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Timeline of Haitian History

  • Before 1492
  • 1492 (Dec. 5) Christopher Columbus got loss and landed in Tortuga; claims the island for Spain
      • (Dec 24) Columbus’ flagship the Santa Maria ran aground
  • 1493 (January 2)  Columbus departed for Spain, leaves 39 crew members behind in the newly built fort called La Navidad near present-day Cap Haitien.
      • (Nov. 28) Columbus returned from Europe to discover the fort burned and his men dead.
      • (Dec. 8) Columbus built a forst called La Isabella in what is now the DR.
  • 1494 (June 7) Treaty of Tordesillas signed between Spain & Portugal
  • 1496 Santo Domingo established by Spanish desettlers
  • 1505 Sugarcane cultivation introduced to Hispaniola
  • 1510 First African captives brought to Hispaniola
  • 1625 France established a colony on the island of Tortuga
  • French pirates established settlements in NW Hispaniola
  • 1664 France claimed Western Hispaniola
  • 1665 France established Port-de-Paix on the Northwestern cost of Hispaniola
  • 1685 France enacted the Code NOir
  • 1697 (Sept. 20) Treaty of Ryswick officially granted the western third of Hispaniola, whichbecame Saint-Domingue, to France
  • 1705 France began extensive sugarcane cultivation in SD
  • 1711 Cap-Haitien established
  • 1724 First neswpaper published in SD
  • 1726 Coffee cultivation introduced in SD
  • 1740 (?) birth of Toussaint on Bréda estate
  • 1749 Port-au-Prince established
  • 1758 (January) Execution of François Makandal , leader of first major slave conspiracy
  • 1763 (November) Expulsion of Jesuits from Saint-Domingue
  • 1770 PauP made colonial capital by the French
      • June 3) Strong earthquake hit PauP
  • 1772 Bayon de Libertat becomes manager of Bréda estate (until 1789); Libertat appoints Toussaint as his coachman
  • 1774 (Jan, Apr) Death of Toussaint’s parents, Hippolyte & Pauline
  • 1775 (?) Toussaint emancipated from slavery
  • 1776 Declaration of Independence of the United States of America 
  • 1777 (June 3) Treaty of Aranjuez delnineated boundary between French and Spanish colonial territory in Hispaniola
  • 1779 Siege of Savannah
  • 1782 Toussaint marries Suzanne Baptiste (They have two children: Isaac, b. 1786; Saint-Jean, b. 1791)
  • 1784 (December) royal ordinance calling for more ‘humane’ treatment of enslaved rejected by Saint-Domingue desettlers
  • 1785 (April 26) John James Audubon born in SD. 
  • 1788 Audubon family subsequently relocated to France 
  • 1787 Constitution of the United States of America; Foundation of the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade, an unofficial extension of the Quaker slave trade committee, in England 
  • 1788 (February) creation of liberal abolitionist Société des Amis des Noirs in France
  • 1789 – 1790 SD white community exclusively campaigned for colonial autonomy; SD experienced a second coffee boom, supplying 60% of coffee exports to the Atlantic World market. Coffee production occurred in the, west, and east of SD.
  • 1789 (Jan-Mar) Wealthy colonial activists illegally elect deputies to the States-General in France
      • (January) formation of colonial assemblies in Saint-Domingue;
      • (July 14) French Revolution begins w/ Fall of the Bastille, July 14; 
      • (Aug) White & free colored colonists form separate political clubs in Paris to press their interests; (August 26) French National Assembly adopts Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, 
      • (September) property owning free people of color petition French National Assembly demanding equal civil and political rights
      • (October) Saint-Domingue Colonial Assembly blocks reforms from the French metropole, denies rights to free people of color; Inspired by the Bastille’s fall, white radicals force the Intendant to flee Saint-Domingue. Free colored calling for political rights meet with persecution. Slaves voicing protests on some plantations brutally suppressed.
  • 1790 (March) French National Assembly grants full legislative powers to Saint-Domingue; is deliberately evasive about the rights of free people of color
      • (May) Saint-Domingue Colonial Assembly declares autonomy from France
      • (July) Governor Peinier closes the autonomist Colonial Assembly at St. Marc
      • (October) Vincent Ogé leads brief free colored rebellion in the North.
