Revolutions - 4.08- The Tricolor Commission

Episode Date: February 1, 2016

In February 1794, the National Convention not only ratified the emergency emancipation of the slaves, they extended it even further....

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to revolutions. Episode 4.8, the Tri-Color Commission. As the second commission approached the first anniversary of their arrival in Sandomang, it's fair to say that they had shepherded the colonial crisis from mere revolt to full-blown revolution. Remember, when they had shown up, the whites were still attempting to both deny colored equality and make no concessions whatsoever to the slaves. The Second Commission had not only imposed racial equality by force,
Starting point is 00:00:42 they had now gone and freed all the slaves. Not that many whites were around anymore. The mass exodus from Le Cap in June was just the start of a larger exodus. The whole rest of the summer of 1793, whites just got on boats and sailed away. But the question now circulating through the entire Atlantic world was, hey, what the hell just happened in Sandalmang, and is any of it going to be permanent? Now, one of the major concerns Sontanax and Paul Varel now had was how this was all going to play back in France. They were acutely aware that the men and women they had either actively deported or who had just fled the colony in terror were going to paint a very negative picture of their conduct.
Starting point is 00:01:24 And then they became really super concerned when word finally trickled back to the colony about what had happened in Paris in June of 1793, which was, you guessed it, the point. purge of the Girondins. About three weeks before the destruction of Le Capp, the Sancuyot in Paris had demanded the expulsion of Brousseau and all his friends from the National Convention, and Brousseau was the political patron of Sontanax and Polvaro. Even if all they had done upon arrival in San Domang was plant a nice flower garden, their lives and fortunes might at this very moment be in jeopardy, and they had obviously done a hell of a lot more than plant a flower garden since their arrival. In mid-September, they got their first unofficial notice of their worst fear.
Starting point is 00:02:09 On July the 16th, 1793, before news of the destruction of Le Capp had even gotten back home, the National Convention voted to recall Sontanax and Polvaro and make them stand before the Revolutionary Tribunal. The commissioners, understandably, decided to stay in Sandomang until an official emissary brought them a written order to depart. They claimed this was to supervise the continued defense of the country. colony from the Spanish and British until replacement leaders arrived, but when the revolutionary tribunal calls, a little foot-dragging is not exactly irrational, especially because by now they knew that ex-governor Blanchland had been executed for far less than anything they had done, so they elected to wait for an actual order. And they weren't just blowing smoke when they said they couldn't leave
Starting point is 00:02:56 without replacement leaders being in place, because with all the chaos and resentment inside Sandomeng, the British finally decided to make their play for the colony. In mid-September, word came round that the whites in Jeremy had invited a British naval squadron into their harbor, and 600 British soldiers had disembarked. At almost that same moment, regular army forces stationed at a naval base at Mole San Nicola on the northwest tip of the North Province, surrendered to the British without firing a shot. The British invasion of Sandomang had begun. Now, just as the British were invading, Sontanax and what was left of his little interim commission
Starting point is 00:03:35 selected six men to go back to France and defend everything that had happened over the last year. And the very character of the commission would speak volumes. There would be two whites, two colors, and two blacks. Living proof of liberty, equality, and fraternity. Now, only three of these guys are actually going to make it Paris, so they're the ones I'm going to focus on. The white delegate was named Louis Defei.
Starting point is 00:04:02 He was a lapsed aristocrat who had been an early white supporter of the commissioners in Le Cap. He had been one of the guys, for example, writing frantic letters back to them right after Governor Galbo arrived. The colored delegate was named Jean-Baptiste Meals, about whom I can find almost no information, except that he was the colored representative in the tri-colored commission, but presumably he was a landowner and probably an officer in the free-colored militia. The black representative we met last week, Jean-Baptiste Belli, the guy who had led the defense of the commissioners at the government house during the Battle of Le Cap. Born in Africa, brought to Sandelman as a slave and then later emancipated, Belly's role in all of this is going to be particularly groundbreaking, as he's about to be the first black ex-slave to do, well, everything he's about to do. After the Tri-Color Commission set sail, they did not head straight for France.
