To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Timeline of Haitian history

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a timeline of Haitian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Haiti and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Haiti. See also the list of heads of state of Haïti.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    3 672 355
    115 582
    25 030
    55 491
    189 226
  • Haitian Revolutions: Crash Course World History #30
  • Feature History - Haitian Revolution (Part 1)
  • The History of Hispaniola: Every Year
  • A Super Quick History of Haiti
  • How did Haiti Overthrow its French colonizers?

Transcription

Hi, I’m John Green, This is Crash Course World History. And apparently it’s revolutions month here at Crash Course, [seriously… all month] because today we are going to discuss the oft-neglected Haitian Revolutions. The Haitian Revolutions are totally fascinating and they involve two of my very favorite things. 1. Ending slavery and 2. Napoleon getting his feelings hurt. I can’t help myself, Napoleon. I like to see you suffer. [Intro music] [intro music] [intro music] [intro music] [intro music] [intro music] [intro music] So, the French colony in Saint Domingue began in the 17th century as a pirate outpost. And its original French inhabitants made their living selling leather and a kind of smoked beef called boucan. All that beef actually came from cattle left behind by the Spanish, who were the first Europeans to settle the island. But anyway, after 1640, the boucan-sellers started to run low on beef. And they were like, “You know what would pay better than selling beef jerky? Robbing Spanish galleons,” [beef jerky still winner of taste test] which as you’ll recall were loaded with silver mined from South America. [heavy metallic undertaste] So, by the middle of the 17th century, the French had convinced many of those buccaneering captains to give up their pirating and settle on the island. [arrrr you kidding?] Many of them invested some of their pirate treasure in sugar plantations, which, by 1700 were thriving at both producing sugar and working people to death. And soon, this island was the most valuable colony in the West Indies, and possibly in the world. [sugar is pretty much totally awesome] It produced 40% of Europe’s sugar, 60% of its coffee, and it was home to more slaves than any place except Brazil. And as you’ll recall from our discussion of Atlantic slavery, being a slave in a sugar-production colony was exceptionally brutal. In fact, by the late 18th century, more slaves were imported to Saint Domingue EVERY YEAR— more than 40,000— than the entire white population of the island. By the 19th century, slaves made up about 90% of the population. And most of those slaves were African born, because the brutal living and working conditions prevented natural population growth. Like, remember Alfred Crosby’s fantastic line, “it is crudely true that if man’s caloric intake is sufficient, he will somehow stagger to maturity, and he will reproduce?” Yeah, well, not in 18th century Haiti, thanks to Yellow Fever and smallpox and just miserable working conditions. So, most of these plantations were pretty large, they often had more than 200 slaves, and many of the field workers— in some cases, a majority— were women. Colonial society in Saint Domingue was divided into four groups, which had important consequences for the revolution. At the top, were the Big White planters who owned the plantations and all the slaves. Often these Grand Blancs were absentee landlords who would just rather stay in France and let their agents do, you know, the actual brutality. Below them were the wealthy free people of color. Most of the Frenchmen who came to the island were, you know, men, and they frequently fathered children with slave women. [not An Abundance Of love stories] These fathers would often free their children. Wasn’t that generous of them. So, by 1789, there were 24,800 free people of color along with about 30,000 white people in the colony. The free people of color contributed a lot to the island’s stability. They served in the militia, and in the local constabulary, and many of the wealthier ones eventually owned plantations and slaves of their own. [ #awkward ] And then, below them on the social ladder were the poor whites, or the petit blancs, who worked as artisans and laborers. And at the bottom were the slaves who made up the overwhelming majority. I know what you’re thinking: this is a recipe for permanent social stability. No, it wasn’t. Okay, so when the French Revolution broke out in 1789, all these groups had something to complain about. The slaves, obviously, disliked being slaves. The free people of color were still subject to legal discrimination, no matter how wealthy they became. And the poor whites, in addition to being poor, were resentful of all the privileges held by the wealthy people of color. And the Grand Blancs were complaining about French trade laws and the government’s attempts to slightly improve the living and working conditions of slaves. [#slaveowningwhitepeopleproblems] Basically they were saying that government shouldn’t be in the business of regulating business. So everyone was unhappy, but the slaves were by far the worst off. [Ya think?] Mr. Green, Mr. Green! You’re always saying how much slavery sucks, but is it really any worse than having to work for, like, subsis-- Yeah, I’m gonna stop you right there, Me from the Past, before you further embarrass yourself. [good call, You From the Now] You often hear from people attempting to comprehend the horrors of slavery that slavery couldn’t have been all that bad, and that it wasn’t that different from working for minimum wage. And that we know this because if it HAD been so bad, slaves would have just revolted, which they never did. Yeah. Well, 1. equating slavery to poor working conditions ignores the fact that if you work at, like, Foxconn, Foxconn doesn’t get to sell your children to other corporations. And 2. As you are about to see, SLAVES DID REVOLT. So, the unrest in what became Haiti started in 1789 when some slaves heard a rumor that the King of France had freed them. Even though it was across the ocean, word of the changes in France reached the people of Haiti, where The Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen, while terrifying to planters, gave hope both to free people of color and to slaves. At the same time, some petit blancs argued that there was inadequate discrimination against blacks. [quite a classy crowd pleaser there] They identified with the third estate in France, and they called for interest rates to be lowered so they could more easily pay their debts. [if wishes were horses…] And they began lobbying for colonial independence. The psychology here shows you the extent to which slaves were not considered people. I mean, these radical petit blancs thought that they were the oppressed people in Saint Domingue because they couldn’t afford to own slaves. And they thought if they could become independent from France, they could take power from the people of privilege and institute a democracy where everyone had a voice-- except for the 95% of people who weren’t white. Then in 1791, these radical petit blancs seized the city of Port au Prince. You’ll remember that by 1791, France was at war with most of Europe, and just like with the 7 Years War, the wars of Revolutionary France played out in the colonies as well as at home. So the French government sent troops to Saint Domingue. Meanwhile, urges toward liberty, fraternity, and equality were only growing in France, and it didn’t seem very equitable to grant citizenship based solely on race. So in May of 1791, the National Assembly gave full French citizenship to all free men of color. I mean, if they owned property, and had enough money, and weren’t the children of slaves. The petit blancs weren’t thrilled about this, and that led to fighting breaking out between them and the newly French free people of color. And then in August of 1791, the slaves were like, “Um, hi, yes. Screw all of you.” [expletives