Leclerc, having taken refuge on Tortuga in…
January 1803 CE
His wife Pauline Bonaparte had accompanied her husband to the island and, though she had not previously been a model of fidelity, his death throws her into despair—she cuts off her hair, puts it in her husband's coffin, puts his heart in an urn and has the rest of his remains repatriated to France.
Rochambeau, as the oldest senior member of the expedition, had taken over from Leclerc as supreme commander and tries in vain to suppress the new revolt.
Little more than seven thousand to eight thousand of the thirty-one thousand soldiers sent to Saint-Domingue survive and over twenty French generals have died.