Starting point is 00:04:57 Instead, they headed up to the United States, which meant that the first thing the Tri-Colour Commission got to do was run into all the refugees who had fled La Capp back in June, and those people, oh my God, they were so mad. It's estimated that about 3 to 5,000 residents of San Domang fled in the June exodus. Since none of the ships in La Capp had been prepared to suddenly be ferrying all of these civilian refugees, I mean, it's not like they had provisions or accommodations for all these people. They decided to sail them all up to the United States. The only country France wasn't at war with and just deposit them there. So that's what happened to all the refugees. Major disembarkings occurred in Charleston and Norfolk, Baltimore, and Philadelphia. Now, the response from the Americans was welcoming and generous, and benevolent societies
Starting point is 00:05:47 were established to help the utterly destitute French refugees land on their feet. As I said, the Americans had been following events in Sandomang in the papers. and were understandably sympathetic to the plight of the refugees. Well, most of them, because while two-thirds of the refugees were white, the other third were either black or colored, both free or slave. Now, almost all of the blacks and colors were women, and they came in two principal types. They were either wives of white refugees,
Starting point is 00:06:18 or they were slaves who acted as nannies and caregivers for the various white children. But there were also a few men, both slave and free in the bunch, And so along with the general fraternal embrace of the refugees, there was quite a lot of hand-wringing that some of these blacks and colored might have boarded the boats in Le Capp, intending to spread the gospel of slave revolt in the United States. But proposals to try to limit disembarkings to only whites got nowhere, as angry French refugees barked in French that either this is my wife or this is the woman who is raising my children. So the blacks and colors got off the boat with the whites, and rumors of a planned uprising, particularly around Richmond, Virginia, were thick in the air. Without really having much experience with free colored, for example, the Americans couldn't quite believe that these colored refugees
Starting point is 00:07:06 were enemies of the slave insurgents, not their allies. But when nothing actually ever happened, the Americans tried to figure out what to do with the refugees. Working through all of this with the American government and various local authorities was the French ambassador to the United States, our old friend, citizen Jeunet. When he wasn't driving George Washington up the wall, Jeanne worked on the refugee problem, and it soon became clear that they fell into three types. Those who planned to go back to San Domain,
Starting point is 00:07:37 those who wanted to go back to France, and those who were prepared to try to start a new life in the United States. And what with the whole world being an exploded mess of war, revolt and destruction, for the most part, they all just had to sit tight and live on American charity. for a while. It's also worth mentioning that in the late summer of 1793, Philadelphia was stricken by a pretty catastrophic epidemic of yellow fever. And while you can never be 100% sure of
Starting point is 00:08:04 these things, the most likely explanation is that the epidemic came along with the refugees. So that also happened. The Citizen-Gene was a side character in the story of the French Revolution. But he winds up playing a critical supporting role in the story of the Haitian Revolution, because if you remember, Jeanne was, that's right, in the Briseau Girondin faction. That's why he had been appointed ambassador to the United States in the first place. So though he did not know Sontanax and Paul Varel personally, they had been in regular correspondence with each other all through 1793 and pretty much saw eye to eye on politics. So when the warship bearing the deposed Governor Galbo arrived in Philadelphia,
Starting point is 00:08:48 the deposed governor, like every other refugee, spun a tail of. of horror about the conduct of the second commissioners and how they had destroyed Le Cap, and Jeunay said, yeah, I don't buy it. I'm pretty sure this is all your fault. Jeanne said, I'm going to keep your mutinous soldiers here in the United States, but I'm going to send you back to France to face the music. Galboe and the sailors both strenuously objected to this, because they did not want to be separated from each other. Galbo needed the sailors as witnesses to back up his story, and the sailors needed Galbo to say, yes, I was in charge the whole time. So they refused to be separated. Then Jeunay found out that Galbo, the sailors and civilian refugees in Philadelphia were talking
