break the lines of inheritance and any family connections that might bind together prominent whites from their colored relatives.
In 1777, blacks were barred from the metropole completely, and free colors were forced to register upon
arrival. In 1779, the colors were hit with a sumptuary law, forbidding them from wearing swords in
public or dressing in European style, which meant wearing the good silks. They were also forbidden from
being addressed using formal titles like madame and signor. Manumission papers proving freedom
were required for wills and marriage licenses, and oh, by the way, there's now a huge tack on manumission,
freeing a slave, to prevent the free-colored population from growing too quickly.
Local notaries were ordered to keep track of racial identifiers on legal paperwork,
so the colonial government could start keeping a record of who was white and who was colored.
After all, sometimes a colored was whiter than a white, and you never could be sure who was inferior to whom.
Now, for the racial identifiers, the colonists turned to the work of a guy named Mero de Samarie,
who was a white creole and who was best known for writing a massive work called the Description of French Saint-Domeng,
which remains a principal primary source for information on the colony before the revolution.
The work was intended to guide colonial administrators,
but it was unfinished by the time that the revolution swept through and made it all obsolete.
The Moro de Samari had worked up a classification system that identified 128 shades of color from the standard mulatto, which was one white parent, one black parent, though there were actually 12 different combinations that produced a mulatto, and we're not going to worry about those.
Then in English, you have a quadroon, which is three white grandparents and one black grandparent.
So, for example, Alex Dumas, the great revolutionary general, was a mulatto, while his son.
son, Alexander Dumas, the great novelist, was a quadroon. This system goes out to one one-128th
part black, and it provided pages of tables to determine what combination makes what.
Now, in practice, a lot of this, like a lot of everything decreed by the metropole, was just
ignored. Notaries didn't bother to note race. Weddings and wills were duly approved without asking
for documentation, but the official racism was odious, and offensive.
to the prominent free-colored who believe themselves in every way the full equal of a white.
I mean, that's what the Code Noir had always said. And then, of course, just as these racist laws
were hitting, they were landing on the first generation of colors who had been educated back in
France. If a free colored family got enough money together, they would send their sons back to
France to be educated. And back in France at that point, racism was practically not even a thing yet.
So these guys would go off, get a fully modern education, be treated as equals for a few years,
and then come back to a colonial world of humiliating slights.
Now, at the epicenter of the tensions between the whites, the collards, and the royal administrators
was the issue of militia service.
Service in the colonial militia was incredibly unpopular.
It took time that was better spent running your property.
It cost money because you had to outfit and arm yourself, and it was dangerous for all the reasons
military service is dangerous. No one liked it, and reforming militia service requirements was
hopefully going to be a part of the transition from military rule to enlightened civilian rule
envisioned by guys like Petit. So in that pivotal year of 1763, the Metropole made a deal with
the colonists. Pay us a one-time tax of four million livres, and we will abolish the militias.
We'll use regular troops to defend the colony. This money was raised practically,
overnight and sent back to France. Except right away the metropole about-faced and decided it was
too expensive to defend the colony with regular troops. Plus, new arrivals to the garrisons kept
dying of tropical diseases the minute they stepped off the boat. So by 1764, they had backtracked
and reinstated the old system. The big whites in particular went nuts about this, and they resisted
all attempts to reinstate the militias. The principal court in La Capp,
ran basically like a colonial parlamo, and new laws had to be registered there to take effect.
And resistance by the big whites in the Le Cap Council was so strong that it took five years to get the militia laws officially re-registered,
and that was just the beginning of the real trouble.
After the militia laws were set to go back into effect in 1769, a full-blown revolt broke out in the South Province.
Prominent white creoles got together with their free-colored neighbors,
to resist service, going so far as to kidnap a militia captain,
gather together in the hundreds, armed, and ready to fight.
Now, this little rebellion was put down inside of six weeks,
but it is of critical importance for two reasons.
First, it was the last major uprising on the island
before things started slipping inexorably towards revolution in the late 1780s,
and second, it was the last time that big whites and free colored joined forces to fight a common cause.
despite the fact that their natural economic interests aligned, they would henceforth be on opposite
sides of all future political confrontations. It would not be until far too late that the big whites
realized, hey, those guys are actually slave-owning planters just like me, and skin color aside,
we have a ton in common. Maybe we should, but by then it would be too late.
