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A Brief History
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The appeal of the French West Indies today is that nothing
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much happens on them. Not so in the “bad old days. ” Unlikely as it
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seems now, at one time these sugar islands were close to center stage
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as the great powers of Europe warred fiercely for world commercial
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domination. France knew a good thing when she seized one, but then so
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did Britain.
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It all began much more peacefully. Perhaps 2,000 years ago,
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Indians sometimes called “Saloides” from the Orinoco basin in South
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America began migrating up the Antilles chain, reaching Martinique and
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Guadeloupe before a.d. 200. A volcanic eruption on Martinique prevented
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these early island-hoppers from staying long; they soon vanished from
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history, leaving only the scantiest archaeological traces.
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By a.d. 300, a new and larger wave of Amerindians from the
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Orinoco basin settled on islands throughout the Caribbean. These were
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the Arawaks, who lived from fishing and planting, and produced
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beautiful pottery. For centuries these people had the islands to
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themselves.
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Then came the Caribs, and the tranquility was shattered.
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These Indians, also from South America, swept north in fast
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seagoing canoes, attacking and either eating or driving Arawak men off
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island after island, then appropriating their women. A ritualistic mark
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of bravery for Carib warriors was cannibalism, and it’s for this that
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history most remembers the Indians who invented the hammock and gave
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their name to the Caribbean. In fact, their staple diet usually
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consisted of fish, crabs, conch, and birds.
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Enter Europe
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On his second voyage to what he evidently thought were the
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islands of the Far East, Christopher Columbus first discovered Dominica
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in 1493. Then he stopped at Marie-Galante, which he named after one of
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his vessels, before crossing over to the large neighboring island. This
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he called Guadeloupe after a monastery in Spain.
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The Caribs here, expert with bow and arrow, were
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demonstrably displeased to see the explorer. But he stayed long enough
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to see his first parrots and to marvel at the fact that the Indians
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spoke three languages — one strictly between the warriors, another for
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the mostly Arawak women, and a third for ordinary communication between
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men and women.
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Sailing north to find and claim islands for the Spanish
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crown, Columbus named one Saint-Barthélemy after his brother and
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another Saint-Martin, probably after the saint on whose feast day he
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had spotted it. Not until his fourth transatlantic journey in 1502 did
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Columbus reach Martinique.
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Spain in the 16th century wasn’t very excited about the
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Lesser Antilles. The big prize was gold, particularly in South America,
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so for a while Madrid regarded the Caribbean chain as “islands of Peru”
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where the galleons could stop for fresh water. Two rather half-hearted
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Spanish attempts to establish footholds on Guadeloupe were repulsed by
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the Caribs.
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But as the years went by, the conquistadors rounded up even
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more Indians to work in gold mines elsewhere. They also introduced
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sugarcane, some European vegetables, and the pig to the islands, but
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never founded any significant settlements. That situation, plus the
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gradual decline of Spanish naval power, proved very tempting to
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others.
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Cardinal Richelieu (the powerful 17th-century French
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statesman) for one dreamed of conquest in the New World. At his
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bidding, French buccaneers and adventurers, some of them noblemen,
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started planting the flag on Caribbean real estate in 1625. At first
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they shared a base with Englishmen on St. Kitts (then called
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Saint-Christophe). Their leader was the Norman gentleman Pierre Belain
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d’Esnambuc, whose statue you can see in the main square of
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Fort-de-France.
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Some years later, French colonizers moved south to both
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Guadeloupe and Martinique. Lienard de l’Olive and Jean Duplessis
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d’Ossonville put ashore at Pointe-Allegre in northern Guadeloupe on 28
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June 1635. But it took until 1640 for the French settlers to prevail
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against the Caribs, who were fighting to retain the island they
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loved.
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In September 1635, d’Esnambuc led a party to Martinique and
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constructed Fort Saint-Pierre, where a town of that name stands today.
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Here too, the Caribs resisted savagely, with the result that for some
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20 years they were left the eastern section of the island. It wasn’t
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all warfare — the Indians taught the settlers fishing and weaving
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techniques still in use today. Finally, the Caribs were expelled from
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the French domain, remaining for a period on Dominica and St. Vincent.
