Revolutions - 4.06- The Second Commission

Episode Date: January 18, 2016

The Second Commission was supposed to implement the Law of April 4 and defeat the slave uprising. This turned out to be harder than they thought.  ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 And welcome to revolutions. Episode 4.6, the Second Commission. After King Louis signed the Law of April 4th, which eliminated the legal basis for racial discrimination, the legislative assembly selected three men to sail to San Doming and enforce the law, and for the record it was, in fact, a law rather than simply a decree, because the king actually signed the thing. These three men would become known to history as the second commission, because they were replacing the first commission, the guys who had been sent over the previous fall to enforce the decree of September the 24th. That had repealed the decree of May the 15th, then had itself overturned the colonial committee report of March the 10th. You follow all that?
Starting point is 00:00:57 Good. I knew that you would. Now, since the law of April 4th had been a part of the Girondin takeover of the royal ministry, it is understandable that Jacques-Pierreau-Brusso, had a huge say in who the commissioners would be, though in the end, he only got two of his top three picks. Brousseau really, really wanted Julian Raymond to be one of the three commissioners, to demonstrate to the colonists in no uncertain terms that when we say race isn't a thing anymore, we mean it. But allies of the club messiahawk inside the legislative assembly, and there were a few, managed to block the appointment by way of a clever deflection. To ensure the objectivity of the commissioners,
Starting point is 00:01:36 no one who owned property in the colony would be allowed to serve. This seemed like a reasonable enough restriction to the rest of the legislative assembly, and the rule was adopted, but it was really just a way of making sure that Raymond, who obviously had extensive property holdings in Sendomang, was barred from serving on the second commission. But despite this minor setback, Bressot's other two principal choices sailed through the nomination process,
Starting point is 00:02:03 in part because they were pretty obscure, and nobody knew who they were. But Brissot knew who they were, and he had every confidence in the world that they would not just enforce the law of April the 4th vigorously, but bring the whole chaotic mess in Sandomang to a successful conclusion. These two were Léges Felicité Sontanax and Etienne Pauvelerl. Both men shared a similar career arc and a political worldview, though Polverell was 25 years older than Sontanax. Born in Bairn, 1742, Paul Varell studied law. in Bordeaux. He was an adherent of Enlightenment philosophy, joined the Freemasons, and was an enthusiastic supporter of the revolution when it arrived. He was working in Paris as a lawyer at the time,
Starting point is 00:02:48 and when the women dragged the royal family back to Paris, Polverell joined the newly formed Jacobin Club, but merely as a rank-and-file member. He was not a leader nor a prominent personality at all. He did, however, fall into Brousseau's orbit early, and though he was not in the friends of the blacks, he was on record supporting colored equality. Paul Varell's first really important action came in 1791 when he helped lead the charge to purge from the Jacobin Club members of the club Mesaic, who were held to be counter-revolutionary agents due to their opposition to the recently past May 15 decree. Paul Varel's partner, Sontanax, meanwhile, was 25 years his junior, just 29 years old when he was appointed to the second commission. But Sontanax would be
Starting point is 00:03:33 the junior commissioner an age only. He is going to wind up one of the two or three most important figures in the entire Haitian revolution, seeing as how he is the emancipator. Sontanax was born into a wealthy but non-noble provincial family, and he was sent off to study law in Dijon in the early 1780s. Upon graduation, he wound up securing a coveted position in the Paris Parliama, so he had a front-row seat for all the early battles of the revolution. Like Polverell, Sontanax was not a leader, nor very well known as the revolution progressed. He, too, fell into Brousseau's orbit, supported racial equality, and, based on an anonymous pamphlet, we now know he authored, supported gradual slave emancipation, but was not in the Friends of the Blacks. He did, however, joined the Jacobins and sat on the committee that issued the club's official support for the May 15 decree.
