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Gendarmerie of Haiti

The Gendarmerie of Haiti (French: Gendarmerie d'Haïti [ʒɑ̃daʁməʁi da.iti]), also known as the Haitian Constabulary, was a gendarmerie raised by the United States during its occupation of Haiti in the early 20th century. Established in late 1915, the gendarmerie was operational from 1916 until 1928, during which time it was Haiti's only military force, earning a reputation for active interference in civilian government that may have set the stage for the future politicization of Haiti's armed forces.

Haitian Constabulary
Gendarmerie d'Haïti
Haitian Gendarmerie
Active1915–1928
CountryHaiti
AllegianceUnited States
TypeGendarmerie
RoleMilitary police, light infantry
Size3,322 (1927)
EngagementsSecond Caco War
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Smedley Butler

From 1918 to 1920 the Gendarmerie of Haiti fought the Second Caco War, one of the so-called "Banana Wars". It was reorganized as the Garde d'Haïti in 1928, forming the nucleus of what would evolve into the modern Haitian army.

Early history edit

Formation edit

 
Smedley Butler, shown here wearing U.S. Marine Corps uniform in later life, was Haiti's first commandant of gendarmerie.

The United States invaded Haiti in the last half of 1915. The invasion followed the violation of the French embassy in Port-au-Prince by a mob that seized Haitian president Vilbrun Guillaume Sam, who had earlier fled to the legation owing to popular unrest, and "mutilated his body in the street."[1] Admiral William Banks Caperton, leading the initial landing force, declared martial law and ordered the Haitian army dissolved.[1] In the absence of functioning police, U.S. Marines assumed civilian law enforcement duties, but occupation authorities had already set into motion plans to raise a local police force with the Haitian–American Convention, obligating Haiti's American-established interim government to "create without delay an efficient constabulary, urban and rural."[1][2][3]

The Gendarmerie of Haiti was formally established in December 1915. It became operational in February of the following year, with Smedley Butler (then a Marine Corps major) assuming the post of commandant of gendarmes and the Haitian rank of major general.[4][5] Officers, non-commissioned officers, and enlisted personnel of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps were initially placed in command of the force, holding officer commissions from the Haitian government while retaining their United States commissions and enlistment status.[5] The process for commissioning of officers was set out in the Haitian–American Convention:[3]

All American officers of the gendarmerie shall be appointed by the President of Haiti upon nomination by the President of the United States, and will be replaced by Haitians when they have shown by examination  ... that they are fit for command.

Early attempts to establish an officer candidate school to train an indigenous officer corps from among Haiti's educated upper class failed due to a reluctance among potential candidates to be seen collaborating with the American occupation, and by the perception that the methods of American military instruction were demeaning.[5] Enlisted gendarmes, meanwhile, were recruited from indigenous Haitians who were paid between $10 and $25 per month.[5]

The gendarmerie was equipped initially with the Krag–Jørgensen bolt-action rifle.[6] Uniforms were surplus Marine Corps uniforms with plain buttons in lieu of buttons embossed with the Marine Corps Eagle, Globe, and Anchor.[7]

Expanding role edit

 
gendarmerie sub-District headquarters at Gros-Morne, Artibonite pictured in the 1920s

The gendarmerie quickly evolved into the cornerstone of the United States occupation, and gendarmerie officers had practical control over the U.S. client government of Philippe Sudré Dartiguenave; one visiting American observer noted that: "the actual running of the government comes pretty near being vested in General Butler and his young colonels and majors."[5] On one occasion, the Haitian ambassador to the United States balked at the idea of signing a Butler-inspired compact that would give the gendarmerie control of the nation's postal service. Butler forced the issue by placing an armed guard in President Dartiguenave's office, with instructions to compel Dartiguenave to telegraph the ambassador with orders to sign the agreement "or else".[7]

Even at the local level, junior officers were virtual "potentates", having not only military and police authority in their jurisdictions, but also being responsible to sit as judges in civil and criminal cases, to collect taxes, to manage prisons, to enforce weights and measures, to register vital statistics, and to audit the financial records of municipal governments.[8] Interference by gendarmerie officers into local governmental affairs prompted Solon Ménos, the Haitian ambassador to the United States, to file a complaint with the U.S. State Department, observing that: "the American officers of the Haitian gendarmerie  ... have extended their powers for the communal councils to such an extent that they wish to act as administrators of the commune and not rest within their powers."[9]

