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Source Description

During the French colonial regime, Saint Domingue became one of the richest European colonies in the West Indies. Like many of the other islands, the economy focused on large sugar plantations, utilizing a sizeable importation of African slaves and taking advantage of fertile soils and an ideal climate. On the eve of the French revolution in 1784, there were approximately a half million slaves, outnumbering the free population 10-1. Life was harsh for the slaves but approximately 30,000 had gained freedom. These freed slaves were often mulattoes (children of French plantation owners and slave women) who had been granted freedom by their masters or black slaves who were able to purchase their freedom. Many of these slaves were able to acquire land, becoming wealthy, as indicated by this mid-18th-century survey plat, where Sieur Giroust granted land to Pierre and Jacques, identified as "negre libre." During the 1790s, there were numerous slave rebellions, finally resulting in the country's independence in 1804. The new republic was named Haiti, an original native name for the island.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
3f462v46c
label
Survey plat of land grants on Caps River, Saint Domingue
core
obj
dtoType
map
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
3f462v46c
contentType
map
stage
normalized
title
Survey plat of land grants on Caps River, Saint Domingue
description
During the French colonial regime, Saint Domingue became one of the richest European colonies in the West Indies. Like many of the other islands, the economy focused on large sugar plantations, utilizing a sizeable importation of African slaves and taking advantage of fertile soils and an ideal climate. On the eve of the French revolution in 1784, there were approximately a half million slaves, outnumbering the free population 10-1. Life was harsh for the slaves but approximately 30,000 had gained freedom. These freed slaves were often mulattoes (children of French plantation owners and slave women) who had been granted freedom by their masters or black slaves who were able to purchase their freedom. Many of these slaves were able to acquire land, becoming wealthy, as indicated by this mid-18th-century survey plat, where Sieur Giroust granted land to Pierre and Jacques, identified as "negre libre." During the 1790s, there were numerous slave rebellions, finally resulting in the country's independence in 1804. The new republic was named Haiti, an original native name for the island.
date
["1768"]
year
1768
rights
No known copyright restrictions.
rightsUri
No known restrictions on use.
reuseAllowed
no restrictions
language
French
identifierLocal
05_04_000123
institution
Boston Public Library
collections
American Revolutionary War-Era Maps
Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center Collection
subjects
Land grants--Haiti--Maps, Manuscript--Early works to 1800
Haiti--Maps, Manuscript--Early works to 1800
subjectsGeographic
Haiti
North and Central America
genreBasic
Maps
typeOfResource
Cartographic
country
Haiti
pageCount
1
source
import
Source extras
institutionArkId
sf268508b
collectionArkId
dn39z222j
schema:latitude
19
schema:longitude
-72.4167
extent
1 ms. map ; 34 x 41 cm.
notes
Title supplied by cataloger.
Oriented with north to the bottom.
Featured in the Faces & Places Exhibit, Kravis Center, Palm Beach, FL, since 2005.
hasTranscription
no
dcId
3f462v46c
type
map
Single page context