Starting point is 00:04:28 So when the time came to select the second commissioners, Sontanax and Polvaral were Bressot's ideal candidates. Neither were well known. Neither carried the taint of membership in the Friends of the Blacks, but both were privately super committed to racial equality. Now Bressel, as I just said, really wanted Julian Raymond to be the third delegate, but he couldn't get it done. And so the Legislative Assembly appointed in his stead,
Starting point is 00:04:55 well, I won't even bother confusing things by giving you the guy's name, seeing as how he's literally going to desert his post the first chance he gets, so we'll just call him the other guy. The second commission set sail from France at the end of July 1792, aboard a warship called the America. Also on board was a 72-year-old military officer named General Desparb, who had been appointed Governor General to replace the disgraced Governor Blanchland. The appointment of the positively ancient Desparve is something of a historical
Starting point is 00:05:27 mystery. No one quite knows how we got the job. But we don't have to worry about it too much because on the voyage across the Atlantic, the commissioners and DeSparb started budding heads immediately. As we're about to see, they will pack up General DeSparb and send him back to France as soon as possible. Also setting sail with the commissioners were 6,000 more armed reinforcements, 2,000 regular army troops and 4,000 volunteers from the National Guard. Though France was now officially at war with both Austria and Prussia, the Legislative Assembly decided it could spare a few regiments to go put down the slave revolt. Combined with the 6,000 troops the Metropole had already sent to reinforce the First Commission,
Starting point is 00:06:12 and the garrisons already in the colony, the colonial ministry was under the impression that with these additional reinforcements on the way, there would be close to 20,000 troops in Sandal Meng, more than enough to end the revolt once and for all. This, however, turned out to not even be close to accurate, because as we will see time and time again for the whole rest of the show, the first thing new European soldiers do upon arrival in San Domang is get sick and die. When the second commission arrived, they would turn out to be only about 2,000 men actually fit for service in the colony, and of the 6,000 reinforcements they just brought with them, they would be down to 3,000 in a matter of months. The America landed in La Capp on either September the 17th or September the 20th. I've seen both dates reported with great conviction.
Starting point is 00:07:04 They were greeted by big white leaders who were outwardly eager to work with the commissioners. Blanchland's humiliating defeat at the hands of the Kingdom of Plataon and the aborted race riot back in August meant that they were now ready to turn over whatever new leaf was required to bring this whole terrible business to a close. At least that's what they said. Now the second commission carried with it instructions to implement three principal objectives. First, dissolve the all-white assemblies and create a mixed-race government for the colony. Second, end once and for all any loose talk of independence that might still be floating around out there. And third, defeat the slave uprising.
Starting point is 00:07:47 And to dispel the rumors that were floating around out there, Sonsanax announced at the ceremony welcoming the commissioners to Lecath that they were not, repeat not, there to abolish slavery. And this was likely true. In a letter back to the metropole in these early days, Sontanax wrote that he believed mass emancipation was inadvisable because it would lead directly to the massacre of every white in the colony. Now, obviously, the most pressing matter, though, was what to do about the slave revolt. But the commissioners were hampered right off the bat. For one, they discovered that their manpower was not nearly what they were. They they thought it was. Then they debriefed Governor Blanchland, who had not yet gone back to France to
Starting point is 00:08:29 get guillotined, and he told them that fighting slaves is not as easy as it sounds. This new information made them all a little less eager to rush into action. Then friction between the Second Commission and Governor Debarb led to delays and mutual accusations that the other side was to blame for those delays. The forces at the Commission's disposal were then given an unexpected boost just days after their arrival. when the Vicar de Rochambeau showed up with 3,000 additional troops, kind of out of the blue. Rochambeau was the son of the Comte de Rochambe, who had served as commander-in-chief of the French Army in the American War of Independence, and who had just recently resigned his position as commander of the Army of the North in the French Revolutionary Armies. Rochambeau the younger had just been assigned governor of the small French colony of Martinique,
Starting point is 00:09:20 but counter-revolutionary royalist forces had staged a hostile takeover of the island and prevented him from landing. So let's not get distracted by that, but just know that Rochambeau is now in Sendel Meng. I mentioned earlier that one of the running jokes of the Haitian Revolution will be that the colony constantly has to play catch-up with the rapid-fire pivots of the French Revolution. Well, here we are again, because just two weeks after the second commission set sail with new, new instructions. What happened? That's right. The central pivot of the whole French revolution, the insurrection of August the 10th. They missed it by just two weeks. You cannot make this stuff up. So right on cue, two weeks after the second commission arrived in La Cap, a ship came into the harbor bearing the absolutely incredible news that the king had been overthrown and France