The upshot of all this is that the big whites were basically exempted from military service
completely by the 1770s, and the free colors wound up being the backbone of the local military.
They were required to serve three years in the police force tasked with tracking down runaway slaves,
and after that they would graduate to the militia, which they could not exempt themselves from
in ways that whites could.
Now, the collards did not like militia service either, and they were really unhappy about the new racist
laws that barred them from serving as officers.
But militia service was a visible way of demonstrative.
that they were ready and able to be full contributing citizens of the colony, so they endured
their service with grudging obedience. And as a part of this visible display of patriotic loyalty,
when volunteers were called for in 1779 to go off and fight in the American War of Independence,
almost no local whites joined, but 941 free-colored showed up to enlist, and ultimately
545 sailed off with the French army, and then they served with distinction in the siege of Savannah,
which I mentioned back in episode 2.10, turning south. Just as the end of the seven years war changed
colonial policy, the end of the American War of Independence changed it again. With the colony once
again booming in the aftermath of wartime recessions, and with the white planters and merchants
in the North American colonies having successfully broken away from the British Empire, the French
Royal Authority started seeing the Colors as potential allies rather than enemies.
And though the existing racist laws were not repealed, the spread of the apartheid was arrested
after 1783. With the Big Whites in North America having thrown off the British, the Royal
authorities decided that maybe the free Colors could be a bulwark against a similar revolt in Sandal
Meng. Aside from dividing whites from colored, one of the other stated goals of all the racist laws in
the 1760s and 1770s, was to stop the contagion of liberty from slipping over to the slaves.
The whites were deathly afraid that once they started treating freed slaves, like full members of
society, it wouldn't take long before an enslaved slave started saying, hey, there's no difference
between him and me, but a piece of paper. But this was never actually much of a threat. The free
colors and the black slaves did not really identify with each other at all. Prominent free colors,
no different than the big whites, treated slaves' property to be used and discarded.
And slaves knew damn well that the free colors were not their brothers, they were just another
class of master. So that brings us to the slaves, because in Sandomeng, the mother of all tensions,
the tension at the center of the web of tension, was between master and slave. The singular fear of
the free population was a slave revolt. In total, slaves outnumbered. In total, slaves outnumbered
the free population 10 to 1, and then out on the individual plantations, this could run much,
much higher with just a few overseers surrounded by black slaves. And though masters ran the gamut
from generous to sadistic, there was a common belief that the only way to make sure that the
slaves didn't rise up was to keep them in constant terror. In Sandomang, exemplary torture was
the order of the day, and the masters were creative and unrelenting. A sense of the same. A
Aside from standard cracks of the whip out in the field, lashing was the most common form of
punishment, and there were different types with cute little names. There was the forepost,
which was laying the victim face down on the ground and tying out their hands and feet.
Then there was the ladder, which was hanging them from a ladder before whipping them.
Then there was the hammock, which was hog tying them to the limb of a tree. The lashes would be
delivered by the slave drivers, and the number varied with the crime. But one astute plan
advised that the number of lashes was less important than the length of time the lashing went on.
Fewer lashes, delivered over a longer period of time, was more agonizing and thus more
instructive to everyone than a bunch of lashes issued quickly. Either way, during a severe session,
it was not uncommon for the victim to simply be whipped to death. Their body would be discarded,
and a new slave would have to be purchased. Aside from whipping, there were all manner of more
permanent punishments. Heavy irons tied to the feeder hands or hung around the neck,
blocks of wood chained to the body to be worn around at all times, iron face masks
to stop slaves from eating the sugar cane. As we discussed last time, regular work duties
often led to accidental mutilation. Well, intentional mutilation was also a standard punishment
for theft or for running away. Hacking off of hands, feet, and ears was pretty standard.
Genitals could also be destroyed in circumstances, and often this was done with hot wax or boiling sugar.
And to make matters worse, masters would rub open wounds with salt and pepper or hot ashes to jack up the misery.
Full-on executions were also designed to be creative and horrible.