  • 1791 (February) Vincent Ogé gruesome execution in Cap
      • (Mar) White radicals drive governor out of PauP
      • (May 15) French Assembly extends political rights to freeborn men of color 
      • (July) New Saint-Domingue Assembly dominated by white supremacists; they discuss secession and organize to resist the May 15 decree
      • (August 14-22) )Insurrections of slaves in the Northern province of Saint Domingue begins—Bois Caïman; involved in its planning, Toussaint becomes secretary of rebel leader Biassou; Cap Français burnt to the ground; insurrection of free coloreds in the west;
      • (Sept) National Assembly annuls the May 15 decree
      • (Sept-Dec) Toussaint emerges as key figure in rebel leadership; protects white prisoners and advocates compromise w/ local Colonial Assembly
      • (November)  Death of Boukman; PauP burned in fighting between white radicals and free coloreds
      • (December) Rebellion of free men of color in the Les Cayemittes region—The Fond d’Icaque Rising; Cotton was the main crop of Les Cayemittes region, sold mainly to contraband traders
  • 1792 Thomas Jefferson asserted that the doctrine of discovery was international, and therefore was applicable to the U.S. government. 
      • (Jan-Mar) Slave rebellion spasmodically spreads in west and south
      • (January) Toussaint’s compromise efforts w/ local Colonial Assembly failed; Toussaint commands his own military force, composed largely of maroons
      • (April) Revolutionary New French Legislative Assembly ends racial discrimination in the colonies
      • (July) Lettre originale des chefs nègres révoltés
      • (August)Toussaint attends celebration in honor of French King; Fall of the French monarchy; proclamation of the French Republic, Aug. 22
      • (September) Arrival of French Civil commissioners in SD w/ 6,000 soldiers; France becomes a republic
      • (Oct-Dec) French commissioners form alliance w/ free coloreds and deport white supremacists and radicals
      • (December) Commissioner Sonthonax proclaims a republic in SD; TL promoted to  general in rebel army
  • 1793 (January) After execution of French King Luis XVI, Spain declares war on France
      • (Feb-Mar) War begins with Britain & France
      • (May) The Spaniards have a formal alliance with Jean-François and Biassou against the French.
      • (June) Civil commissioners’ struggle with Governor Galbaud causes burning of Cap Français and the emancipation of slave recruits; Toussaint becomes general in Spanish auxiliary forces; in ensuing months, he takes Dondon, Marmalade, Verrettes, Petite-Rivière, and Plaisance from the French
      • (Aug) Sonthonax abolishes slavery in the North. Abolition extended to the west in Sept. and the south in Oct; Toussaint adopts name ‘Louverture
      • (Sept) British forces begin five-year occupation in parts of south and west SD
      • (November) Toussaint signs reconciliation pact with Jean-François and Biassou.
      • (December) Saint Domingue rebels join Spanish side; Sonthonax publishes general emancipation decree in the North, August 29 (Saint Domingue) Girondin purge, trial and execution of Brissot (France); Toussaint captures Gonaïves, consolidating Spanish control of the whole northern part of Saint-Domingue—except Cap. 
  • 1794 (Jan) Fall of Fort Dauphin completes Spanish conquest of most of northern province
      • (February 4) Jacobin government declares the slaves in all French colonies to be free citizens;
      • (March) Toussaint denounces Biassou, begins rapprochement with the French; Toussaint switches sides from Spanish to French;
      • (Apr-Jul) Toussaint Louverture turns on his Spanish allies and joins the French
      • (April) British capture Guadeloupe, after taking Martinique (in March)
      • (May) French royalists massacred at Gonaïves; Toussaint rallies republican camp and brings territories under his control to French side.
      • (June) Toussaint appointed commander of western territories under French control; British capture Port-au-Prince
      • (July 28) execution of Robespierre, Saint Just, and fellow Jacobins
      • (October) Toussaint captures Saint-MIchel & Saint-Raphaël from Spanish
  • 1795 (June) Toussaint takes Mirebalais back from British, after five months of fighting
      • (July) Spain signs Treaty of Bâle w/ France, abandons all positions in SD and cedes Santo Domingo to France in Thermidorian Constitution; Toussaint is promoted to brigadier general
      • Major slave rebellions in Venezuela, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Curaçao, Demerara; conspiracies in Santo Domingo, Trinidad, Louisiana, Bahamas
      • (August) Toussaint launches full-scale attack on British positions in Saint-Domingue; National Assembly dissolved & Directory established in France
      • (October) New French constitution establishes Directory, with Conseil des Cinq Cents as its lower chamber
      • (Dec) Jean-François et Biassou leave for exile
  • 1796 (March) Toussaint saves governor Laveaux from attempted coup by people of color in Cap; Toussaint is appointed as Laveaux’s deputy-governor. 
      • (May) New commissioners arrive from France, including Sonthonax & Julien Raimond
      • (July) Isaac Louverture and his half-brother, Placide, sent to France for their education
      • (August), British severely defeat Toussaint’s forces and recapture Mirebalais
      • (October) Laveaux leaves Saint Domingue to take seat in Conseil des Cinq Cents
      • (Oct.-Dec) Toussaint et Sonthonax consolidate their control of the north; British switch to defensive strategy
  • 1797 (April) Counter-revolutionary royalists win majority in French legislative elections. 