deleted] And a massive slave revolt broke out. Among the leaders of this revolt was Toussaint Breda, a former slave of full African descent, who later took the name Toussaint L’ouverture. L’Ouverture helped mold the slaves into a disciplined army that could withstand attacks from the French troops. But again, the context of the wider revolution proves really important here. So, the Spanish had consistently supported slave revolts in Saint Domingue hoping to weaken the French. But, by 1793 they were offering even more support. In fact, L’Ouverture became an officer in the Spanish military because the emancipation of the slaves was more important to him than maintaining his rights as a French Citizen. So then, in October of 1793 the British, whom as I’m sure you’ll recall were also at war with France, decided to invade Saint Domingue. And at that point, the French military commanders were like, We are definitely going to lose this war if we fight the British, the Spanish, and the slaves, so let’s free the slaves. So they issued decrees freeing the slaves and on February 4, 1794 the National Convention in Paris ratified those decrees. By May, having learned of the Convention’s actions, L’Ouverture switched allegiances to the French and turned the tide of the war. Thus, the most successful slave revolt in human history won freedom and citizenship for every slave in the French Caribbean. But emancipation didn’t end the story because the French were still at war with the Spanish and the English in Saint Domingue. Luckily for France, L’Ouverture was an excellent general, and luckily for the people of the island, L’Ouverture was also an able politician. And between 1794 and 1802, he successfully steered the colony toward independence. So, although slavery was abolished, this didn’t end the plantation system because both L’Ouverture and his compatriot Andre Rigaud believed that sugar was vital to the economic health of the island. But now at least people were paid for their labor and their kids couldn’t be sold. Now you can compare it to Foxconn. But soon, L’Ouverture and Rigaud came into conflict over Rigaud’s refusal to give up control over one of the Southern states on the island, and there was a civil war, which L’Ouverture, with the help of his able lieutenant Jacques Dessailines, was able to win after 13 months of hard fighting. L’Ouverture then passed a new constitution, and things were going pretty well on Saint Domingue with the small problem that it was still technically part of France, which meant that it was about to be ruled by Napoleon Bonaparte. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble. [Finally!] So, in 1799, Napoleon seized power in France in a coup. And, his new regime, called the Consulate (because he was the First Consul a la the Roman Republic) established a new constitution that specifically pointed out its laws did not apply to France’s overseas colonies. Napoleon had plans to reconstruct France’s empire in North America that it had lost most of in the 7 Years’ War, and to do this he needed tons of money from France’s most valuable colony, Saint Domingue. And the best way to maximize profits? Why, to reintroduce slavery, of course. ["gotta get offa this merry-go-round"] That’s certainly what the former slaves thought was the plan when in 1802, a French expedition commanded by Napoleon’s brother in-law Charles-Victor-Emmanuel- I-Have-Too-Many-Names - Leclerc showed up in Saint Domingue. This started the second phase of the Haitian revolution, the fight for independence. So, Leclerc eventually had L’Ouverture arrested and shipped to France where he died in prison in 1803. But this itself did not spark an uprising against the French because L’Ouverture wasn’t actually that popular, largely because he wanted most blacks on the island to continue to grow sugar. Instead, the former slaves only started fighting when Leclerc tried to take away their guns, thus beginning a guerrilla war that the French, despite their superior training and weapons, had absolutely no chance of winning. Although the French were exceedingly cruel, executing women as well as men and importing man-eating dogs from Cuba, the Haitians had the best ally of all: Disease, specifically in the form of Yellow Fever, which killed thousands of French soldiers, including Leclerc himself. Oh, it’s time for the Open Letter? Stan! Where is my chair? Stan, you’re telling me the yellow chair has been lost? The yellow chair is the star of the show. The stars, in order, are 1. me, 2. yellow chair, 3. the chalkboard, 4. Danica, [bazinga] 5. Meredith the Intern, 6. you, Stan. You’re sixth. [Sorry Thought Bubblers, must be Johnny Bookwriter's domestic list] Oh, I’m mad. [Not as mad as the ThoughtBubblers…] Let’s see what’s in the secret compartment today. It’s a giant squid of anger!!! I’M A GIANT SQUID OF ANGER!!!! Oh, no. It broke. An open letter to disease. Dear disease, why do you always put yourself at the center of human history? Most of you are just tiny, little single-celled organisms, but you’re so self-important and self-involved that you’re always interfering with us. Admittedly, sometimes you work for the good guys, but usually you don’t. It seems like even though you’re constantly interfering with human history, you don’t even care about it. I just hate when people, and also microbes, are super self-involved. Like, don’t tell me you gotta take a day off to go to your mom’s birthday party, Stan. That’s not imagining me complexly. [there it is] I’ve got needs over here. Best wishes, John Green. So continued defeat and the death of his troops eventually convinced Napoleon to give up his dreams of an American empire and cut his losses. He recalled his surviving troops, of the 40,000 who left, only 8,000 made it back. And then, he sold Thomas Jefferson Louisiana. And that is how former slaves in Haiti gave America all of this. On January 1, 1804, Dessaillines who had defeated the French, declared the island of Saint Domingue independent and re-named it Haiti. Which is what the island had been called by the native inhabitants before the arrival of Columbus. The Haitian Declaration of Independence was a rejection of France and, to a certain degree of European racism and colonialism. It also affirmed, to quote from the book Slave Revolution in the Caribbean, “a broad definition of the new country as a refuge for enslaved peoples of all kinds.” So, why is this little island so important that we would devote an entire episode to it? [cuz we're an office of sugar junkies?] First, Haiti was the second free and independent nation state in the Americas. It also had one of the most successful slave revolts ever. Haiti became the first modern nation to be governed by people of African descent, and they also foiled Napoleon’s attempts to build a big new world empire. Of course, Haiti’s history since its revolution has been marred by tragedy, a legacy of the loss of life that accompanied the revolution. I mean, 150,000 people died in 1802 and 1803 alone. But the Haitian revolutions matter. They matter because the Haitians, more than any other people in the age of revolutions, stood up for the idea that none should be slaves, that the people who most need the protection of a government should be afforded that protection. Haiti stood up for the weak when the rest of the world failed to. The next time you read about Haiti’s poverty, remember that. Thanks for watching. I’ll see you next week. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller. Our script supervisor is Danica Johnson. The show is ably interned by Meredith Danko. And our graphics team is Thought Bubble. Oh, right, I write it with my high school history teacher Raoul Meyer. Actually, he does most of the work, who am I kidding. [plenty of folks, apparently ;] Last week’s phrase of the week was “fancy footwear.” If you want to guess this week’s phrase of the week or suggest future ones, you can do so in comments, where you can also ask questions that will be answered by our team of historians. Thanks for watching Crash Course, and as we say in my hometown, Don't forget to Always Take A Banana To A Party. ...woo!

