He was the first president of the U.S
George Washington
What did Napoleon do that betrayed Toussaint?
He seized power in France, and then tried to reinstate slavery in the Caribbean colonies.
What was created at the end of the revolution?
The Republic of Haiti
A group that caused it was...
The French colony of St. Domingue rebelled
The time period from the start to the end of it.
From 1791 to 1804
He commanded tens of thousands of soldiers.
Toussaint Louverture
The U.S was inspired by...
Haiti
This is between the U.S and Haiti
The politics of race was closely tied to it's relationship with Haiti
The Haitians did this.
The Haitians revolted, burned the plantations, and "thrust themselves into the turmoil of the French Revolution."
How it fits the definition of "A sudden, rapid, complete change."
It fits because it was a complete change, but it did take 13 years...
He might be popular. (There is an explosive that shares his first name...)
Napoleon Bonaparte
What did Haiti become at one point during the revolution?
Haiti became a headquarters for abolitionist organizations.
After it ended this happened.
The Haitian people implemented both forced labor and martial law.
The Haitians were tired of
Slavery
The Haitians decided that
They were done being slaves
He worried about Haitians joining the opposing side
John Adams
Secretary of State John C. Calhoun sent what to Haiti?
He sent arms(soldiers)there, in dim hopes that they could overthrow the Haitian government.
This happened 30 years after
There was an American movement against slavery
Due to different groups, the now-called Haitians did this.
They rebelled because there was an ample opportunity
It was the only successful...
Slave revolt IN HISTORY that led to the creation of a new state
He was the new leader of Haiti
Dessalines
Pro-slavery forces joined who?
They joined with anti-Haiti forces
This also happened in Haiti after it ended
There was both forced labor and inequality
Another revolution partly caused it
The French Revolution
The U.S would not accept Haiti until
1862!