Second Caco War edit

Conflict edit

 
A Haitian gendarme photographed by Harry A. Franck in 1920

Some gendarmerie actions, including the enforcement of government press censorship, and the use of conscripted civilian labor for infrastructure development, have been cited as factors leading to the Second Caco War (1918–20), a rebellion by Haitians against the occupation.[10]

The conflict erupted on October 17, 1918, with an attack by 100 rebel cacos on a gendarmerie barracks. The assault was repulsed with significant loss of life, and commanding officer Lieutenant Patrick Kelly earned Haiti's Médaille militaire and a promotion to captain for his role in the defense of the barracks.[8] A wave of small-scale rebel attacks on isolated gendarmerie outposts followed; over a six-month period in 1919, the gendarmerie reported more than 130 engagements with cacos.[8][11]

The 1919 Battle of Port-au-Prince saw the first major action between gendarmes and rebels, and after-action dispatches reported the force acquitted itself well. The day following the Battle of Port-au-Prince, a contingent of 12 gendarmes under Lt. Kemp C. Christian overran the cacos' base camp, killing 30 rebels and capturing their only field gun.[12] Nonetheless, during this period, the gendarmerie was largely dependent on the U.S. Marine Corps to provide the "muscle" for its operations, though by the end of the rebellion gendarmerie units were beginning to operate independently.[11] By 1919 an experimental gendamerie unit had been raised under the designation "Provisional Company A". Unlike the bulk of gendarmerie units, which garrisoned towns, Provisional Company A was a mobile force organized to conduct preventative patrols.[13] Chesty Puller, then a gendarmerie officer, was given the captaincy of Provisional Company A. The company's executive officer, Lt. Augustin Brunot, was one of the first indigenous Haitians to receive a commission.[13]

By the time the Second Caco War ended in 1920, 75 gendarmes had been killed in action.[8]

Aftermath edit

 
A headline in the Des Moines Register from 1920 announces the planned probe of U.S. Marine Corps and Haitian Gendarmerie activity during the Second Caco War.

Following the war, the U.S. Senate's Select Committee on Haiti and Santo Domingo convened a series of hearings to investigate the behavior of gendarmes and marines during the conflict.[14] Several indigenous Haitian gendarmes who were asked to submit testimony to the hearing alleged that gendarmerie officers had executed prisoners.[14] One gendarme, Eucher Jean, stated that:[2]

... during the first part of the month of November 1918, while I was a first sergeant in the Gendarmerie d'Haïti, serving in the district of Hinche, Haiti, I saw Lieut. Freeman Lang, Gendarmerie d'Haïti, take a Haitian who was prisoner, named Teka, out of the prison in the town of Hinche, and purposely execute him with a machine-gun rifle.

Despite the sometimes gruesome testimony it was generally believed the hearings were politically motivated and that individual excesses could largely be traced only to Lang and Dorcas Williams, both of whom had been acting under the orders of a Marine Corps officer who had since been committed to an insane asylum.[14] Both of the accused gendarmerie officers had been indicted by U.S. Navy court-martial prior to the hearings.[14] A separate inquiry conducted by the Haitian government concluded that, outside of 10 killings attributed to Lang and Williams, the gendarmerie's conduct of the war had been justifiable.[15]

1924 Olympics edit

Haiti was represented at the 1924 Olympics by a rifle team composed entirely of black gendarmes. The team won the bronze medal in the team free rifle event, which was the nation's first-ever Olympic medal.[8][16] The team's expenses were paid for from all of the nation's gendarmes contributing five percent of their salary for five months.[17]

Later history and influence edit

In 1927 the gendarmerie was reporting a strength of 160 officers, 2,522 gendarmes and 551 rural policemen. Even at this late date only about 40 of the officers were Haitian, the majority being United States Marines and sailors.[18]