15th century

Year Date Event
1492 Christopher Columbus came to the first Spanish community near Cap-Haïtien.

16th century

Year Date Event
1501 The first Africans were brought to Hispaniola as people in the U.S.
1503 Queen Anacaona, leader of the last Taino kingdom in the Hispaniola, is executed by Spanish governor.
1518 Ferdinand II of Aragon officially established Spain's African slave trade.
1528 Don Sebastián Ramirez de Fuente became the first Catholic bishop of the island.

17th century

Year Date Event
1625 French, Dutch and English filibusters, pirates and privateers occupied Tortuga Island and were repeatedly expelled by the Spaniards.
1670 The city of Cap-Francais was founded on the north coast by French settlers.
1670 Louis XIV of France authorized the African slave trade in Saint-Dominque.
1685 Louis XIV enacted the Code Noir, regulating slavery in Saint-Domingue and the rest of the French colonial empire.
1697 Spain signed the Treaty of Ryswick, under whose terms she ceded the western third of Hispaniola to France.

18th century

Year Date Event
1749 The city of Port-au-Prince was founded by Charles Burnier, Marquis of Larnage and named the capital of Saint-Domingue.
1751 Slave rebellions in northern Saint-Domingue, led by François Mackandal, began.
1758 Mackandal was captured and publicly executed in Cap-Français.
1778 Volunteer Haitian slaves, led by French admiral Count d'Estaing, left for Savannah, Georgia to participate in the unsuccessful Siege of Savannah during the American Revolutionary War.
1791 25 February Vincent Ogé and Jean-Baptiste Chavannes, proponents of equal rights for free blacks and mulattos and leaders of an armed rebellion, were publicly executed in Cap-Français.
7 August The Conseil des Représentants de la Commune was founded by affranchis to demand equal rights. Pinchinat was named president of the council.
14 August Haitian Revolution: Dutty Boukman and Cécile Fatiman held a Vodou ceremony in Bois-Caïman, where hundreds of slaves vowed to die for liberty.
21 August Major slave revolt begins, led by Dutty Boukman and his lieutenants: Jean François, Georges Biassou, and Jeannot.
25 August Rebel attack on Cap Francais is repulsed by the cannons and militia of the white colonists.
24 September The Concordat de Damiens was signed, granting political rights to the affranchis.
November The First Civil Commission, comprising Roume, Mirbeck, and Saint-Léger, arrived in Cap-Français to restore order.
7 November Dutty Boukman killed in a counter attack by colonial forces.
1792 4 April France's Legislative Assembly voted to give full citizenship and equal rights to all free people of color.
18 September The Second Civil Commission, comprising Léger-Félicité Sonthonax, Étienne Polverel and Ailhaud, arrived in Cap-Français to execute the law of 4 April.
1793 12 April A force led by the Second Civil Commission and affranchis defeated white colonists in a fight to enforce the law of 4 April.
Toussaint Louverture offered his services as a military commander to the Spanish.
20 June French colonial forces, under the authority of the Second Civil Commission, put down a revolt led by François-Thomas Galbaud du Fort.
Henri Christophe was promoted to the captaincy of the French colonial forces, but soon removed when accused of adultery.
British troops landed in Saint-Domingue.
June Toussaint, fighting for Spain, captured the city of Dondon.
13 August Toussaint defeated the French general Desfourneaux at Ennery.
29 August Sonthonax, without prior approval from the French government, declared the abolition of slavery by decree in northern Saint-Domingue. Polverel soon after does the same for the southern part of Saint-Domingue.
6 December Toussaint captured Gonaïves for Spain.
1794 4 February The French National Convention declared the abolition of slavery in all French colonies, so making the abolition of slavery legal and applying to all of France and its colonies.
May Toussaint left the Spanish and joined the French forces.
1 June The British captured Port-au-Prince from Colonel Montbrun of France.
21 October Toussaint captured the cities of Saint-Michel and Saint-Raphaël for the French.
1795 13 October Toussaint captured the city of Dondon a second time, this time for France.
14 October The Treaty of Bâle was ratified, ending Spain's involvement in the conflict and surrendering the eastern part of Hispaniola to France.
1796 30 March Toussaint rescued French commander Laveaux from mulatto rebel Villatte; Laveaux appointed Toussaint the Lieutenant-Governor of Saint-Domingue.
11 May The Third Civil Commission, comprising Sonthonax, Roume, Giraud, Leblanc, and Julien Raymond, arrived in Saint-Domingue to establish diplomatic relations between France and the colony.
1797 1 May Sonthonax appointed Toussaint the commander-in-chief of the French colonial forces.
1798 20 April General Hédouville arrived in Cap-Français on the orders of the French government in order to oppose the ambition of Toussaint Louverture.
31 August British general Maitland agreed to evacuate Môle Saint-Nicolas in a treaty signed with Toussaint.
1799 12 January The generals of the colony – Toussaint, André Rigaud, Bauvais, and Laplume – met in Port-au-Prince and named Toussaint the lead commander. Rigaud surrendered control of the southern cities of Léogâne, Grand-Goâve, Petit-Goâve, and Miragoâne.