Starting point is 00:09:31 sediciously behind Jeanne's back, and so Jeunay ordered the ship to sail up to New York, where the refugee population was much thinner. In mid-August, Jeunay and Galbo had a final confrontation aboard the ship. Jeanne stood by his plan to separate Galbo from the sailors and send him back to France. So that night, Galbo and his wife snuck onto a longboat, rode to shore, and made a run for it. They made it to an inn in Westchester County before two French military police officers dispatched by Jeunay caught up with them. But the ex-governor managed to slip out the back door and make for Canada. Meanwhile, Lady Galbo stayed behind at the inn and entertained one of the military policemen for a week, while the officer wrote reports back to Jeanne, and
Starting point is 00:10:17 saying, I've got Galbo cornered, don't worry about it. Make of all that what you will. As soon as Galbo crossed over to Canada, he was arrested by the British and taken to Quebec City, where he was held until October when he escaped and crossed back over to New York. Now basically a penniless vagabond, Galbo found meager accommodations near the border in case he had to run for it again. Meanwhile, Jeunay was continuing to annoy the American government, but also handle the frequent requests of refugees to either go back to San Doming or sail on to France. But Jeunet was now purposefully deflecting their requests. He knew that both the British and Spanish had agents recruiting in the refugee communities,
Starting point is 00:11:01 so anyone going back to the colony was sure to be going to join the enemies of the Republic. Meanwhile, anyone going back to France was sure to denounce Sontanax, Paul Varel, and now likely Jeanne himself, and cost them their jobs, and possibly their heads. Little did Jeannes know that the American ambassador in Paris had already denounced him, and his recall order was in the mail. Into this angry, resentful, and combative environment, the Tri-Color Commission arrived in the United States in early November.
Starting point is 00:11:33 On November the 8th, they landed in Philadelphia, and when the French sailors and refugees found out who was on board, they were furious. Meals and Belly elected to remain on their ship and not risk walking the streets, publicly. The white delegate, Louis Dufay, tried to go out, but as soon as he went ashore, he was identified and surrounded by an angry mob of Frenchmen, and it was only with the help of a local woman that he was guided safely away. But then a further mob just marched up the gangplank of the commissioner's ship. They accosted meals and belly and ransacked their quarters. Only after some serious pushback was this mob dispersed. So the captain of the ship then prudently sailed on up to New York.
Starting point is 00:12:15 which, like I said, did not really have a significant refugee population to accost the commissioners. When they arrived on November 10th, Jeanne welcomed them with a public reception that acknowledged the commission as an official government delegation. And this is when Belly gets to do one of his firsts, as he is the first black to be recognized as an official government representative of anything in the United States or in France. The Tricolor Commission remained in New York for the next month, under Jeanne's auspices, but the refugee French and French sailors both continued to make ominous noises about attacking and possibly even assassinating the lot of them. So the six commissioners agreed to split up into two groups, and on December the 10th, Jeannes put Dufé, Meals, and Belly on one of the French government's fast messenger boats
Starting point is 00:13:04 and ordered the captain to sail them to France as fast as possible. There are rumors that the angry French refugees actually tried to hire some of the sailors to murder the commissioners and route, but to no avail. So just to wrap up our loose ends here, not long after the commission sailed, a penniless Governor Galbo re-emerged in New York City, looking for passage back to France. Jeunet tried to get the American government to block this, but by now Jeunay himself was persona non-grotto with the American government. So, Jeunay said, fine, if you can pay for your passage, you can leave, and eventually Galbo will sail back to France. Genet also stopped trying to block the further passage of the other refugees.