In 1928, the gendarmerie was reorganized as the Garde d'Haïti and became the nucleus of what would eventually evolve into the reconstituted Haitian army.[4] The later politicization of the Haitian military has been attributed by some to Haiti's early experience with the Gendarmerie d'Haïti.[8] The gendarmerie's special access to U.S. resources and influence vested in it a measure of social control within Haiti that would become institutionalized in later years.[19] On the other hand, former Haitian President Prosper Avril has observed that Haiti already had a long tradition of military involvement in government prior to the occupation, with 25 of its 26 pre-occupation presidents being either military officers or leaders of rebel groups. Avril also contends the gendarmerie worked to instill a respect for political neutrality in its men.[3]

Chain of Command edit

The Commandants were:[20]

The Gendarmerie was nominally subordinate to the President of the Republic, but in practice the Gendarmerie Commandant had to run everything through American officials, especially during the tenure of High Commissioner John H. Russell Jr. In a March 14, 1927 letter to the Marine Corps Commandant Lejeune, Gendarmerie Commandant Turrill wrote:

When I get any instrutions from the President I always have to get General Russell's approval on such orders before carrying them out... Nothing of importance can be done in the Gendarmerie without General Russell's sanction.[21]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Heinl, Nancy (1978). Written in Blood: The Story of the Haitian People, 1492–1971. Houghton Mifflin. pp. 406–422. ISBN 0-7618-3177-0.
  2. ^ a b Inquiry Into Occupation and Administration of Haiti and Santo Domingo. U.S. Congress. 1920. p. 1761.
  3. ^ a b c Avril, Prosper (1999). From Glory to Disgrace: The Haitian Army, 1804–1994. Universal. pp. 108–109. ISBN 1-58112-836-3.
  4. ^ a b . globalsecurity.org. GlobalSecurity.org. Archived from the original on 26 February 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e Schmidt, Hans (1995). The United States Occupation of Haiti, 1915–1934. Rutgers University Press. pp. 85–90. ISBN 0-8135-2203-X.
  6. ^ Ball, Robert W.D. (2 August 2011). Mauser Military Rifles of the World. Gun Digest Books. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-4402-1544-5.
  7. ^ a b Strecker, Mark (2011). Smedley D. Butler, USMC: A Biography. McFarland. pp. 67–68. ISBN 978-0-7864-4807-4.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Beede, Benjamin (1994). The War of 1898 and U.S. Interventions, 1898 to 1934: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 198–199. ISBN 0-8240-5624-8.
  9. ^ Renda, Mary (2001). Taking Haiti: Military Occupation and the Culture of U.S. Imperialism, 1915–1940. University of North Carolina Press. p. 147. ISBN 0-8078-2628-6.
  10. ^ "U.S. Invasion and Occupation of Haiti, 1915–34". history.state.gov. U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
  11. ^ a b Daugherty, Leo (2015). Counterinsurgency and the United States Marine Corps: Volume 1. McFarland. pp. 91–94. ISBN 978-0-7864-9698-3.
  12. ^ Musicant, Ivan (August 1990). The Banana Wars: A History of United States Military Intervention in Latin America from the Spanish–American War to the Invasion of Panama. New York City: Macmillan Publishing Company. p. 215.
  13. ^ a b Hoffman, Jon (2007). Chesty: The Story of Lieutenant General Lewis B. Puller, USMC. Random House. pp. 31–32. ISBN 978-0-679-44732-0.
  14. ^ a b c d Clark, George (2014). The United States Military in Latin America. McFarland. pp. 94–96. ISBN 978-0-7864-9448-4.
  15. ^ "Investigation Proves Allegations Against Marines Unjustified". Ellensburg Daily Record. 1 December 1920. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  16. ^ Hall, Michael (2012). Historical Dictionary of Haiti. Scarecrow Press. pp. 68–69. ISBN 978-0-8108-7810-5.
  17. ^ . sports-reference.com. Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 16 November 2015. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
  18. ^ "History of the Gendarmerie D'haiti". Leatherneck. September 1927.
  19. ^ Coupeau, Steve (2008). The History of Haiti. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-313-34089-5.
  20. ^ Records of the United States Marine Corps. National Archives Inventory Record Group 127. Compiled by Maizie Johnson. The National Archives Inventory Series No. 2, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration, Washington, 1970. Library of Congress Card No. 78-607015
  21. ^ Schmidt, Hans (1995), The United States Occupation of Haiti, 1915–1934, Rutgers University Press