19th century

Year Date Event
1801 27 January Toussaint invaded the eastern part of Hispaniola and captured Santo Domingo, declaring freedom for all slaves and appointing a ten-member Central Assembly to issue a constitution.
8 July The Constitution of 1801 was promulgated, under which Toussaint Louverture
1802 29 January A French expeditionary force, sent by Napoleon Bonaparte and led by his brother-in-law Charles Leclerc, arrived in Samana Bay.
1 February French vessels arrived at Cap-Français.
4 February Henri Christophe burned Cap-Français to resist the French troops.
23 February Battle of Ravine-à-Couleuvres: French forces defeated Toussaint.
4 April - 24 March Battle of Crête-à-Pierrot: The battle ended with a French victory over Jean-Jacques Dessalines.
6 May Toussaint arrived in Cap-Français to recognize Leclerc's authority in return for an amnesty for him and his remaining generals.
7 June Toussaint was arrested by General Leclerc and shipped to France, where he was imprisoned.
13 October Dessalines, now Commander-in-Chief of the revolutionary forces, met with Alexandre Pétion in Haut-du-Cap to plan further military action.
1 November Commander of the French forces General Leclerc died of yellow fever. He was succeeded by Donatien-Marie-Joseph de Vimeur, vicomte de Rochambeau.
1803 7 April Toussaint died in the French prison of Fort de Joux.
18 May The flag of Haiti was created during a meeting between Dessalines and Pétion in l'Arcahaie and sewn by Catherine Flon.
18 November Battle of Vertières: During the last major battle of the revolution, Haitian forces under Dessalines and Pétion defeated the French.
19 November French general Rochambeau signs a document of surrender and agrees to evacuate French troops from Saint-Domingue; Rochambeau is later given as a prisoner to the British
29 November Dessalines' army arrives in Cap-Français; Christophe and Clerveaux issue a preliminary declaration of independence
4 December French forces surrender Môle Saint-Nicolas to Dessalines' army, officially ending French presence on the island
1804 1 January Dessalines, in Gonaïves, declares Haiti an independent nation and becomes Governor-General
February On the order of Dessalines, the 1804 Haiti Massacre eradicates the white minority of Haiti; the massacre is finally stopped 22 April.
22 September Dessalines proclaims himself Emperor of Haiti
6 October Dessalines becomes Emperor Jacques I in a coronation ceremony at Cap-Français
1805 20 May Dessalines formulates the first constitution of Haiti as an independent country, the Imperial Constitution of 1805
1806 17 October Dessalines is assassinated at Pont-Rouge by disaffected leaders of his administration
27 December During a meeting at a cathedral in Port-au-Prince, the Constituent Assembly creates a new constitution and appoints Henri Christophe to a four-year term as President of the Republic of Haiti
1807 1 January The Battle of Sibert ends with the division of Haiti into the southern Republic of Haiti under Alexandre Pétion and the northern State of Haiti under Christophe
17 February Henri Christophe names himself President of the State of Haiti; a state council (7 generals and 2 civilians) appointed by Christophe meets in Cap-Haïtien and votes the Constitutional Act of Haiti
9 March Pétion is elected President of the Republic of Haiti by the Constituent Assembly under the Constitution of 1806
1809 Napoleon sends a delegation to negotiate France's recognition of Haitian independence; Pétion meets with a French delegate, Dauxion-Lavaysse, and agrees to an indemnity payable to dispossessed French planters
1811 9 March Pétion is elected to a second four-year term as President of the Republic of Haiti
26 March Christophe proclaims himself King Henri I of the northern Haitian state, now known as the Kingdom of Haiti
28 May The Kingdom of Haiti promulgates the Royal Constitution of Henri I
2 June Christophe is crowned as King Henri I in Cap-Haïtien
1812 24 February The Kingdom of Haiti establishes a civil code, the Henri Code
1814 November Christophe refuses to negotiate with French delegate Franco de Medina concerning France's recognition of Haitian independence
1816 2 June Pétion promulgates the Republican Constitution
8 October Louis XVIII of France sends another delegation to negotiate France's recognition of Haitian independence; Pétion cuts off negotiation, Christophe declines to meet the delegates
1818 29 March Pétion, President of the Republic of Haiti, dies of fever
30 March Jean-Pierre Boyer, Chief of the Presidential Guard, is appointed President-for-Life of the Republic of Haiti