Starting point is 00:13:49 So by early 1794, they were either headed back to France, which, for the record, yes, seems like a pretty crazy time to be wanting to go back to France, but even crazier are the ones headed back to San Domain. Now, some had decided to reconcile with the new order and reclaim their property, but, as Jeanne suspected, a bunch of the others joined the Spanish and British as auxiliary forces to go retake what was theirs by force. Other refugees chose to permanently settle in America, where they were soon joined by emigres fleeing the reign of terror. Like, for example, Moreau de Saint-Marie, the great colonial expert and one-time big white delegate to the National Assembly.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Well, by now, he's a counter-revolutionary swine, and in October 1793, he ducked out of France one step ahead of an arrest warrant. After landing in Philadelphia, San Marie would remain there for years. He opened up a bookshop that soon became a hub of the best-bred and best-educated of the French emigres, including eventually Talleyrand. When Talleyrand arrived in Philadelphia, he spent practically every night hanging out in the rooms above San Maris bookshop, chatting, playing cards, and waiting for his chance to get the hell out of this backwater and back to the real action. Back in the real action, the Tricolor Commission finally made it to Paris at the end of January, 1794, and boy did they walk into a crazy mess. We are now at episode 3.36, The Liquidation
Starting point is 00:15:21 process, when the revolution is now truly devouring all her children. There was a paranoid factional struggle between the Committee of Public Safety and the Committee of General Security and the Ultras and the indulgence and then Robespierre's little death cult in the middle. The Tri-Color Commission is about to become a pawn in this deadly game and to explain how and why, we need to back up a little bit. So when last we left Paris, King Louis had just signed the law of April the 4th. And then in July 1792, Sontanax, Paul Varel, and the other guy had sailed away. The law of April 4th was a major setback for the big white colonial interests, but it was
Starting point is 00:16:03 nothing compared to what came next, the insurrection of August the 10th. The club messiarch was full of liberal nobles, and enlightened bourgeoisie, like Moro de Saint-Marie, who were now all suspected of counter-revolutionary leanings. The Club Messiaq pretty much ceased functioning after August 10th. But the colonial interests were not done yet. Just before the Second Commission arrived in Le Cap, the Colonial Assembly had selected a few delegates to go back to Paris
Starting point is 00:16:34 to make sure that the law of April 4th was not followed with anything crazy like the emancipation of all the slaves. When these guys arrived in Paris, they discovered, holy crap, the king has been overthrown, and France is now a republic. Thinking fast, these colonial representatives denounce the club messiarch types as being in league with the counter-revolutionary aristocrats, and they pitched slavery as necessary for the survival of the republic
Starting point is 00:17:00 because obviously we're all patriotic Republicans now. But they still face two major hurdles. First, Brousseau remained a major hurdle. major power in the new National Convention, especially on colonial matters. He and his ally Julian Raymond were not about to let their work be undone. And second, Paris, frankly, had bigger fish to fry. When the National Convention convened, the Mountain and Gerondins descended into their blood feud, they put Louis on trial, and then when they chopped his head off, they had to deal with the mass eruption of war and rebellion. Colonial affairs were totally deprioritized.
Starting point is 00:17:39 But the white colonial interest did get a few boosts along the way. In January 1793, just as Louis was facing Madame Laggillotine, the first wave of men deported by the Second Commission arrived in Paris ready to denounce Sontanax and Palverell. But the real boost came in June 1793 when the Girondins were purged from the convention. Because the second commissioners were identifiably Briseau's boys, the white colonial lobbyists were now able to paint their work as a counter-revolutionary Girondin plot to destroy the colony. A story, the now purged convention was ready to gobble up. So as I said at the beginning of the show, on July the 16th, the convention ordered the recall of Sontanax and Palverell to return home and face the revolutionary tribunal.
Starting point is 00:18:28 Then at the end of August, word of the destruction of Le Cap and the mass exodus of the whites arrived, and everyone in Paris now solidly believed that the second commission was to blame for everything, and further that they were an actively sinister force that had to be stopped. But the official agents sent to convey the recall order and bring the commissioners home to stand trial, got trapped in breast, thanks to British naval patrols, and spent the next few months just never setting sail. As the reign of terror prepared to really get going in October 1793, Paris hit peak anti-Girondin fury.