Starting point is 00:10:13 was on the verge of becoming a republic. Okay, so I guess that's now happened. And then, Then get this. By the time Sandomeng heard about the insurrection of August the 10th on October 2nd, France had been further rocked by the invasion of the Austro-Prussian army, the panic-inducing Brunswick manifesto, the resulting September massacres, the surprise victory at Valmy, and then the even more surprising retreat of the Austro-Prussian army. Keeping up with the French Revolution is nearly impossible. With the insurrection of August 10th now known, however, the very legitimacy of the Second Commission hung in the air, seeing as how their appointment came bearing the signature of a now deposed king. But confirmation of their mandate came from the Legislative Assembly
Starting point is 00:11:02 very quickly, and not just confirmation, but expansion. The Second Commission now had the authority to dismiss any public official or military officer who stood in the way of their mission. On October the 12th, the commissioners officially dissolved the whites-only colonial assembly. Until a new mixed assembly could be elected, an executive committee of 12 men called the Interim Commission was established to act as the colony's executive government. Six of the delegates would be chosen by the outgoing Colonial Assembly, and six would be chosen by the Second Commission. And signaling that their long-term commitment to racial equality might be a lot of hot air, the Colonial Assembly selected six white delegates. So to balance this, the second commissioners chose six colored delegates, including, including Julian Raymond's brother, Francois.
Starting point is 00:11:55 For the moment, though, the big white leaders in La Capp were not focused on resisting racial equality. They were focused on settling old scores with the royal administration. Remember, when we talked about the web of tension back in episode 4.2, one of those lines of tension was between the small click of royal bureaucrats and military officers whose authority had long been resented by the big whites. That hatred, as we've seen, has now morphed. into the widespread belief that these officials were the secret hand guiding the slave uprising.
Starting point is 00:12:27 While with news that the monarchy has now been overthrown, it is time to get rid of those guys once and for all. So three days after the Colonial Assembly dissolved, its delegates reformed as a private political club called the Society of the Friends of the National Convention. The following day, reports began circulating that the senior officers of the LeCAP Garrison had insulted the newly arrived troops, most of whom were patriotic national guardsmen, and then a meeting of the new club the next day turned into a mass meeting of every patriotic-minded citizen in LeCap. On October the 19th, 1792, a unified patriotic front that included big whites, small whites, and free colors, all backed by armed units from the newly arrived troops and sailors from the naval
Starting point is 00:13:16 convoy, staged a huge demonstration. They had a list of a hundred men who, who they called traitors to the country, and they wanted them all deported. Among them was the commandant of the Le Cap Garrison. He was the guy who last week had asked for martial law, but that request was denied because of the suspicion that he was in league with the slaves. Faced with this sudden mass demonstration, the second commission decided to side with the demonstrators, and they ordered Governor Despbar to put the commandant in custody and then prepared to deport him.
Starting point is 00:13:49 but Governor Despar refused the order. Meanwhile, the Commandant himself had taken refuge inside his garrison's barracks surrounded by loyal officers and troops. Shots were then fired as the demonstrators threatened to storm the barracks. But other military officers, well known in Le Cap, but not in the Commandant's circle, managed to help the Second Commission talk down both sides. The Commandant and the officers still loyal to him agreed to board a ship that would take them all back to France post haste. The second commission then exercised their newly expanded powers and demanded that Governor De Sparb, who had disobeyed a direct order, immediately resigned the governorship,
Starting point is 00:14:31 and himself returned to France. Having served as Governor General for less than a month, De Sparb was already on his way home. In his place, the commissioners appointed General Rochambeau to temporarily fill the vacant position until a new new Governor General was appointed. With the crisis of October the 19th resolved, the second commission decided to split up and attend to the colony as a whole. Sontanax would stay in Le Cap and take care of the North province, while Polverell would take on administration of the West Province, and the other guy would take over the South. And it is right here that the other guy truly earns his status as the other guy, because instead of going down to the South province, he just bolts, deserts his post, and disappears back to France. I dug around a little bit trying to figure out whatever happened to him, but he just falls off the face of the earth, so whatever, see you later, other guy. Polverall then had to take on administration of both the West and the South.