There are accounts of slaves being buried up to their necks, their faces slathered with sugar for the bugs to come eat them alive,
and then there are particularly gruesome stories about tying slaves up, stuff.
their anus with gunpowder and blowing them up. It was called putting a little powder up the
arse of a negro. The point of all this was to terrorize the slaves into believing that there was no
hope and that the slightest misstep meant torture and death. But despite all this terror,
slaves did resist in what small ways they could. On the most basic level of daily work,
slaves might intentionally work slowly, sabotage machinery or break tools. They,
often acted dumb or unable to comprehend anything without explicit instructions and constant oversights.
Descriptions of slaves as naturally stupid and lazy were universal and probably reflected nothing so much
as, why on earth should I be smart and hardworking? Bleep you, bleep hole. A step above
intentionally jamming up the works was running away. His Sendomeng, this was called marinawage,
and runaways were called maroons. And there was
were two basic types of marinaug, Petit Marranage and Grand Marinoge. So again, with the
little and big, so it's better to distinguish them as temporary and permanent. Temporary
marinaage was often a deliberate strike tactic to force changes or extract slightly better
treatment from the masters. Occasionally, there would be mass walkouts protesting a particularly
bad manager or overseer, and as often as not, a negotiated settlement would be reached,
and the slaves would return with a promise that the runaways would not be punished.
While gone, the runaways might simply lurk on the outskirts of the plantation,
and might even sleep in their own beds at night.
But if you got caught without having negotiated your return,
please refer to the horrible punishments that I just described.
Permanent marinage, on the other hand, was an attempt to flee slavery altogether,
and it took two basic forms.
First, a slave might make it to one of the bigger cities,
where they would pass themselves off as a free black,
laborer forged manumission papers were available on the black market. Women runaways would generally
seek employment in a brothel, and if they were incredibly lucky, they might make the transition from
prostitute to mistress to wife. Now this was all doable, but with every slave bearing a brand,
and with wanted fugitive notice is constantly making the rounds with quite specific descriptions
of the runaway, this was not very easy to pull off. If the permanent runaway didn't make for one of
the cities. They headed in the opposite direction, up into the unpopulated mountains along the border
between French San Domingue and Spanish Santo Domingo. For the whole history of the colony,
there were always free maroon communities living up in the mountains. In 1720, for example,
there was a mass breakout of about a thousand slaves who formed one of the largest communities on record.
Usually, they numbered a hundred or fewer. These guys would survive by a combination of living off the land,
raiding nearby plantations or trading with the Spanish side of the island. By the middle of the
1700s, there was an estimated 3,000 maroons living out in these communities, and despite the
efforts of the militias and the runaway slave police, they would never be eliminated. And completely
eliminating the maroons wasn't even in the master's best interest. It was better for the truly
rebellious slaves who could not be controlled to find an escape hatch out the back door,
than feeling trapped and then forced into violent resistance.
Now, the deadliest form of resistance, and the one most feared by the masters, was poison.
If a slave had some basic knowledge about herbs, they could concoct a poison, and because they
handle all of food and water, murdering a household would be a snap.
Or at least, that's what the owners believed.
People and livestock drop dead in Sandelmeng all the time, and separating the times it was
just regular old disease from the times where it was deliberate poisoning was practically impossible,
but the owners were really, really super paranoid about being poisoned by their slaves.
Now, compared to other Caribbean colonies, there was not much in the way of organized slave
rebellions prior to the spectacular revolt of August 1791, but there was one famous
failed uprising in the late 1750s that stood at the intersection of marinaage and poison.
An African-born slave named Mokendal started gaining a reputation for himself in the slave communities as a great orator and leader.
He mixed magical elements of various religions and presented himself as a slave prophet.
Eventually he ran away and became the leader of a maroon community.
He then spent upwards of six years building an organization with members in all the plantations and cities and at all levels of the slave hierarchy.
There was a chain of command and a plan, and any fellow slave who learned of the brewing conspiracy
and did not join it would be ruthlessly killed.
Mockendahl's plan was ambitious.
He was going to poison every well in Le Cap, and then when the population was decimated by tainted water,
he would lead his armed followers into the city for a general massacre and the overthrow of the French slavers.
But just before the plot was about to be executed in January 1758,
Mockendal was betrayed to the authorities and captured. He was tortured and then burned alive.
