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[Note the US Occupation of Haiti 1915-1934.]
Escalating instability in Haiti all but invited foreign intervention. The
country's most productive president of the early twentieth century, Cincinnatus
Leconte, had died in a freak explosion in the National Palace (Palais National)
in August 1912. Five more contenders claimed the country's leadership over the
next three years. General Vilbrun Guillaume Sam, who had helped to bring Leconte
to power, took the oath of office in March 1915. Like every other Haitian
president of the period, he faced active rebellion to his rule. His leading
opponent, Rosalvo Bobo, reputedly hostile toward the United States, represented
to Washington a barrier to expanded commercial and strategic ties. A pretext for
intervention came on July 27, 1915, when Guillaume Sam executed 167 political
prisoners. Popular outrage provoked mob violence in the streets of
Port-au-Prince. A throng of incensed citizens sought out Guillaume Sam at his
sanctuary in the French embassy and literally tore him to pieces. The spectacle
of an exultant rabble parading through the streets of the capital bearing the
dismembered corpse of their former president shocked decision makers in the
United States and spurred them to swift action. The first sailors and marines
landed in Port-au-Prince on July 28. Within six weeks, representatives from the
United States controlled Haitian customs houses and administrative institutions.
For the next nineteen years, Haiti's powerful neighbor to the north guided and
governed the country.
Representatives from the United States wielded veto power over all
governmental decisions in Haiti, and Marine Corps commanders served as
administrators in the provinces. Local institutions, however, continued to be
run by Haitians, as was required under policies put in place during the
presidency of Woodrow Wilson. In line with these policies, Admiral William
Caperton, the initial commander of United States forces, instructed Bobo to
refrain from offering himself to the legislature as a presidential candidate.
Philippe Sudre Dartiguenave, the mulatto president of the Senate, agreed to
accept the presidency of Haiti after several other candidates had refused on
principle.
With a figurehead installed in the National Palace and other institutions
maintained in form if not in function, Caperton declared martial law, a
condition that persisted until 1929. A treaty passed by the Haitian legislature
in November 1915 granted further authority to the United States. The treaty
allowed Washington to assume complete control of Haiti's finances, and it gave
the United States sole authority over the appointment of advisers and receivers.
The treaty also gave the United States responsibility for establishing and
running public-health and public-works programs and for supervising routine
governmental affairs. The treaty also established the Gendarmerie d'Ha�ti
(Haitian Constabulary), a step later replicated in the Dominican Republic and
Nicaragua. The Gendarmerie was Haiti's first professional military force, and it
was eventually to play an important political role in the country. In 1917
President Dartiguenave dissolved the legislature after its members refused to
approve a constitution purportedly authored by United States assistant secretary
of the navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. A referendum subsequently approved the new
constitution (by a vote of 98,225 to 768), however, in 1918. Generally a liberal
document, the constitution allowed foreigners to purchase land. Dessalines had
forbidden land ownership by foreigners, and since 1804 most Haitians had viewed
foreign ownership as anathema.
The occupation by the United States had several effects on Haiti. An early
period of unrest culminated in a 1918 rebellion by up to 40,000 former cacos
and other disgruntled people. The scale of the uprising overwhelmed the
Gendarmerie, but marine reinforcements helped put down the revolt at the
estimated cost of 2,000 Haitian lives. Thereafter, order prevailed to a degree
that most Haitians had never witnessed. The order, however, was imposed largely
by white foreigners with deep-seated racial prejudices and a disdain for the
notion of self-determination by inhabitants of less-developed nations. These
attitudes particularly dismayed the mulatto elite, who had heretofore believed
in their innate superiority over the black masses. The whites from North
America, however, did not distinguish among Haitians, regardless of their skin
tone, level of education, or sophistication. This intolerance caused
indignation, resentment, and eventually a racial pride that was reflected in the
work of a new generation of Haitian historians, ethnologists, writers, artists,
and others, many of whom later became active in politics and government. Still,
as Haitians united in their reaction to the racism of the occupying forces, the
mulatto elite managed to dominate the country's bureaucracy and to strengthen
its role in national affairs.
The occupation had several positive aspects. It greatly improved Haiti's
infrastructure. Roads were improved and expanded. Almost all roads, however, led
to Port-au-Prince, resulting in a gradual concentration of economic activity in
the capital. Bridges went up throughout the country; a telephone system began to
function; several towns gained access to clean water; and a construction boom
(in some cases employing forced labor) helped restore wharves, lighthouses,
schools, and hospitals. Public health improved, partially because of United
States-directed campaigns against malaria and yaws (a crippling disease caused
by a spirochete). Sound fiscal management kept Haiti current on its foreign-debt
payments at a time when default among Latin American nations was common. By that
time, United States banks were Haiti's main creditors, an important incentive
for Haiti to make timely payments.
In 1922 Louis Borno replaced Dartiguenave, who was forced out of office for
temporizing over the approval of a debtconsolidation loan. Borno ruled without
the benefit of a legislature (dissolved in 1917 under Dartiguenave) until
elections were again permitted in 1930. The legislature, after several ballots,
elected mulatto St�nio Vincent to the presidency.
The occupation of Haiti continued after World War I, despite the
embarrassment that it caused Woodrow Wilson at the Paris peace conference in
1919 and the scrutiny of a congressional inquiry in 1922. By 1930 President
Herbert Hoover had become concerned about the effects of the occupation,
particularly after a December 1929 incident in Les Cayes in which marines killed
at least ten Haitian peasants during a march to protest local economic
conditions. Hoover appointed two commissions to study the situation. A former
governor general of the Philippines, W. Cameron Forbes, headed the more
prominent of the two. The Forbes Commission praised the material improvements
that the United States administration had wrought, but it criticized the
exclusion of Haitians from positions of real authority in the government and the
constabulary, which had come to be known as the Garde d'Ha�ti. In more general
terms, the commission further asserted that "the social forces that created
[instability] still remain--poverty, ignorance, and the lack of a tradition or
desire for orderly free government."
The Hoover administration did not implement fully the recommendations of the
Forbes Commission, but United States withdrawal was well under way by 1932, when
Hoover lost the presidency to Roosevelt, the presumed author of the most recent
Haitian constitution. On a visit to Cap Ha�tien in July 1934, Roosevelt
reaffirmed an August 1933 disengagement agreement. The last contingent of
marines departed in mid-August, after a formal transfer of authority to the
Garde. As in other countries occupied by the United States in the early
twentieth century, the local military was often the only cohesive and effective
institution left in the wake of withdrawal.
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