Starting point is 00:15:35 And we're going to come back to his attempt to impose the law of April the 4th onto a white population already literally up in arms about colored equality, because the North Province, for the moment, must remain the center of attention. The rapid-fire pivots of the French Revolution did not just have implications for the free citizens of Sandomang. I also had huge implications for the slave armies occupying the Northern Plains. By the summer of 1791, the slave insurgents had settled into the territory they held and had faced no meaningful attempt to expel them for quite some time. Jean-François and Bissue, simultaneously partners and rivals, divided up the black-held territory, was Jean-Francois taking the eastern part of the North province, and Bissue taking the south part.
Starting point is 00:16:24 They were comfortable enough that Bissue actively enlarged an old plantation house, transforming it into something resembling a full-on royal palace. And as I mentioned last time, they also both took on grandiose military titles. Jean-François was now Grand Admiral. Bessu was Governor General, and his second-in-command was now Tucson Louvichure. Their followers were spread out. in camps all over, with no one encampment numbering more than a few thousand. With the war stalled, these guys spent most of their time tending to and expanding the old personal plots that gave them the
Starting point is 00:17:00 food that they needed to live. Having failed to negotiate an end to the revolt the previous winter, the slave generals had now expanded their demands. There is a letter they allegedly sent, whose authority is questioned by some historians, that roots these new demands principally in the declaration of the rights of man, which included in its very first clause the right to resist oppression, which they argued is all we're doing. But regardless of the authenticity of this specific argument, the slave demands were now nothing less than one general liberty and two general amnesty. The slave leaders recognized that plantation labor was essential to everyone's survival. The colony was a cash crop economy that had to trade sugar, coffee, and indigo to live.
Starting point is 00:17:49 But when the blacks returned to work, it would be as free men paid for their labor, not as slaves. They insisted these demands be presented to King Louis and the Legislative Assembly, and that the presentation be witnessed by Spanish ambassadors. But of course, by the time these demands were being made, the French monarchy had already been overthrown. Now firmly in control of the political situation in Le Cap, or at least that's what he thought. Sontanax was able to turn his attention to these slaves and their demands, demands that were now so couched in appeals to the king that he could paint the entire slave revolt as counter-revolutionary. He ordered Rochambeau on a coordinated offensive that ran through early November that was on all fronts quite successful. The slave soldiers were everywhere driven from their camps and into the mountains.
Starting point is 00:18:40 But then Sontanax and Rochambeau learned the difference between invading slave-held territory and holding it. Without nearly enough men to actually garrison the northern plains, when Rochambeau's forces returned to Le Cap, the slave simply came back down out of the mountains and reoccupied their old camps. And then when word filtered back up to the slaves that the king had been overthrown, the slave generals doubled down on their counter-revolutionary royalism. In early December, Bissue declared himself the king's vote. Viceroy, who would rule in the king's name until the monarchy was restored. As Sontanax learned the hard way, what fighting the slave armies was really like, he was also learning that the whites in Le Cap were now practically as counter-revolutionary as the slaves. The friends of the National Convention started making noises that, hey, look, the law of April
Starting point is 00:19:30 the 4th is great and all, but it's also signed by a deposed king, and so we're not super convinced of its legitimacy. Given his mandate and his powers, Sontanax believed, that it was his prerogative to simply assert that the law of April the 4th was completely legitimate, and then he made sure everybody knew it. He took a very controversial and confrontational step. He appointed a free-colored officer to every military unit in Le Cap. This led to angry white denunciations from inside these military units
Starting point is 00:20:03 that were loudly echoed in the Friends of the National Convention, who were starting to fancy themselves a shadow government, a la'a the Jacobins back in Paris. But Sontanax wasn't having any of this. On December 1st, he banned the club from holding further meetings, a decision even his colleague Paul Verro thought, overly dictatorial. But Sonsonax pressed on. The following day, December 2nd,
Starting point is 00:20:29 he ordered the core regiments of the regular army garrison, the still-white National Guard units, and the colored militias to muster for a mass oath swearing to uphold the law of April the 4th. The colored militias showed up, obviously. The regular army regiments showed up, but were not happy about it. The White National Guard units, meanwhile, straight up ignored the order and did not come. Then, when Sontanax ordered the men to take the oath, the coloreds did, because, of course, they did,
Starting point is 00:20:58 but the white soldiers refused. Then word came that a white mob was gathering on the other side of town and preparing to march on the regiment Sontanax had mustered. With the mob approaching, Sontanaks completely lost control of the situation. Chaos set in, confusion took over, and pretty soon, shots were being fired. One of the colored regiments surrounded Sontanaks and saved his life, while the white regular army troops seized control of the central arsenal. The colored regiment, having gotten Sontanx out of the fray alive, then fell back to the outskirts
Starting point is 00:21:34 of the city. Well, actually a bit outside the city. taking over a small settlement on the road out of town that had been fortified to prevent the slave armies from breaking in. They seized control of this critical point of the city's defense, and by holding it, they held the fate of Le Cap in their hands. If they had wanted to, they could have opened the doors and just let the slaves in to massacre all the whites. But they didn't, nor did they really want to. The Colards held this post for three days, until on December 5, 1792, Sontanax was able to reassert control of the cap with the help of Rochambeau, the troops who had come over with them from France who were still loyal, and a charismatic and well-respected regular army colonel named Etienne LeVos, who we'll get to in a second.
