French officer Thomas-Antoine de Mauduit du Plessis,…
April 1790 CE
French officer Thomas-Antoine de Mauduit du Plessis, after resigning from the Continental Army in late 1778, may have fought under Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau.
In any event, he had been promoted to major in the French royal army and in 1787 had been posted to Haiti in 1787 as commandant of the Port-au-Prince Regiment.
At the outbreak of the French Revolution, du Plessis had announced himself to be hostile to it and is outspoken in his views against freeing the slaves.
He and Governor Philibert François Rouxel de Blanchelande refuse to carry out the decrees ordered by the revolutionary government.
After the troops of du Plessis skirmish in Port-au-Prince with a squadron of the Patriot-dominated National Guard, du Plessis disperses them, killing more than a dozen Patriots and provoking calls for revenge against the “royalist” oppressor.
Disarming the National Guard, du Plessis forms a royalist corps called the Pompons Blancs.
He arrests the colonial revolutionary committee and dissolves the local assembly, having convinced the grands blancs to quit it voluntarily.
His harsh policies provoke a general insurrection.