| HAPPY BIRTHDAY MR. PRESIDENT - Alexandre Sabès Pétion |
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| Written by Haitianite.com Staff Writer | |
| Thursday, 20 March 2008 | |
![]() President Alexandre Sabès Pétion Pétion was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti to a black mother and a French father. He was sent to France in 1788 to study at the Military Academy in Paris. He returned to take part in the expulsion of the British (1798–99). His mulatto heritage meant that when tensions arose between blacks and mulattoes he supported the mulatto faction. He allied with General André Rigaud and Jean Pierre Boyer against Toussaint L'Ouverture in the failed rebellion, the so-called War of Knives, which began in June 1799. By November the rebels were pushed back to the strategic southern port of Jacmel; the defence was commanded by Pétion. The town fell in March 1800 and the rebellion was effectively over. Pétion and other mulatto leaders went into exile in France. He returned in February 1802 with Boyer, Rigaud and the 12,000-strong French army commanded by Charles Leclerc. Following the treacherous treatment of Toussaint and the renewed struggle, Pétion joined the nationalist force in October 1802 following a secret conference at Arcahaie and supported Jean-Jacques Dessalines, the general who had captured Jacmel. The capital was taken on October 17, 1803, and independence was declared on January 1, 1804. Dessalines was made ruler for life and had himself crowned emperor on October 6, 1804. Post-Revolution He was active in seizing the commercial plantations and divided the land thus gained amongst his supporters and the peasantry, earning himself the nickname Papa Bon-Cœur ("good-hearted daddy"). The land grab dealt a serious blow to the economy of the country, and most of the population did little more than subsistence farming. He started the Lycée Pétion in Port-au-Prince. He gave sanctuary to Simón Bolívar in 1815 and provided him with material support. Article source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandre_P%C3%A9tion
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 02 April 2008 ) |
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