Starting point is 00:22:23 The colored regiment was talked into standing down, and Sontanax furiously turned on the white agitators who had sparked the crisis, arresting most of the prominent leaders of the Friends of the National Convention and imprisoning them on ships anchored in the harbor. It was as a result of this December crisis that Sontanax made a firm political decision. The slaves were counter-revolutionary enemies of the Republic. The whites were counter-revolutionary enemies of the republic. The only true patriots and viable allies in the colony were the coloreds. So he made an outright alliance with the free-colored leadership, putting them in charge of the municipal government of LeCAP, and allowing them to form totally independent military units,
Starting point is 00:23:07 staffed and led by colored and answerable to no authority but Sontanax himself. Following the December crisis, word came in that the Little Royalist Rebellion in Martinique had been suppressed, and that Rochambeau was now free to take up his assignment, so he will now depart from our story. But only temporarily, because he will return at the very end as the second in command of the Leclair expedition, the massive French invasion force sent by First Consul Bonaparte in 1801 to reassert French control over Sandomang. With Rochambeau gone, Sontanax elevated Colonel Etienne LeVoe to take on overall command of the colony's military forces in the North Province.
Starting point is 00:23:55 Colonel LeVos came from minor nobility and was a career army officer. He was considered intelligent and capable, but his only claim to fame prior to his arrival in San Doming was his very willingness to go to San Doming. He had volunteered his unit, the 16th Dragoons, for the expedition that was preparing to follow the second commission. I'm sure his men were thrilled. He was obviously an ardent revolutionary patriot and one who clearly believed in racial equality. When resistance to the idea of colored officers started up, LeVos stood up and said the next vacancy in the 16th dragoons would go to a colored. This earned him the lasting friendship of Sontanax, and so upon Rochambeau's departure,
Starting point is 00:24:39 Sontanax happily put this obvious ally in charge of the North Province military. But that military was shrinking fast. The newly arrived European soldiers were dying like flies, and if they were going to make a move against the slaves, it was going to have to be soon. So in January 1793, LeVoe led the forces in the north on a widespread attack. They drove Viceroy Governor-General Bissue from his palatial headquarters and forced him to take refuge in a nearby fort. But then LeVoe managed to get a hold of the high ground,
Starting point is 00:25:15 and a company of free-colored soldiers breached the walls, and Bessu had to run for the safety of the mountains. At the same time, colonial forces drove Grand Admiral Jean-François from his base and over the border into Santa Domingo. This renewed offensive was also more comprehensive, and wherever the colonial forces went, they torched all the garden plots that kept the slave armies fed, and then burned whatever lodgings the slaves had been using.