Starting point is 00:19:08 After Bressot's arrest back in June, Julian Raymond had tried to keep a low profile, but on September the 27th, he too was denounced and arrested. When all his Gerond and friends were executed a few weeks later, Raymond had to believe that he would soon be next. It also, just so happens, that mid-October 1793 is also when word of general emancipation hits, and everyone becomes really super convinced
Starting point is 00:19:33 that this is all Girondin plot to help destroy the Republic. But then in December, everything suddenly flipped upside down, when two pieces of news were revealed almost simultaneously. First, correspondence between the renegade big whites and the British government about handing the colony over were published. Suddenly, everyone knew that since at least February, the white colonial interests had been actively in league with the enemies of the Republic, And then the second bit of news was the incontrovertible proof of this treasonous alliance,
Starting point is 00:20:09 news that Jeremy and Moul San Nicola had opened their harbors to the British. Suddenly, the second commission and their emergency emancipation order looked like a truly patriotic response to white colonial treason. So the verdict that Sontanax and Paul Varel were enemies of the republic was suddenly being reconsidered. But as I said, colonial policy is. very much now being viewed through the lens of the really super dangerous world of Paris politics during the reign of terror. For complicated reasons, the white colonial lobbyists had wound up
Starting point is 00:20:44 attached most especially to the ultras in all of this, and particularly had allies in the Committee of General Security. So it was by order of the Committee of General Security that Julian Raymond had been arrested, and when the Tricolor Commission arrived in Paris at the end of January 1794, the Committee of General Security acted on a colonial lobby request and arrested them too. Oddly enough, though, only Dufay and Mules were tossed in jail, while Belli was left alone, no one quite knowing what to do with him. But the Committee of Public Safety soon ordered all these guys released, because, like I just said, one, this was just a further skirmish in the power struggle between the Committee of Public Safety and the Committee of General Security,
Starting point is 00:21:29 but then two, the official story was now changing. The white colonial lobbyists are the really real traders in all of this, so let's hear what this Tri-Color Commission has to say. On February 3, 1794, the Tri-Color Commission were presented to the National Convention and were then accepted as official delegates from the North Province of San Domain, making Jean-Baptiste Belli the first black legislature in French history, possibly even European history, unless I'm missing somebody.
Starting point is 00:22:02 The next day, Louis Dufay delivered a stirring speech in defense of the second commission and more importantly, the emancipation decree. But critically, Dufay blew right past the moral reasons for ending slavery because nobody cares much about that. He focused exclusively on the role the freed slaves, now free citizens, would play in defending the Republic in the Caribbean. He also told a pretty sweet lie about how the slaves had to be able to be able to be spontaneously rallied to the commissioners during the Battle of Le Cap and had cried long-lived their
Starting point is 00:22:35 Republic as they went into battle. These same black citizen soldiers were now the only thing protecting Sandomang from falling to the British. Dufe also stressed the restrictive nature of emancipation that the commissioners had made sure to put rules in place to make sure the economy kept going, and he said, you will see that your colony of San Domang, cultivated by free hands, will be more flourishing, that this new colony will produce more for the metropole than before. When Dufei was finished, the National Convention took a vote, and what a vote it turned out to be. On that day, 16 Pluvos year two, February the 4th, 1794 to you and me, the National Convention ignored Dufe's careful focus on the legal restrictions of emancipation and unanimously decreed, quote, the National Convention declares that slavery of Negroes is abolished in all the colonies.
Starting point is 00:23:33 In consequence, it decrees that all men, without distinction of color, domiciled in the colonies, are French citizens, and will enjoy all rights guaranteed by the Constitution. This decree is referred to the Committee of Public Safety, which will report immediately on measures for its implementation. This was a stunning, blanket emancipation order of all the slaves, not just in Sandalmendom, but the entire French Empire. This was not freedom for service. This was not freedom with labor rules. This was not gradual. There was no compensation to former owners. This was just freedom. In the euphoric aftermath of the vote, Belly took to the floor and said, I was a slave during my childhood. Thirty-six years have passed since I became free through my own labor and purchased myself.
Starting point is 00:24:24 Since then, in the course of my life, I have felt worthy of being French. He then went on to say that the tricolor flag had become the beacon of liberty that he and his brothers would defend with their lives. Don Ton, in one of his last public speeches before getting beheaded cried, this is the death of the English. All the slaves in Sandomang were now free citizens of France. And before we head back to San Domang, though, I will note a little coincidence that I did not realize until I was putting this week's show together that the very next day, February 5, 1794, is the day Robespierre came forward and delivered his famous speech on public morality, with its link between virtue and terror that we discussed in episode 3.37,
Starting point is 00:25:15 the Republic of Virtue. Oddly enough, the man who had once fought to ensure that the word slavery was not included in the French Constitution made no reference to the incredible abolition of slavery that had just been decreed the day before. So now, heading back to Sandomang, the second commission would have a long time to wait before this epic vindication of all their work arrived. After the Tri-Color Commission set sail, it was a harrowing seven months before they found out. And even then, the vindication was not without a major caveat for them personally. So after the Tricolor Commission sailed away, Sontanex and Paul Varel were quickly dealt another major blow. The colored leaders in Sanmark, long one of their main bases of support, decided that the commissioners had gone too far, and that emancipation was an intolerable betrayal. After making contact with British agents in November, the Sanmark colored voted to invite them into the harbor. The deal was straightforward. If you recognize racial equality and help us maintain slavery, we will help you take Sandomang away from the French.
