Vincent Ogé, aided by the British abolitionist…
October 1790 CE
Vincent Ogé, aided by the British abolitionist society, reaches Saint Domingue from Paris by way of England, accompanied by a group of mulattoes from France.
More meet him on his arrival.
On October 28, he raises a rebellion in the northern mountains near the Santo Domingo border, with a force of three hundred men, seconded by Chavannes.
Several days later, an expedition from Le Cap, led by du Plessis, defeats him, and he and Chavannes, with nearly all of their army slain, flee across the frontier to Spanish Santo Domingo.
Ogé's rising is answered by parallel insurgencies in the west that are quickly quelled.
The ease of putting down the rebellion convinces the colonists that it is safe to pursue their internal dissensions.