Starting point is 00:25:41 Soon the residents of LeCap were getting news of actual honest-to-god victories. After 18 months of miserable, fatalistic gloom, things were looking up. Meanwhile, from his base down in the west, Paul Verro had come to the same basic conclusion as Sontanax, and though he was less confrontational than his colleague, the dynamic turned out to be the same. The whites were going to resist the law of April 4. and his best allies were the free colors. So Polverell, too, allied with them, both against
Starting point is 00:26:16 the insurgent slaves and the intransigent whites. By resisting equality, the whites were suddenly in danger not just of having to share power with the colored, but being surpassed by them completely. The whites, however, were not going to go down without a fight. Pulveral's arrival in the West and his very clear preference for the colored led white leaders to once again seize control. Port-au-Prince, and then also Jacques Mel, the city on the Caribbean seaside of the southern peninsula. Polverell decided to leave that battle for another day, though, and instead turned his attention to avenging Governor Blanchland's defeat at the Kingdom of Platon. Since their victory, the kingdom had formed a pretty stable community up in the mountains, with a network of settlements, with as many
Starting point is 00:27:03 as a thousand cabins, a functioning hospital, and elected kings. The increasing prominent colored leader, Andre Rigo, had remained behind in Lekai after Governor Blanchland departed, and he managed to convince the local provisional assembly to offer more generous terms to the slaves, freedom not just for the leadership, but for the rank and file as well. But even Rago's more generous terms came with a heavy stipulation. With the law of April 4th now passed. It was clear that the colored were the quote-unquote winners of the little civil war
Starting point is 00:27:41 that had erupted. And so only those slaves who had been armed by the colored would have their promise of freedom recognized. Those armed by the whites would be returned to slavery because they had fought for the quote-unquote losers. Now, some slaves took this
Starting point is 00:27:57 deal because, hey, why not? But the kingdom as a whole held out. So just as LeVoe was undertaking his offensive in the north. Polverell arrived in Le Chai and launched a new offensive against the kingdom of Platon. This one better organized and better executed than Blanchland's fiasco. When the colonial forces came marching up this time, the leaders of the kingdom determined that they were not going to be able to hold their camps and decided to retreat even higher into the mountains. Unfortunately, they had among them slaves too weak, too old, or too sick to join the quick retreat.
Starting point is 00:28:32 When the colonial forces reached the settlements, they burst in unopposed, and then proceeded to massacre all the blacks they found. You know, the ones who were too weak, too old, or too sick to flee. It was a glorious victory. So by February 1793, the slave revolt looked like it was finally going to be crushed, and everywhere the slave armies were breaking apart and in retreat. But then what happened? That's right. by now the National Convention has executed King Louis, and both Britain and Spain have joined the war against France. So rather than being able to press their advantage against the slave armies, the second commission had to suddenly swivel to face the very real threat now posed by their colonial neighbors in Jamaica and Santo Domingo.
Starting point is 00:29:20 The sudden arrival of the European war to the Caribbean had massive implications for the course of the Haitian revolution, as both the British and Spanish looked for allies inside San Doming to pry the colony out of French hands. The Spanish, of course, looked to the slave armies that they had been covertly supplying since the fall of 1791. The Spanish government in Madrid ordered its colonial representatives in Santa Domingo to take the next step and formally recruit the French slaves into a full-blown auxiliary army. The offer to Jean-François and Bissue was brought. pretty straightforward. If you fight under the flag of the Spanish crown, we will recognize your freedom and grant you land titles when we altogether inevitably crush the upstart French Republic.