1820 8 October Christophe, King of the northern Haitian state, commits suicide
26 October Boyer promulgates the Republican Constitution in Christophe's northern state; northern and southern Haiti are unified
1822 9 February Boyer arrives in Santo Domingo and declares control over the entire island of Hispaniola
1825 17 April King Charles X of France signs an ordinance which conditionally recognizes the independence of Haiti and imposes a 150 million franc indemnity on the Haitian government
3 July A squadron of French ships arrives in Haiti to deliver the news of Charles X's ordinance of 17 April to President Boyer
1831 22 September The city of Pétion-Ville, a suburb of Port-au-Prince named for Alexandre Pétion, is founded by Boyer
1838 Haiti's remaining debt to France, 120 million francs, is reduced to 60 million francs
1842 7 May An earthquake strikes northern Haiti, destroying the city of Cap-Haïtien
1843 13 March President Boyer is overthrown and flees to Paris in exile
18 September The Constituent Assembly begins formulating the Constitution of 1843; it will take more than three months to finish
31 December The Constitution of 1843 is released and Charles Riviere-Hérard is appointed President of Haiti
1844 28 February The Dominican Republic declares its independence from Haiti
4 April The Piquets, peasants of southern Haiti led by Jean-Jacques Acaau, revolt against the government
3 May The Piquets force Riviere-Hérard into exile; Philippe Guerrier is appointed President of Haiti
1845 15 April President Guerrier dies in office; the State Council appoints Jean-Louis Pierrot President of Haiti
1846 1 March President Pierrot is overthrown; Jean-Baptiste Riché becomes President of Haiti
1847 Haitian historian Thomas Madiou publishes the first volume of his seminal work Histoire d'Haïti ("History of Haiti")
27 February President Riché dies in office
1 March Faustin Élie Soulouque is elected President of Haiti
1852 18 April President Faustin Soulouque is crowned Emperor Faustin I of Haiti
1858 December Forces led by Fabre Geffrard defeat Emperor Faustin's Imperial Army
1859 13 January Fabre Geffrard is elected President of Haiti
1860 28 March Haiti and the Vatican sign an agreement which divides Haiti into five dioceses
1862 The United States recognizes Haiti
15 December Rhum Barbancourt is first produced
1865 Céligny Ardouin's eleven-volume work on the history of Haiti, Essais sur l'Histoire d'Haïti, is published
1867 President Geffrard is forced to flee the country
Sylvain Salnave is elected President of Haiti
The Constitution of 1867 is voted
1869 The National Assembly elects Nissage Saget to a four-year term as President of Haiti after the overthrow of Salnave
1870 Haitian writer Demesvar Delorme publishes the essay "Les Théoriciens au Pouvoir", which maintains that political power should be in the hands of the intellectual elite
1874 Saget relinquishes the Presidency; the Constituent Assembly elects Michel Domingue as President
President Domingue promulgates the Constitution of 1874
1875 President Domingue signs a treaty of peace and friendship with the Dominican Republic
1876 President Domingue is overthrown; the Constituent Assembly elects Pierre Théoma Boisrond-Canal to a four-year term as President
1879 The Constituent Assembly elects Lysius Salomon as president; President Salomon would institute many reforms and pay off Haiti's remaining debt to France for independence
1880 The National Bank of Haiti (or Haitian Central Bank) is founded by President Salomon
1882 Port-au-Prince and Haiti are dedicated to Our Lady of Perpetual Help during a mass in Bel Air
1883 Haitian poet Oswald Durand composes his most famous work, "Choucoune"
1884 Haitian writer Louis-Joseph Janvier publishes the article "L'Egalité des Races", which proclaims the equality of the races
1885 Haitian writer Anténor Firmin publishes the book De l'Égalité des Races Humaines, which proclaims the equality of the races
1888 President Salomon is overthrown; the Constituent Assembly installs a provisional government
The Constituent Assembly elects François Denys Légitime to the presidency
1889 President Légitime is overthrown; the Constituent Assembly installs a provisional government
The Constituent Assembly elects Florvil Hyppolite to a seven-year term as president
1893 Haitian writer Hannibal Price publishes De la Réhabilitation de la Race Noire par la République d'Haïti ("On the Rehabilitation of the Black Race by the Republic of Haiti") in response to Spenser St. John's Hayti or the Black Republic
1896 President Hyppolite dies of a heart attack; Tirésias Simon Sam is elected to a seven-year term as president

