Dessalines, Christophe, and Pétion regroup to oppose…
1792 CE to 1803 CE
Dessalines, Christophe, and Pétion regroup to oppose Leclerc and his diseased army following Toussaint's betrayal.
Leclerc requests reinforcement but dies of yellow fever two months later, in November 1802.
Once his replacement, General Donatien Rochambeau, arrives, fierce fighting continues for another year, during which fifty-five thousand more people are killed, including most of the remaining whites.
Many plantations and villages are also destroyed.
By September 1803, Rochambeau writes to Napoleon Bonaparte advising him that the only way for France to win will be to kill everyone over twelve in Saint-Domingue.
Meanwhile, more than twenty thousand of his own forces are dead.
War has resumed in Europe, and consequently Rochambeau is never adequately supported.
Following the French defeat at Vertieres, Rochambeau flees to Jamaica in November 1803, where he surrenders to the British, ending French colonial rule in Saint-Domingue.
After a decade of violence, three hundred years of foreign domination has come to an end.