The Battle of Vertieres (
Kreyòl:
Batay Vètyè; French:
Bataille de Vertières), a defining campaign in the Haitian revolution, took place on
November 18,
1803. In this clash, south of
Le Cap Haitians led by
Jean-Jacques Dessalines and
Alexandre Pétion ultimately defeated the French troops under General
Rochambeau.
The last and defining Battle of the Haitian Revolution
Image of
François Capois 'La Mort'This last large battle of the Haitian Revolution, the Haitian War of Independence, was fought between Haitian rebels and French expeditionary forces. This decisive blow was a major loss for France and it's colonial empire.
Haitians led by
Jean-Jacques Dessalines and
François Capois attacked a strong French-held fort of Vertières, near
Cap François (in the north of Haiti) and won a decisive victory over French colonial army under
General Comte de Rochambeau and forced him to capitulate the same night.
The Haitian Ninth Brigade
[1] under François Capois played a crucial role in the victory and caused
Napoléon's troops to abandon their stronghold. This battle occurred less than two months before Dessalines declaration of independence (On
January 1,
1804) and delivered the final blow to the French attempt to re-institute slavery, as had been the case in the other Caribbean possesions, and to stop the Haitian Revolution.
Another leader of the fight at Vértieres was
Louis Michel Pierrot, the husband of the
mambo Cécile Fatiman who had led the
vodou ceremonies at
Bois Caïman on August 14,
1791 together with
Boukman.
The first major defeat of Napoléon's army
Napoléon Bonaparte, who had come to power three years prior to the Battle of Vertières (Through a coup d'etat on November 11,
1799), was given his first major defeat when he lost this crucial battle against the Haitian revolutionary forces. The French lost many experienced troops in the last year of fighting (
1803) in Saint-Domingue and after the Battle of Vertières, their military and political strength in the Western Hemisphere was significantly weakened.
Even though Napoléon had mobilized about 30.000 troops that, in
1802, sailed in huge fleets from France to re-establish slavery in it's most profitable colony [Saint-Domingue], and had given up control over much of the territory he controlled in the Americas (
see: The Haitian Revolution and the Louisiana Purchase), the Haitian troops commanded by
Toussaint Louverture and later
Jean-Jacques Dessalines won the war, culminating in the Battle of Vertiéres. This defeat, the French troops fled for France soon after loosing the final battle, was a major blow to the French empire, having been cut of from it's biggest source of income: the profits of plantation
slave labor in Saint-Domingue.
For the Haitians, who would soon
declare independence, the outcome of the battle of Vertiéres signaled the final defeat of the cruel treatment they had to suffer from the hands of the French colonizers. Rochambeau's defeat is still seen as a milestone in the fight against slavery and paved the way for the
abolition of slavery in other countries, although
Haiti was the first black republic in the hemisphere and the first nation to rid themselves from the terrors inflicted by the European colonialists.
The Battle of Vertières is a monument to Haiti's achievements as well as that of it's outstanding military leader at the time:
Jean-Jacques Dessalines. Toussaint Louverture, who had died in April of
1803 in French captivity at
Fort de Joux, had laid the groundwork for the defeat of France. It was Jean-Jacques Dessalines, who carried on as the leader of the Haitian troops and united the revolutionary forces, that made the win over the cruel
General Rochambeau a possibility.
"[Rochambeau's] ferocious and sanguinary spirit was too much for the kind heart of
Toussaint, or the gentlemanly bearing of
Christophe. His only match was Dessalines." (
Wells Brown p. 111)
Battle of Vertières' Day
November 18 has been celebrated since then as the
Bataille de Vertières day (
Battle of Vertières' Day) this day also used to be
Armed Forces Day (French:
Jour Des Forces Armées) in
Haiti. President Jean-Bertrand Aristide abolished the Haitian army in the early 1990's.