gendarmerie, haiti, french, gendarmerie, haïti, ʒɑ, daʁməʁi, also, known, haitian, constabulary, gendarmerie, raised, united, states, during, occupation, haiti, early, 20th, century, established, late, 1915, gendarmerie, operational, from, 1916, until, 1928, d. The Gendarmerie of Haiti French Gendarmerie d Haiti ʒɑ daʁmeʁi da iti also known as the Haitian Constabulary was a gendarmerie raised by the United States during its occupation of Haiti in the early 20th century Established in late 1915 the gendarmerie was operational from 1916 until 1928 during which time it was Haiti s only military force earning a reputation for active interference in civilian government that may have set the stage for the future politicization of Haiti s armed forces Haitian ConstabularyGendarmerie d HaitiHaitian GendarmerieActive1915 1928CountryHaitiAllegianceUnited StatesTypeGendarmerieRoleMilitary police light infantrySize3 322 1927 EngagementsSecond Caco WarCommandersNotablecommandersSmedley Butler From 1918 to 1920 the Gendarmerie of Haiti fought the Second Caco War one of the so called Banana Wars It was reorganized as the Garde d Haiti in 1928 forming the nucleus of what would evolve into the modern Haitian army Contents 1 Early history 1 1 Formation 1 2 Expanding role 2 Second Caco War 2 1 Conflict 2 2 Aftermath 3 1924 Olympics 4 Later history and influence 5 Chain of Command 6 See also 7 ReferencesEarly history editFormation edit nbsp Smedley Butler shown here wearing U S Marine Corps uniform in later life was Haiti s first commandant of gendarmerie The United States invaded Haiti in the last half of 1915 The invasion followed the violation of the French embassy in Port au Prince by a mob that seized Haitian president Vilbrun Guillaume Sam who had earlier fled to the legation owing to popular unrest and mutilated his body in the street 1 Admiral William Banks Caperton leading the initial landing force declared martial law and ordered the Haitian army dissolved 1 In the absence of functioning police U S Marines assumed civilian law enforcement duties but occupation authorities had already set into motion plans to raise a local police force with the Haitian American Convention obligating Haiti s American established interim government to create without delay an efficient constabulary urban and rural 1 2 3 The Gendarmerie of Haiti was formally established in December 1915 It became operational in February of the following year with Smedley Butler then a Marine Corps major assuming the post of commandant of gendarmes and the Haitian rank of major general 4 5 Officers non commissioned officers and enlisted personnel of the U S Navy and Marine Corps were initially placed in command of the force holding officer commissions from the Haitian government while retaining their United States commissions and enlistment status 5 The process for commissioning of officers was set out in the Haitian American Convention 3 All American officers of the gendarmerie shall be appointed by the President of Haiti upon nomination by the President of the United States and will be replaced by Haitians when they have shown by examination that they are fit for command Early attempts to establish an officer candidate school to train an indigenous officer corps from among Haiti s educated upper class failed due to a reluctance among potential candidates to be seen collaborating with the American occupation and by the perception that the methods of American military instruction were demeaning 5 Enlisted gendarmes meanwhile were recruited from indigenous Haitians who were paid between 10 and 25 per month 5 The gendarmerie was equipped initially with the Krag Jorgensen bolt action rifle 6 Uniforms were surplus Marine Corps uniforms with plain buttons in lieu of buttons embossed with the Marine Corps Eagle Globe and Anchor 7 Expanding role edit nbsp gendarmerie sub District headquarters at Gros Morne Artibonite pictured in the 1920sThe gendarmerie quickly evolved into the cornerstone of the United States occupation and gendarmerie officers had practical control over the U S client government of Philippe Sudre Dartiguenave one visiting American observer noted that the actual running of the government comes pretty near being vested in General Butler and his young colonels and majors 5 On one occasion the Haitian ambassador to the United States balked at the idea of signing a Butler inspired compact that would give the gendarmerie control of the nation s postal service Butler forced the issue by placing an armed guard in President Dartiguenave s office with instructions to compel Dartiguenave to telegraph the ambassador with orders to sign the agreement or else 7 Even at the local level junior officers were virtual potentates