20th century

Year Date Event
1902 President Simon Sam resigns; Pierre Nord Alexis becomes president
1904 1 January Haiti celebrates 100 years of independence
The Haitian Football Federation is created
1908 Pierre Nord Alexis withdraws from the presidency; the Constituent Assembly appoints François C. Antoine Simon president
1911 President Antoine Simon cedes the presidency to Cincinnatus Leconte
1912 5 August The Haitian American Sugar Company is founded
8 August President Leconte and 300 soldiers are killed in an explosion at the National Palace; the Constituent Assembly appoints Tancrède Auguste president
1913 President Auguste dies during a visit to northern Haiti
Senator Michel Oreste is elected president by the Constituent Assembly
1914 President Oreste is overthrown and succeeded by Oreste Zamor
President Zamor is overthrown and lost by Joseph Davilmar Théodore
1915 President Théodore resigns and is succeeded by Vilbrun Guillaume Sam. Sam executed 167 political prisoners (including the previous president, Zamor) who were being held in the Port-au-Prince jail. President Sam sought refuge in the French Embassy. He was found by mulatto leaders, dragged out to the street, murdered and cut into small pieces. The parts were paraded throughout the capital.
28 July Three thousand United States Marines, led by Admiral William B. Caperton, enter Port-au-Prince; beginning of the 19-year United States occupation of Haiti
12 August Senator Philippe Sudré Dartiguenave is elected by the Constituent Assembly to a seven-year term as president
1919 12 April The Haitian government undertakes a monetary reform with the National Bank of Haiti
31 October Charlemagne Péralte, leader of the resistance against U.S. occupation, is assassinated
1920 Haitian writer Leon Laleau publishes his first compilation of poems, A Voix Basse
1921 24 January President Dartiguenave addresses United States President Warren G. Harding concerning the needs of the Haitian people
12 April United States President Harding responds to President Dartiguenave
1922 10 April Louis Bornó is elected to a four-year term as president by the State Council
15 May President Dartiguenave's term ends; Louis Bornó is sworn into office
28 December The Central School of Agriculture (Ecole Centrale d'Agriculture) is founded in Damien
1926 President Bornó is re-elected by the State Council and makes a diplomatic trip to the United States
Haitian writer Leon Laleau publishes his second compilation of poems, La Flèche au Cœur
1928 Haitian writer Jean Price-Mars publishes his acclaimed novel Ainsi Parla l'Oncle ("So spoke the Uncle")
Leon Laleau publishes two more compilations of poems, Le Rayon des Jupes and Abréviations
1929 21 January Haiti and the Dominican Republic sign an agreement settling the border between the two countries
1930 28 February The Forbes Commission, sent by U.S. president Herbert Hoover to investigate Haiti's political situation, arrives in the country
21 April Louis Eugène Roy is designated temporary president by state decree
18 November Senator Sténio Vincent is elected to a six-year term as president
10 December Fietta, the first Apostolic Nuncio (diplomatic representative of the Roman Catholic Church) to Haiti, arrives in Port-au-Prince
1931 Jacques Roumain publishes his acclaimed novel Gouverneurs de la Rosée ("Masters of the Dew")
5 August The U.S. agrees to hand over control of the Offices of Public Works, Health, Agriculture and Education to the Haitian government
15 December The ceremony commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the dedication of Port-au-Prince to the Virgin Mary, led by Archbishop Joseph Legouaze, began.
17 December The anniversary ceremony ended.
1933 7 August The governments of Haiti and the United States sign an agreement on the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the country and the end of the U.S. occupation
18 October President Vincent of Haiti and President Rafael Leónidas Trujillo of the Dominican Republic meet for diplomatic talks in Ouanaminthe in northeastern Haiti, near the Dominican border
1934 5 July President of the United States Franklin D. Roosevelt visits Cap-Haïtien
14 August Last American forces withdraw from Haiti, ending the U.S. occupation
21 August The flag of Haiti is raised at Casernes Dessalines, where it was lowered nineteen years earlier at the start of the U.S. occupation
1935 16 May A new constitution is released, reinforcing the authority of the executive branch of government and renewing President Sténio Vincent's mandate for five more years
1937 Between 20,000 and 35,000 Haitians living in the Dominican Republic are massacred by the Dominican armed forces on the orders of President Rafael Trujillo.
1938 18 May The 135th anniversary of the flag of Haiti is celebrated with athletic festivities at the Champs-de-Mars in Port-au-Prince
1940 Haiti's national library, the Bibliothèque Nationale d'Haïti is organized
1941 14 April Élie Lescot is elected to a five-year term as president
15 May President Vincent's term ends; Élie Lescot takes office
1944 7 May The Cathedral of Cap-Haïtien is consecrated after 100 years of restoration work
14 May The Centre d'Art is founded; it exhibits important Haitian art works
1946 A military coup forces President Lescot to resign; the newly created Executive Military Committee appoints Dumarsais Estimé president and the 8.1 MsDominican Republic earthquake.
1948 16 February The government-owned tobacco company Régie du Tabac et des Allumettes is founded
1949 8 December The bicentennial of Port-au-Prince's founding is celebrated; a World's Fair, the Exposition internationale du bicentenaire de Port-au-Prince, is held
1950 10 May Dumarsais Estimé relinquishes the presidency and is replaced by a provisional government
8 October Presidential and legislative elections are held; Colonel Paul Magloire becomes the first president of Haiti to be elected directly by the people, the Delegates, and the Senators
6 December Paul Magloire is sworn in as president
1951 President Magloire of Haiti and President Trujillo of the Dominican Republic meet for diplomatic talks
The Haitian Institute of Statistics (Institut Haïtien de Statistique) and the Haitian Institute of Farming and Industrial Credit (Institut Haïtien de Crédit Agricole et Industriel) are established by the government
1953 31 May Father Rémy Augustin, the first native Haitian bishop, is consecrated at the Cathedral of Port-au-Prince
1954 1 January A celebration commemorating the 150th anniversary of Haiti's independence from France, during which monuments to the "heroes of independence" are inaugurated in Port-au-Prince, began.
4 January The celebration ended.
8 October Hurricane Hazel kills an estimated 1,000 Haitians and decimates the coffee and cocoa crops, affecting the economy for years to come.
1955 26 January President Magloire and his wife began a trip to the United States, Canada, and Jamaica.
17 February Magloire's trip ended.