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In 1648, the French staked claim to their part of Saint-Martin and to
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nearby Saint-Barthélemy.
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Sugar and Slaves
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Sugar cropping, destined to change the face and fate of the
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Caribbean, began booming as early as the 1640s. To work plantations on
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the French islands as well as those belonging to other European
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nations, slaves were shipped in from Africa. The traffic soared
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incredibly: by 1745 Martinique had 60,000 slaves and only 16,000
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whites, while Guadeloupe had even more slaves and fewer whites. Some of
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the slaves were able to gain freedom in return for special services
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rendered. The children of colons and slaves were free citizens.
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By 1674, when Louis XIV took formal control of the islands
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from the debt-ridden commercial administrators, Martinique had become
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France’s colonial capital in the Lesser Antilles. Royal rule was to
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last for more than a century, with West Indian sugar helping to
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catapult France to economic supremacy in Europe.
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Britain versus France
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This was the period when nautical marauders variously
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called buccaneers, corsairs, privateers, and pirates stalked the
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shipways and bays of the Caribbean. For undermanned Guadeloupe and
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Martinique, the French pirates were critically important: in return for
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a safe haven, they carried in supplies, raided enemy merchant vessels,
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and joined battles against invading forces.
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France’s enemy number one in the Caribbean, as elsewhere,
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was the British. The first naval attacks by the redcoats were against
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Guadeloupe in 1691 and 1703. Half a century of fighting followed, with
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blockades, slave-raiding forays against the major islands, and three
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short seizures of Saint-Martin.
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During the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763), the British
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conquered Guadeloupe and held it for four years. Ironically, the
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British occupation gave Guadeloupe’s economy a big boost: between
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20,000 and 30,000 more slaves were transported in and new cane-grinding
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windmills built, all of which spurred the sugar trade to unprecedented
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prosperity. British engineers also set a port in operation at
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Pointe-à-Pitre, thus establishing the importance of this advantageously
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located town.
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If there was any doubt that sugar was king in those days,
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the Treaty of Paris (1763) dispelled it: France elected to take back
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her little West Indian islands and leave the “few snowy acres” of
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Canada to the British.
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During the American War of Independence, France’s
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sympathies were undisguised: American ships were granted safe anchorage
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in the FWI, privateers raiding from Saint-Barthélemy’s coves sank many
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a British merchantman, and a Martinique regiment fought the British at
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Savannah, Georgia. On 12 April 1782, in the sea channel near
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Guadeloupe’s little off-shore islands of Les Saintes, a British fleet
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gained historic revenge against French Admiral de Grasse, of Yorktown
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fame, in a battle that is still talked about today.
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De Grasse’s fleet of 34 warships was escorting a convoy of
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150 cargo vessels to Santo Domingo (today’s Dominican Republic and
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Haiti) planning to join a Spanish naval venture against Britain’s base
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on Jamaica. British Admiral Rodney, with 37 ships and a crucial
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superiority in cannon (3,012 to 2,246 French), struck off Les Saintes.
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As the islanders watched from their hills, the more mobile British
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mercilessly chopped up the French convoy until finally de Grasse
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surrendered. This disastrous French naval defeat is known as the Battle
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of Les Saintes.
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Slavery Declines
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When, during the French Revolution, the Convention
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ambitiously declared slavery abolished, Martinique’s wealthy plantation
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owners frantically objected. Opting, as a dubious second best, for
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eight years of British occupation in 1794, the island managed to retain
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slavery and avoid the revolutionary terror that Guadeloupe
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underwent.
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After Britain seized Guadeloupe, Victor Hugues, commissaire
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of the Convention, wrenched the island back, proclaimed slavery
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abolished, and set about guillotining the old-guard colons. His
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corsairs became the scourge of the sea, the indiscriminate attacks
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leading to a diplomatic blow-up with the new American government.
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Hugues’ reign on Guadeloupe didn’t last long, but it was bloodthirsty
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enough to be recalled vividly even today.