having not only military and police authority in their jurisdictions but also being responsible to sit as judges in civil and criminal cases to collect taxes to manage prisons to enforce weights and measures to register vital statistics and to audit the financial records of municipal governments 8 Interference by gendarmerie officers into local governmental affairs prompted Solon Menos the Haitian ambassador to the United States to file a complaint with the U S State Department observing that the American officers of the Haitian gendarmerie have extended their powers for the communal councils to such an extent that they wish to act as administrators of the commune and not rest within their powers 9 Second Caco War editConflict edit nbsp A Haitian gendarme photographed by Harry A Franck in 1920Some gendarmerie actions including the enforcement of government press censorship and the use of conscripted civilian labor for infrastructure development have been cited as factors leading to the Second Caco War 1918 20 a rebellion by Haitians against the occupation 10 The conflict erupted on October 17 1918 with an attack by 100 rebel cacos on a gendarmerie barracks The assault was repulsed with significant loss of life and commanding officer Lieutenant Patrick Kelly earned Haiti s Medaille militaire and a promotion to captain for his role in the defense of the barracks 8 A wave of small scale rebel attacks on isolated gendarmerie outposts followed over a six month period in 1919 the gendarmerie reported more than 130 engagements with cacos 8 11 The 1919 Battle of Port au Prince saw the first major action between gendarmes and rebels and after action dispatches reported the force acquitted itself well The day following the Battle of Port au Prince a contingent of 12 gendarmes under Lt Kemp C Christian overran the cacos base camp killing 30 rebels and capturing their only field gun 12 Nonetheless during this period the gendarmerie was largely dependent on the U S Marine Corps to provide the muscle for its operations though by the end of the rebellion gendarmerie units were beginning to operate independently 11 By 1919 an experimental gendamerie unit had been raised under the designation Provisional Company A Unlike the bulk of gendarmerie units which garrisoned towns Provisional Company A was a mobile force organized to conduct preventative patrols 13 Chesty Puller then a gendarmerie officer was given the captaincy of Provisional Company A The company s executive officer Lt Augustin Brunot was one of the first indigenous Haitians to receive a commission 13 By the time the Second Caco War ended in 1920 75 gendarmes had been killed in action 8 Aftermath edit nbsp A headline in the Des Moines Register from 1920 announces the planned probe of U S Marine Corps and Haitian Gendarmerie activity during the Second Caco War Following the war the U S Senate s Select Committee on Haiti and Santo Domingo convened a series of hearings to investigate the behavior of gendarmes and marines during the conflict 14 Several indigenous Haitian gendarmes who were asked to submit testimony to the hearing alleged that gendarmerie officers had executed prisoners 14 One gendarme Eucher Jean stated that 2 during the first part of the month of November 1918 while I was a first sergeant in the Gendarmerie d Haiti serving in the district of Hinche Haiti I saw Lieut Freeman Lang Gendarmerie d Haiti take a Haitian who was prisoner named Teka out of the prison in the town of Hinche and purposely execute him with a machine gun rifle Despite the sometimes gruesome testimony it was generally believed the hearings were politically motivated and that individual excesses could largely be traced only to Lang and Dorcas Williams both of whom had been acting under the orders of a Marine Corps officer who had since been committed to an insane asylum 14 Both of the accused gendarmerie officers had been indicted by U S Navy court martial prior to the hearings 14 A separate inquiry conducted by the Haitian government concluded that outside of 10 killings attributed to Lang and Williams the gendarmerie s conduct of the war had been justifiable 15 1924 Olympics editHaiti was represented at the 1924 Olympics by a rifle team composed entirely of black gendarmes The team won the bronze medal in the team free rifle event which was the nation s first ever Olympic medal 8 16 The team s expenses were paid for from all of the nation s gendarmes contributing five percent of their salary for five months 17 Later history and influence editIn 1927 the gendarmerie was reporting a strength of 160 officers 2 522 gendarmes and 551 rural policemen Even at this late date only about 40 of the officers were Haitian the majority being United States