3 March Vice-president of the United States Richard Nixon and his wife began a visit to Haiti.
5 March Nixon's trip ended.
1956 President Magloire relinquishes the presidency; President of the Supreme Court Joseph Nemours Pierre-Louis becomes provisional president of Haiti
1957 Franck Sylvain is elected President of Haiti, but is succeeded by a thirteen-member Executive Council of Government
Daniel Fignolé is elected President of Haiti, but is replaced by a Military Council of Government
22 October Dr. François "Papa Doc" Duvalier is elected President of Haiti
1958 Duvalier began to attack his opponents violently, driving many of them into exile.
1964 Duvalier's reign of terror ended.
The National Assembly votes to accept the Duvalieriste Constitution, establishing Duvalier as President for Life of Haiti
1968 28 October François Wolf Ligondé, the first Haitian archbishop, is consecrated at the Cathedral of Port-au-Prince
1970 Thousands of Haitians began to flee poverty and repression in Haiti by boat, often arriving in south Florida.
1971 February The National Assembly approves an amendment to the constitution, allowing President For Life Duvalier to name his son, Jean-Claude Duvalier, as his successor
21 April President for Life François Duvalier dies in Port-au-Prince
22 April Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier succeeds his father as president for Life
1974 The Haiti national football team participates in the FIFA World Cup for the first time
1977 15 August The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations commission arrives in Haiti; the commission meets with the Haitian government to discuss civil rights in Haiti
1980 27 May President for Life Jean-Claude Duvalier marries Michèle Bennett
1983 March Pope John Paul II arrives in Haiti, becoming the first Pope to visit the country
27 August The constitution is amended, creating the post of State Minister and allowing the President to name his successor
1985 6 June President for Life Duvalier amends the constitution to allow the creation of the post of Prime Minister of Haiti
July A referendum is approved by 99.48% of voters, allowing political parties to participate in the government and recognizing the Presidency for Life of Jean-Claude Duvalier
July A constitutional amendment on the Presidency for Life is passed
28 November Three schoolboys (Jean-Robert Cius, Daniel Israël, and Mackenson Michel) are killed during an anti-government demonstration in Gonaïves
1986 31 January Rumors spread through Port-au-Prince that President Duvalier has fled the country
3 February President Duvalier and members of his cabinet visit commercial and residential areas of Port-au-Prince as a show of power
7 February President Jean-Claude Duvalier flees Haiti for Talloires, France; the National Council of Government (Conseil National de Gouvernement, CNG) is established, led by General Henri Namphy; the Legislative Chamber and Duvalier's armed forces, Volontaire Sécurité Nationale, are dissolved
25 February The original blue and red flag of Haiti is raised at the National Palace, replacing the black and red flag of the Duvalier regime
March Former President of Haiti Daniel Fignolé returns to Haiti; a second version of the CNG is formed, consisting of Henri Namphy, Williams Régala, and Jacques François
20 March More than two thousand students and public transportation drivers of Carrefour demonstrate against the CNG
26 April Eight people are killed in an attack by armed groups on Fort-Dimanche
19 October Forty-one people are elected to a constituent assembly to draft a new constitution, the CNG appoints twenty more constituents for a total of sixty-one
1987 10 March The constituent assembly presents the new constitution, written in both French and Haitian Creole, to President of the CNG Henri Namphy
29 March The new constitution is ratified by referendum; the results of 215 voting places show an approximately 99.81% approval rate
13 May The CNG publishes a decree electing the members of the Provisional Electoral Council (Conseil Electoral Provisoire, CEP)
22 May The CEP proclaims itself independent from the CNG
5 June The CEP delivers the text of the electoral law to the Minister of Justice
July Large landowners (grandons) massacre hundreds of peasants demanding land in Jean-Rabel
17 July During a ceremony at the Military Academy, the Armed Forces of Haiti swear allegiance to the new 1987 constitution
29 November At the Haitian presidential election, 1987 a massacre of voters takes place; the elections are suspended and General Namphy dissolves the CEP
10 December General Namphy sets 17 January 1988 as the new election date; the CNG elects a new Provisional Electoral Council (Conseil Electoral Provisoire, CEP)
1988 January Christian Democrat Leslie Manigat is elected in military-run elections boycotted by the Haitian people and most candidates. In June he is overthrown in a military coup by Gen. Henri Namphy. In September, shortly after the St Jean Bosco massacre, Namphy is overthrown by Gen. Prosper Avril.
1990 January President/General Prosper Avril declares a state of siege in January.
March Rising protests convince Avril to resign. A Provisional Government led by Supreme Court Justice Ertha Pascal-Trouillot is formed.
16 December Democratic elections take place. Father Jean-Bertrand Aristide, well known throughout the country for his support of the poor, is elected president with 67.5% of the counted popular vote. The "U.S. favorite" Marc Bazin finishes a distant second with 14.2% .
1991 January A coup by former Tonton Macoutes head Roger Lafontant is foiled after tens of thousands pour into the streets of the capital, surrounding the National Palace.
7 February Aristide is sworn in as president.
30 September A military coup deposes Aristide, who goes into exile first in Venezuela, then in the United States.
Thousands of Haitians begin to flee violence and repression in Haiti by boat. Although most are repatriated to Haiti by the U.S. government, many enter the United States as refugees.
1994 September The de facto military government resigns at the request of the United States in September, which then sends in troops to occupy Haiti. This occupation is sanctioned by the United Nations.
15 October The U.S. returns Aristide as president.
1995 The U.S. nominally hands over military authority to the United Nations but maintains effective control of the occupation. Aristide dissolves the Haitian army.
December Former prime minister René Préval is elected president.
1996 7 February Aristide leaves office and is succeeded by René Préval.
2000 May Legislative, municipal and local elections are held. The OAS disputes how the sovereign electoral council calculates the run-offs for eight Senate seats.
November Aristide is reelected for a second five-year term with 92% of the vote in elections boycotted by the opposition. The last UN peacekeeping forces withdraw from Haiti.