Starting point is 00:30:08 And the wording of this is key. The Spanish were not offering to grant the slaves their freedom. They were offering to recognize the freedom the slaves had already won for themselves. With this adroit nod to the dignity and honor of the slave fighters, and with the promise now of endless arms and supplies. Jean-Francois and Bissue signed up with the Spanish, bringing over 10,000 men right away with the promise of many more to come. The slave armies now fought under the flag of the Spanish Bourbons. Meanwhile, the British looked to the bitter big whites as their best allies in the colony. White planters, who had fled to Jamaica after the start of the slave revolt, had already communicated their willingness to support a British invasion if it meant the re-imposition
Starting point is 00:30:56 of slavery and the recovery of all their property. While now official representatives of the big white interests residing in London, signed a formal agreement to that effect with the British ministry. The whites would help the British invade, conquer, and hold the colony. And in exchange, the British would allow them to reimpose racial apartheid and put all the blacks back in chains. Now, for the moment, all this talk of war was just urgent rumor. But still, it was clear what was coming. On February the 26th, Sontanax left Le Cap in the hands of Levo and their colored allies
Starting point is 00:31:33 and met up with Polverell in San Mark on March 5th to hammer out their next move. They quickly decided that securing control of the principal port cities against the likely threat of foreign invasion would have to be the priority for the moment, and that meant pivoting from attacks on the slaves to attacks on the white holdouts. At the beginning of April, they went on the offensive. Their first objective was Port-Prince, which as I just mentioned is, of course, once again in active revolt and being held by small white agitators. Obviously, the previous round of arrest had not been thorough enough. Supported by a force of 1,200 men marching overland,
Starting point is 00:32:14 the commissioner sailed a naval flotilla into the Port-au-Prin's harbor on April 5th and demanded the city surrender. The commissioners waited until the land army was in position, and then, When the city refused to yield again, the commissioners ordered a general bombardment on April the 12th. Resistance collapsed at once. When the forces of the Second Commission entered the city, they did not bother trying to weed out the principal leaders from the other suspects. Hundreds of whites were indiscriminately rounded up and imprisoned on a troop transport in the harbor to be dealt with later. Then the forces of the Second Commission went round and re-secured Jacques-Mell. By early May 1793, almost the whole of the colony had submitted to the authority of the Second Commission, either by force or by choice.
Starting point is 00:33:02 The only part of the colony still held by intransigent whites was the rugged northwest tip of the southern peninsula, the Grand Ants, surrounding the port of Jeremy. This will become important once the British do invade, because Jeremy is going to be their first and most permanent beachhead. While the Second Commission was putting down the last of the whites, they were also rethinking their strategy towards the blacks. Even with the victories of January, it was painfully obvious that no true military victory was ever going to be won. As soon as the exhausted colonial forces moved on from whatever territory they had just cleared, the slave simply came back down out of the mountains and retook it. The policy of winning the war and then imposing a settlement was never going to work.
Starting point is 00:33:51 Sontanax had already written back to France, urging them that the time had come to, quote, do something for the slaves, but he received no reply. Not only was the government a little busy, what with it being the spring of 1793 and all, but with the British Navy now out on patrol in the Atlantic, communications between Sando-Mang and the metropon were all but severed.
Starting point is 00:34:14 Left on their own, Sontanax and Polverell decided to unilaterally issue a decree on May the 5th, 1793. The core of the decree reaffirmed both the Code Noir and the Royal Decrees of 1784 and 1785, that the Masters had an obligation to provide for the slaves, that there were limits to how badly slaves could be treated, and that if Masters mistreated their slaves, that slaves would have the right to appeal to authorities. But the content of this decree, while obviously hated by the Master Class, was not nearly as a very much as a offensive as the means by which it was disseminated.
Starting point is 00:34:52 Aware that the previous slave protections had been ignored by the colonists, the second commission had the decree translated into Creole and then ordered it read aloud on every plantation and transmitted to the slave insurgents. So not only would the slaves have rights, they would all know that they had rights. The commissioners hoped that this would start the process of coaxing the slaves back to the plantations. Luckily for everyone, just two days after the May 5th decree was issued, General Francois Toma Galboe, the new new Governor General, appointed by the National Convention, arrived in La Capp,
Starting point is 00:35:32 and everything got upended again. As soon as Galbo landed, he was treated to a thousand horror stories by prominent whites in La Capp about the horror of life under the horrible commissioners who had been appointed by a horrible king and how, thank God, a true patriotic representative of the republic is here to save us from the horrible horror. Galbo took a liking to all this fawning attention, but still, he exchanged a few cordial letters with the second commissioner saying, I'm here, I look forward to meeting with you and coordinating strategy, et cetera, et cetera, to which the second commission cordially replied, oh, we're so glad to have you and look forward to working with you. But please, the situation here
Starting point is 00:36:16 is very complex. Don't be misled by enemies of the Republic. And whatever you do, take no official action until we are back in La Cap and we can confer in person. Next week, Governor General Galbo is totally going to take official action before the Second Commission returns to La Cap. And when Sontanax and Polvaral do arrive, the resulting, political confrontation will lead to nothing less than the total destruction of Le Capp and the mass emancipation of every slave in San Doming.

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