Peace had not yet been conclusively signed …
Years: 1802 - 1802
Peace had not yet been conclusively signed with Britain (the Peace of Amiens will finally be signed on March 25, 1802) when, on December 14, 1801, a French fleet of twenty-one frigates and thirty-five ships of the line (with one one hundred and twenty-gun ship) had left Brest under Villaret de Joyeuse carrying seven thousand to eight thousand troops.
This fleet is followed by the squadron under contre-amiral Ganteaume, which leaves Toulon on February 14 with forty-two hundred troops, then by that under contre-amiral Linois, which leaves Cadiz on February 17 with twenty-four hundred troops.
In the following months even more ships leave France with fresh troops, including over four thousand men from the artillerie de marine, a Dutch division and the Polish Danube Legion.
Also included are a Spanish fleet of seven ships under Admiral Federico Gravina as well as large financial and material aid coming from Spanish Cuba.
In total, thirty-one thousand one hundred and thirty-one troops are landed on Saint-Domingue, including some black figures such as André Rigaud and future Haitian president Alexandre Pétion, both of whom Toussaint had expelled from the colony two years earlier in the War of Knives (after the Saint-Domingue expedition's failure, Rigaud will be imprisoned at fort de Joux by Napoleon, a few cells away from Toussaint himself).
The ships are due to join up in the Bay of Samaná, which Villaret de Joyeuse reaches on January 29, closely followed by Latouche-Tréville.
Without waiting for Ganteaume and Linois, these two admirals divide up their combined fleets to arrive at different ports in order to surprise Toussaint.
General Kerverseau is to land at Santo Domingo in the Spanish part of the island, General Jean Boudet is sent to take Port-au-Prince in ships under Latouche-Tréville and Leclerc; Villaret de Joyeuse and Gravina sail towards to Cap-Haïtien.
When Toussaint discovers the French ships in the bay of Samaná, he orders Henri Christophe (head of the island's northern département), Jean-Jacques Dessalines (head of the western département) and Laplume (head of the southern département) to obey the squadrons' summons to a parley, to insist on a parley if none is offered, and (if a landing should occur) to threaten to destroy the towns and massacre the white inhabitants before retreating into the mountains.
People
- Alexandre Pétion
- André Rigaud
- Charles Leclerc
- Henri Christophe
- Jean-Jacques Dessalines
- Louis-René Levassor de Latouche Tréville
- Louis-Thomas Villaret de Joyeuse
- Napoleon
- Toussaint Louverture
Groups
- Dutch people
- Poles (West Slavs)
- French people (Latins)
- Austria, Archduchy of
- Spaniards (Latins)
- Cuba (Spanish Colony)
- Saint Domingue, French Colony of
- Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
- Russian Empire
- Naples and Sicily, Bourbon Kingdom of
- French First Republic
- Santo Domingo (French Colony)
- Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
Topics
- Haitian Revolution
- Toussaint L'Ouverture, Revolt of
- Saint-Domingue expedition
- Haitian French War of 1801-03
- Saint-Domingue expedition