Starting point is 00:26:28 But the Colords were in for a rude awakening. The British agents likely would have promised 10,000 magical unicorns to get the British in the door. But official ministry policy, as agreed to back in February with the renegade white colonists, was that, quote, Colords will have the same rights as this class in English colonies, which meant that whatever territory the British controlled, the Colords were about to go back to being second-class citizens. So, no unicorns.
Starting point is 00:27:00 With the colored betraying the Republic, Paul Varel rushed to Port of Prince to make sure the always seditious capital didn't flip two. And I forgot to mention this, but in fine revolutionary fashion, after the second commissioners had retaken the city back in April, they had renamed it Port Republican. But since this was pretty short-lived, I'm just going to keep calling it Port-au-Prince, if that's cool with everybody. Now, the situation became critical enough that then Sontanaks rushed down too, leaving Colonel Lavo in charge of the military situation in the north. LeVos then moved his forces over to Portape, which was west of LeCamp, where he planned to hold the line against any British encroachments. I've got a map of all this at Revolutionspodcast.com. But luckily for LeVos, Sontanax and Polverell, the British were about to make no headway over the winter. They captured a few more ports and held some coastal territory, but were unable to push inland or link any of their captured territories together.
Starting point is 00:28:01 For one, like all Europeans, British soldiers were dropping like flies from tropical diseases. And then the mountainous interior of San Doming is, as we've seen, pretty brutal territory and riddled with armed enemies, whether independent slave insurgents who had no interest in the British trying to reimpose slavery, or armed colored armies who had elected to stick with the Republic, because the emancipation order had split the colored community right down the middle. So some of the second commissioner's allies defected to the British, but others, like Andre Rigo in the South, denounced. the perfidy of his brothers and stayed true to the Republic. It was, as a result of his conduct, during these troubled months, that Rigo really cemented the foundation for his rule in the South. With the Emancipation Decree in hand, he was, for example, able to talk most of the leaders of the Kingdom of Platon into joining what Rago was now calling the Legion of Equality, a mixed-colored and black army that would uphold racial equality and slave emancipation by force against all comers.
Starting point is 00:29:11 Most of the leaders accepted the deal and were enrolled as captains in the Legion, and they brought with them about 1,200 men. And I can't nail this down, but I'm also pretty sure this is the moment when the kingdom of Platon gets re-dubbed the Republic of Platon, which is what it's called in many history books on the subject. But Rego's vision of emancipation was enforcing the rules of labor imposed by the 2nd commissioners, and in the territory Rago controlled, those blacks not fighting were expected to return to their plantations and work, and he expected the black leaders to help keep them there.
Starting point is 00:29:50 But while the staunch support of Rago and his forces will be critical to the survival of the mission of the 2nd Commissioners, there was nothing quite like the almost miraculous news they received in May 1794. Tusson Louvichure was prepared to switch his allegiance from Spain to 4,000. France. Now, it is likely that Tucson had been considering this option even as he was denouncing Sontanax's emancipation decree back in August. With the Republican cause, both in Europe and the Caribbean, seemingly on the brink of collapse, the principal slave generals were already positioning themselves for the new order to come. Jean-François and Bissue's partnership was now more
Starting point is 00:30:33 tenuous than ever, as each prepared to rush into the post-French vacuum and become the supreme leader of the colony. Meanwhile, Tucson, who was technically Basu second in command, had positioned himself in the greatest position of all. Jean-François controlled the eastern part of the North province. Bissou controlled the southern part, both with easy access to the Spanish. Tusson, meanwhile, had gotten himself put in charge of the West, territory that bordered cordon of the west. Over the winter of 1793, 1794, Tucson methodically took the forts of the cordon one by one, and by October he had captured the port city of Gonaiv, and suddenly it was Tucson who held the all-important line between the West Province and the North Province.