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In 1802 France reclaimed Martinique from Britain through
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the Treaty of Amiens. Bonaparte, as First Consul of France, reinstated
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slavery in the FWI, and historians still argue over the role played in
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that decision by his Creole wife Josephine, a native of Martinique (see
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page 55).
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Sugarcane was revered by the planters and government
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conservatives as “white gold” (l’or blanc) for the immense wealth it
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brought. But in 1799 doom was signaled for the cane monopoly with the
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appearance of the cheaper sugar beet. The end also became inevitable
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for the slave system upon which the sugar industry was based: the
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example of Santo Domingo’s slave revolt, which led to the independence
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of a new republic named Haiti, was electrifying, causing an entirely
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new attitude to the whole problem of the slave trade. Liberal ideas
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began mushrooming in France itself, and after Nelson destroyed
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Napoleon’s fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar, the French West Indian
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planters’ lifeline with France was all but destroyed as well. In
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addition, the Congress of Vienna formally banned the trade in
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slaves.
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Abolition and Beyond
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The stage was now set for the French West Indies’ greatest
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hero, Victor Schoelcher. The son of a Parisian porcelain merchant,
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Schoelcher was inspired to wage a 15-year struggle to free the slaves
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by what he saw on three trips to the Caribbean.
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When the Republic was proclaimed in Paris in 1848,
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Schoelcher drafted the emancipation decree that freed 87,500 slaves in
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Guadeloupe and 72,000 in Martinique. Today the smallest hamlets on both
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islands honor Schoelcher with busts, full statues, and street names.
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Martinique has a town named after him.
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No slaves meant almost no sugar production, until the first
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of some 80,000 Hindus from India and 16,000 free Africans began
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arriving as contract workers for Guadeloupe and Martinique plantations.
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Many Indians remained and established small farms in the FWI, their
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descendants becoming an important and colorful segment of the
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population (see box, page 42).
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To help stimulate the economy, the islands were finally
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relieved of the long-standing and controversial requirement that, as
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colonial appendages of France, they could trade only with the French
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and usually only in French ships. Rum now began bringing in
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considerable legal (as opposed to contraband) revenue.
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In 1871 under the Third Republic, Martinique and Guadeloupe
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were granted representation in the National Assembly in Paris, which
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they have retained ever since. Gradually, metropolitan institutions and
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the benefits of French citizenship were extended to the FWI.
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In 1877, France bought back Saint-Barthélemy from Sweden
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for 320,000 gold francs (Louis XVI having ceded the little island 93
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years earlier to his friend King Gustav III in return for duty-free
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trading rights in Gothenburg).
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The 20th Century
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The FWI’s worst modern tragedy came in 1902 when the
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sophisticated city of Saint-Pierre was totally destroyed by the
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eruption of Mount Pelée. The victims — over 30,000 — included most of
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Martinique’s social and managerial elite. Henceforth Fort-de-France
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would be the island’s only significant center and the largest city in
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the French Antilles.
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When France fell in World War II, the FWI’s administrator,
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Admiral Georges Robert, decreed allegiance to the Vichy regime,
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although most of the islanders were against the move. Fearing German
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occupation and submarine use of the islands, the Allies imposed a
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painful blockade and threatened to use military force. In 1943 Robert
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resigned and the islands swung immediately to de Gaulle’s Free French.
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With the war monopolizing shipping, the FWI suffered great economic
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privation.
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Guadeloupe and Martinique became full départements of
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France in 1946 — a source of great pride to many. More importantly, it
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meant much needed, larger financial contributions from Paris. The
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smaller islands, French Saint-Martin and Saint-Barthélemy, are
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administrative sub-prefectures (sous-préfectures) of Guadeloupe.
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While sugar, rum, and banana exports resumed to a degree
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after the war, the islands’ economies have not kept satisfactory pace
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with their burgeoning populations. The recent surge of tourism has
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helped, but not enough. Unrest and some political extremism have
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surfaced from time to time, but since aid from France is so vital, and
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French customs so ingrained, it seems almost inconceivable that the FWI
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will seek total independence as other Caribbean islands have done.
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