          • (May-Sept.) Reactionary forces in French legislature push for revision of colonial policy, until they’re overthrown in the coup of Sept. 4
          • (May 2) Toussaint appointed commander in chief of Saint Domingue army by Sonthonax; Viénot-Vaublanc speech at Conseil des Cinq Cents denounces black revolution in Saint-Domingue
          • (August) Toussaint forces Sonthonax to leave Saint Domingue. 
          • (September) coup d’etat of 18 Fructidor an V in Paris, royalists defeated 
          • (October) Toussaint publishes Réfutation de quelques assertions d’un discours prononcé au Corps Législatif le 10 Prairie an cinq par Viénot Vaublanc [Refutation of some assertions from a speech delivered to the Legislative Body on 10 Prairie year five by Viénot-Vaublanc] to counter Viénot-Vaublanc’s speech of May 2nd
  • 1798 (January) Law on colonies adopted in French legislature fully incorporates Saint Domingue. 
      • (April) new French agent, General Hédouville arrives in Saint Domingue. 
      • (July) Hédouville’s Arrête concernant la police des habitations [Order concerning the housing police] provokes widespread discontent among laborers; Hédouville mission creates friction with emergent power of ex-slaves under Toussaint (Mar-Oct)
      • (May- Sept) British conclude negotiated withdrawal from Saint Domingue with Toussaint via secret treaty on trade and nonaggression
      • (September) Toussaint challenges Hédouville granting amnesties to émigrés. 
      • (October) Hédouville flees the colony after Toussaint orchestrates insurrection against him.
      • (December) Philippe Roome appointed French agent in Saint Domingue. 
  • 1799 (March) Edward Stevens appointed US consul to Saint Domingue. 
      • (May to June) attempted insurrection against Toussaint, and the beginning of the Civil War, guerre des couteaux [war of knives] against Rigaud in the South; extension of 1798 treaty between Toussaint and Maitland.
      • (May) Toussaint hits back at Rigaud with the publication of  Réponse du citoyen Toussaint Louverture aux calomnies et aux écrits mensongers du général de brigade Rigaud [Response from citizen Toussaint Louverture to the slander and lying writings of Brigadier General Rigaud]
      • (June) War of the South begins between Toussaint et Rigaud
      • (August) Toussaint regains full control of north and west of Saint Domingue
      • (November-Dec) Bonaparte 18th Brumaire coup overthrows directory; new constitution removes colonies’ right to be represented in French national legislature
      • (December) attempted Republican plot in Jamaica foiled; Toussaint’s vessels seized by British.
  • 1800 (March) Jacmel falls to Toussaint’s forces with American naval help (then Grand-Goâve in April) 
      • (April) Toussaint coerces Roume approval of French takeover of Santo Domingo
      • (June) Arrival of delegation appointed by Consul (Vincent Julien Raimond and Michel)
      • (August) Toussaint victorious in southern war, enters Les Cases; Toussaint controls all of Saint-Domingue; Rigaud halls ass
      • (October)Toussaint labor decree establishes draconian regime and plantations, the beginning of caporalisme agraire
      • (November) Toussaint sends Roome into internal exile in Dondon. 
  • 1801 (January) Toussaint gives French orders the finger; invades and occupies Santo Domingo; expels Spanish authorities and abolishes slavery. Hispaniola unified under French Republican rule. 
      • February, Toussaint announces his creation of Central Assembly to draft a new constitution for colony; Napoléon names him Captain-General of Saint-Domingue but then retracts his decision
      • March. Central Assembly members appointed, and begin their deliberations. 
      • May, Toussaint publishes Instructions aux fonctionnaires publics [Instructions to public officials]
      • July) Saint Domingue constitution unveiled at Cap ceremony; Toussaint appointed governor of colony for life, and slavery abolished ’forever’ 
      • (October) Franco-British peace preliminaries permit the Leclerc expedition; Bonaparte orders 20,000 troops to be sent to overthrow Toussaint; the rebellion of Moyse occurs. 
      • November, Toussaint 4 Frimaire an X decree: fight against sedition expanded.
      • December. Toussaint proclamation announces impending French military invasion; In the name of the French Republic, Toussaint governs all of Hispanolia
  • 1802 Bonaparte approves decree reestablishing slavery and the slave trade;
      • (January 29) Toussaint personally observes the arrival of French warships off Cape Sámana, in Santo Domingo; tL and his small band of riders saw the lead ships of Leclerc expedition; French invasion begins. 
      • (Feb-Mar) Leclerc conquers SD
      • February, Toussaint burns down cap and refuses to submit, launches spring campaign against French forces. 