Starting point is 00:31:24 Operating now on his own and away from Spanish supervision, Tucson likely began to think hard about what to do with this new position. He was never going to be able to outmaneuver Jean-François and Basu by way of the Spanish. They had more direct and deeper ties to the Spanish authorities, and Tucson would always be a mere subordinate in the Spanish hierarchy. So if he wanted to be anything more than that, and by now it's pretty clear that he wants to be a lot more than that, then the Spanish are not his best allies. Then at the end of 1793, word started filtering up that all those Spanish boasts that the French Republic was on the brink of collapse was a lot of hot air. The Republic still stood, and was possibly even winning the war back in Europe.
Starting point is 00:32:09 So whose promises really counted for what around here? And then there was also the subtle distinction between the emancipation offered now by the French, which was general, and the Spanish, which was limited to the soldiers, the standard freedom for service deal. The Spanish had made it clear that they had no intention of a boss, abolishing slavery as such, and Tucson may have by now made up his mind that general emancipation was the only way forward for Sandomang. So a calculated jump over to the French at this moment might be the perfect move. And it was. In March 1794, Tucson and Basu exchanged a furious
Starting point is 00:32:50 set of letters indicating that they were both getting pretty tired of each other. Then it is supposed that in April, news of the National Convention's mass emancipation decree arrived, and that pushed Tucson over the edge. At the end of April, Tucson's black soldiers and Gonaiv suddenly turned on their Spanish comrades, killing them all and forcing the townspeople to flee. Tucson said, I had nothing to do with this. Let me go look into it, and I'll punish the perpetrators of this crime, blah, blah, blah. When he arrived, he suddenly announced the existence of the existence of a lot,
Starting point is 00:33:25 a secret offer from Colonel LeVoe to join the French Republican Army as a brigadier general. Then Tucson announced he was taking the deal. He brought with him 4,000 well-trained soldiers, the cordon of the West, and all the parishes under his control, including Akul, Limbe, and Dondon, parishes that had been at the very heart of the initial revolt. He also brought with him top-flight black officers, who would soon go on to play a major role in the history of of Haiti, for example, Jean-Jacques D'Elline and Henri Christoph. Tucson's sudden defection to the French breathed new life into the Republican cause, and not a moment too soon.
Starting point is 00:34:09 In early June, the depleted British got some reinforcements and launched a renewed assault on Port-au-Prince. Sontanax and Paul Varel could not hold them off and were forced to flee down to Jacques Mel. The British captured the capital on June 4th. Four days after that, while in Jacques Mel, the agents of the National Convention finally, finally arrived with two pieces of news, the first so-so-sweet, the other so-so-bitter. The agent invited Sontanax and Polvaro onto his ship and said the convention has not only
Starting point is 00:34:44 ratified your emancipation decree, it has taken them even further. The slaves are all free. They are all now citizens. emancipation had been the second commissioner's most controversial act. The unanimous endorsement by the home government must have been a huge relief. But then the other news dropped. The Committee of Public Safety had upheld the recall order. Sontanax and Poverrell were to remain on board the ship for immediate deportation back to France to face the Revolutionary Tribunal.
Starting point is 00:35:16 The commissioners were not even allowed to return to shore, but they were able to hastily dispatch a few final arrangements. Now, by order of the convention, LeVos was officially promoted to Governor General, which is finally a really great choice, and Sontanax wrote him a letter that said whatever happens, you have to hold the colony at all costs. Paul Varel, meanwhile, wrote to Rago, and vested him with autonomous authority over the South. With the colony so divided and with the British everywhere, it was pointless for LeVos and Rago to try to work together. So with this last order, Paul Varel said to Rigo, you are the absolute authority in the South. And Rigo would keep this authority until he was defeated by Tusson in the final War of Knives
Starting point is 00:36:03 in 1800, because don't worry, gang, the fund never stops in the Haitian Revolution. Next week, the new Republican tri-color triumvirate of Laveau, Tusson, and Rigo will launch simultaneous campaigns against both the British invaders and Tucson's old comrades, Jean-Francois and Basu. With France now exploding outward back in Europe, thanks to the LeVay en masse, and the Republican forces winning battles in the field in San Domang, Toussaint had to be quite gratified to know that he had indeed switched sides at the perfect moment.

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