21st century

Year Date Event
2001 Aristide succeeds Préval for a second five-year term. For the next two years, and with Washington's support, Aristide's opponents use the OAS challenge to the 2000 elections to increase economic and political instability. Former Haitian soldiers carry out guerrilla attacks, primarily along the Dominican border and in the capital.
2004 Haiti's 200th anniversary of independence.
4 February A revolt breaks out in the city of Gonaïves, with a local militia hostile to Aristide capturing the city and driving out the police force.
22 February Rebels capture Haiti's second-largest city, Cap-Haïtien, after just a few hours of fighting, claiming their biggest prize in a two-week uprising that has driven government forces from most of the country's north.
29 February Aristide resigns from office and flees Haiti aboard a U.S. military aircraft to South Africa. Boniface Alexandre is inaugurated as interim president. Aristide later claims that he was forced from office and kidnapped by the U.S. government.
March UN Resolution 1529 authorizes a three-month multinational interim peacekeeping force. It consists of troops from France, Canada, Chile and the U.S.
September Hurricane Jeanne kills over 1,900 people.
2006 February René Préval is elected president, defeating U.S.-backed and other candidates in an election overseen by U.N. peacekeepers
2008 April Riots break out in Les Cayes and Port-au-Prince over high food prices, forcing the ouster of Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis.
August Tropical Storm Fay, Hurricane Gustav, Tropical Storm Hanna and Hurricane Ike strike within a month, leaving nearly 800 people dead and wiping out a quarter of the economy. (to September)
November The Pétion-Ville school collapse and the Grace Divine School collapse.
2009 May Former U.S. President Bill Clinton is appointed U.N. special envoy to Haiti. He is tasked with reinvigorating the country's moribund economy after the 2008 storms.
2010 12 January A major earthquake, 7.0 on the moment magnitude scale, kills over 230,000 and causes massive damage to buildings and infrastructure in Port-au-Prince.
2016 4 October Hurricane Matthew makes landfall on the peninsula of the nation as a category 4, killing over 700 (although estimates place the toll at ~1,600) and causing massive damage in its wake
2021 14 August 2021 Haiti earthquake causes widespread damage as of 15 August 2021, 304 people are reported dead and another 1.800 injured.

See also

References

  • Schutt-Ainé, Patricia (1994). Haiti: A Basic Reference Book. Miami, Florida: Librairie Au Service de la Culture. pp. 25–58. ISBN 0-9638599-0-0.
This page was last edited on 25 March 2024, at 21:29
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.