      • March. Battle of Crête-à-Pierrot. French take fort, but suffer heavy losses.
      • May. Toussaint agrees ceasefire and retires to. Bonaparte restores slavery in Martinique, Tobago, and Saint Lucia, soon followed what Guadalupe and Guyana. 
      • June, Leclerc arrested Toussaint, and his family captured and deported to France. 
      • July, government decree bans entry of black and mixed race people into France.
      • August, Toussaint interned in Fort Dujou. News of restoration of slavery in Guadalupe rekindles resistance in Saint Domingue; news of re-establsihment of slavery in Guadeloupe rekindles resistance in SD
      • September, Toussaint dictates his memoir.
      • October, Dessalines and Petron unite against French occupation and issued general call to arms. 
      • November, Leclerc dies of yellow fever succeeded by Rochambeau. 
  • 1803, (April) death of Toussaint at Fort de Joux. 
      • (May) Arcahaie agreement: unification of Saint Domingue’s black and mixed race insurgent forces under leadership of Dessalines; Franco-British war resumes
      • (November) final French defeat at Battle of Vertier. Rochambeau capitulates.
      • (December) Last French forces evacuate Saint Domingue. Slavery and color lines formally restored in the French colonies
      • John James Audubon immigrated to the U.S.
  • 1804 (January) Dessalines declares Independence of Saint Domingue under the name of Haiti, January 1; 
  • (February-March) massacre of the remaining white colonists by Dessalines; 
  • (October 8) Dessalines  crowned emperor of Haiti
  • 1805 Proclamation of first Haitian constitution, May 20 
  • 1806 Dessalines assassinated, October 17; new Republican Constitution 
  • 1807 Henri Christophe proclaimed president of Haiti, February 17; issues his own constitution and establishes a capital in the North; Alexandre Pétion elected president of the republic of Haiti, with the capital in Port-au-Prince, March 11; Haiti is divided into two states, British Parliament abolishes the slave trade 
  • 1808–26 Spanish American revolutions 
  • 1809 Santo Domingo returns to Spanish rule 
  • 1810 Rigaud returns to Haiti and establishes an independent republic in the south; he dies within months and the southern republic rejoins Pétion’s republic 
  • 1811 Henri Christophe transforms the North into a Kingdom and is crowned Henri I, June 2 
  • 1811–12 Major slave rebellions and conspiracies in Louisiana, Martinique, Puerto Rico, Santo Domingo, including the Aponte Conspiracy of 1812 in Cuba 
  • 1812–14 Constitution of Cádiz (Spain); first constitutional period in Cuba 
  • 1816 Pétion declares himself president for life; Simón Bolívar is in Haiti 
  • 1818 Pétion dies and is succeeded by Jean-Pierre Boyer 
  • 1819 Congress of Angostura effectively rejects all measures of immediate slave emancipation 
  • 1820 Christophe commits suicide; Haiti is reunited
  • 1821 “Ephemeral Independence” of Spanish Santo Domingo under leadership of Núñez de Cáceres, December 1 
  • 1822 Boyer enters Spanish Santo Domingo, February 9; beginning of Haitian occupation of the former Spanish colony; Denmarck Vesey’s conspiracy in Charleston, South Carolina 
  • 1826 Boyer issues “Code Rural” 
  • 1831 Nat Turner’s slave revolt in Virginia 
  • 1833 Emancipation Act passed by British parliament 
  • 1836 Slavery declared illegal in France 
  • 1843 Boyer resigns, March 13 
  • 1844 Santo Domingo declares independence from Haiti Escalera Conspiracy in Cuba; Plácido executed 
  • 1847 General Faustin Soulouque president (Haiti) 
  • 1848 Slavery abolished in French and Danish Antilles 
  • 1849 President Soulouque declared Emperor Faustin I 
  • 1861 Santo Domingo becomes province of Spain 
  • 1862 Slave emancipation in the US; diplomatic recognition of Haiti by the United States 
  • 1863 Holland abolishes slavery 
  • 1864 Dominican Independence from Spain 
  • 1865 Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution bans slavery 
  • 1868–78 Ten Year War in Cuba for independence from Spain (unsuccessful) 
  • 1873 Puerto Rico abolishes slavery Last known slave ship lands in Cuba 
  • 1886 Cuba is the last Caribbean territory to abolish slavery 
  • 1895–98 Cuba’s second war of independence 
  • 1899 Treaty of Paris: Cuba ceded to the United States 
  • 1902 Cuban independence under Platt Amendment 
  • 1915–34 U.S. occupation of Haiti 1916–24 U.S. occupation of Dominican Republic
  • 1937 Massacre of Haitian migrant workers in Dominican Republic under Trujillo