Marines and sailors 18 In 1928 the gendarmerie was reorganized as the Garde d Haiti and became the nucleus of what would eventually evolve into the reconstituted Haitian army 4 The later politicization of the Haitian military has been attributed by some to Haiti s early experience with the Gendarmerie d Haiti 8 The gendarmerie s special access to U S resources and influence vested in it a measure of social control within Haiti that would become institutionalized in later years 19 On the other hand former Haitian President Prosper Avril has observed that Haiti already had a long tradition of military involvement in government prior to the occupation with 25 of its 26 pre occupation presidents being either military officers or leaders of rebel groups Avril also contends the gendarmerie worked to instill a respect for political neutrality in its men 3 Chain of Command editThe Commandants were 20 1915 1918 Smedley D Butler 1918 1919 Alexander S Williams 1919 1921 Frederic M Wise 1921 Richard S Hooker 1921 1925 Douglas C McDougal 1925 1927 Julius S Turrill 1927 1930 Frank E Evans 1930 1933 Richard P Williams 1933 1934 Clayton B VogelThe Gendarmerie was nominally subordinate to the President of the Republic but in practice the Gendarmerie Commandant had to run everything through American officials especially during the tenure of High Commissioner John H Russell Jr In a March 14 1927 letter to the Marine Corps Commandant Lejeune Gendarmerie Commandant Turrill wrote When I get any instrutions from the President I always have to get General Russell s approval on such orders before carrying them out Nothing of importance can be done in the Gendarmerie without General Russell s sanction 21 See also edit nbsp Haiti portalMilitary history of Haiti Monroe DoctrineReferences edit a b c Heinl Nancy 1978 Written in Blood The Story of the Haitian People 1492 1971 Houghton Mifflin pp 406 422 ISBN 0 7618 3177 0 a b Inquiry Into Occupation and Administration of Haiti and Santo Domingo U S Congress 1920 p 1761 a b c Avril Prosper 1999 From Glory to Disgrace The Haitian Army 1804 1994 Universal pp 108 109 ISBN 1 58112 836 3 a b Military In Haitian History globalsecurity org GlobalSecurity org Archived from the original on 26 February 2016 Retrieved 6 September 2015 a b c d e Schmidt Hans 1995 The United States Occupation of Haiti 1915 1934 Rutgers University Press pp 85 90 ISBN 0 8135 2203 X Ball Robert W D 2 August 2011 Mauser Military Rifles of the World Gun Digest Books p 240 ISBN 978 1 4402 1544 5 a b Strecker Mark 2011 Smedley D Butler USMC A Biography McFarland pp 67 68 ISBN 978 0 7864 4807 4 a b c d e f Beede Benjamin 1994 The War of 1898 and U S Interventions 1898 to 1934 An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 198 199 ISBN 0 8240 5624 8 Renda Mary 2001 Taking Haiti Military Occupation and the Culture of U S Imperialism 1915 1940 University of North Carolina Press p 147 ISBN 0 8078 2628 6 U S Invasion and Occupation of Haiti 1915 34 history state gov U S Department of State Retrieved 6 September 2015 a b Daugherty Leo 2015 Counterinsurgency and the United States Marine Corps Volume 1 McFarland pp 91 94 ISBN 978 0 7864 9698 3 Musicant Ivan August 1990 The Banana Wars A History of United States Military Intervention in Latin America from the Spanish American War to the Invasion of Panama New York City Macmillan Publishing Company p 215 a b Hoffman Jon 2007 Chesty The Story of Lieutenant General Lewis B Puller USMC Random House pp 31 32 ISBN 978 0 679 44732 0 a b c d Clark George 2014 The United States Military in Latin America McFarland pp 94 96 ISBN 978 0 7864 9448 4 Investigation Proves Allegations Against Marines Unjustified Ellensburg Daily Record 1 December 1920 Retrieved 7 September 2015 Hall Michael 2012 Historical Dictionary of Haiti Scarecrow Press pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 8108 7810 5 Shooting at the 1924 Paris Summer Games sports reference com Sports Reference Archived from the original on 16 November 2015 Retrieved 6 September 2015 History of the Gendarmerie D haiti Leatherneck September 1927 Coupeau Steve 2008 The History of Haiti Greenwood Publishing Group p 87 ISBN 978 0 313 34089 5 Records of the United States Marine Corps National Archives Inventory Record Group 127 Compiled by Maizie Johnson The National Archives Inventory Series No 2 National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington 1970 Library of Congress Card No 78 607015 Schmidt Hans 1995 The United States Occupation of Haiti 1915 1934 Rutgers University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gendarmerie of Haiti amp oldid 1212739762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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