But having sworn to his followers that he could change shape, the myth emerged that Mockendal,
in fact, turned himself into a fly and floated away before the flames got him.
And the legend of Mockendal, I mean, who knows the actual extent or aim of the conspiracy,
lived on in both the imaginations of the master and the slave. The former terrified it might happen again,
the latter cherishing it as a dream that might one day yet be realized.
As the slaves dreamed of maybe one day overthrowing the system from the inside,
another group on the other side of the world dreamed of dismantling it from the outside,
and this will bring us back full circle to the tension between the big white masters
and the powers that be back in France,
who started possibly coming under the sway of a dreaded new intellectual movement, abolitionism.
The idea that human beings should not be held as property got going with the Enlightenment,
and in France, there were two particular works that really took root.
The first was a book called The Year 2440 by Louis Sebastian Merci,
which is an original Rip Van Winkle story, with the author waking up in the far future
and exploring the new fantastic world he discovers.
The important bit for us in this work of utopian science fiction comes when the time-traveling
author comes across a statue in honor of the man who led the colonial slaves to freedom.
It was a statue dedicated to the Avenger of the New World.
This theme was then picked up by the enlightened clergyman, the Abbe Renaud, in his work
the philosophical and political history of the establishment and commerce of the Europeans
and the two Indies, which was nearly continuously in print after its first publication in 1770.
The work was a general survey of colonial history and economics, but it contained scathing passages, denouncing slavery, and promising that if the system was not dismantled slowly, it would eventually explode violently.
After the end of the American War of Independence led to the massive influx of new slaves into Sandomang.
As we said last week, imports jumped to nearly 40,000 a year.
The colonial authorities decided to take measures to curb the worst abuses of slavery and start possibly in four.
forcing the provisions of the Code Noir. So in December 1784, and then again in December 1785,
the Colonial Office issued decrees on the treatment of slaves. Owners were to keep compliance
records of the provisions, clothes, and food they provided their slaves. There were now to be
maximum limits on the amount of hours a slave could work in the day, and they were also supposed to
get Sunday afternoon off too. Slaves were also to be protected if they justly complained about
mistreatment. Without the slightest hint of irony, the colonial masters were incredulous and denounced
the despotism of the metropole. Mostly, though, they said if you get between us and our slaves,
you'll be the one fomenting slave insurrection, not us, because they'll start thinking they have
rights, and that will be the ballgame. In an almost exact replay of what was about to go on
back in France, the Le Capp Council refused to register the edicts, and in 1787,
the exasperated intendant had had enough.
He abolished the Lecapp Council and moved its functions down to Port-au-Prince.
This all happened one year before the great battles over the closure of the Parlamar rocked France in 1788,
that soon led to the day of the tiles.
Now, in fact, in 1788, all of this tension came to a near head
when a paranoid master named La June suspected some of his slaves of trying to poison him.
He tortured two suspected women and then chained them to a wall to die.
Under the new rules, 14 slaves presented themselves to the royal officials,
described the crimes that had taken place,
and then the officials opened up an inquiry against Lejeune.
After the alleged box of poison was found to contain nothing but tobacco,
they were set to prosecute him for murder.
So this is going to be a major test of these new slave laws.
But as the prosecution progressed, the big whites rallied behind Lejeune.
They provided testimony of their own that contradicted the slaves' account, and they hinted
darkly that if he wasn't acquitted, the royal governor would soon have a revolt on his hands.
Lejeune was duly acquitted.
The big whites had flexed their muscle, cowed the local officials into backing down,
and kept firm control over their slaves.
So this all brings us right up to the edge of the French Revolution.
And next week, the metropole will be rocked by the events of 1789.
Everyone in San Doming was going to try to take advantage of the crisis.
The big whites will send representatives back to France to make sure that their rights were protected and maybe even expanded.
The free colors will send their own representatives back to lobby for full political and social equality.
And while no one was there representing the slaves, they too recognized the possibilities opened up by the revolution.
In the midst of Abbe Renal's denunciation of slavery in the history of the two Indies, he wrote,
A courageous chief only is wanted.
Where is he, that great man whom nature owes to her vexed, oppressed, and tormented children?
Where is he?
He will appear, doubt it not.
He will come forth and raise the sacred standard of liberty.
And Raynaul was right.
That man is coming.
