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Vincent Ogé

Vincent Ogé (c. 1757 – 6 February 1791) was a Dominican Creole[1] revolutionary, merchant, military officer and goldsmith best known for his role in leading a failed uprising against French colonial rule in the colony of Saint-Domingue in 1790. A mixed-race member of the colonial elite, Ogé's revolt occurred just before the Haitian Revolution, which resulted in the colony's independence from France, and left a contested legacy in post-independence Haiti.

Vincent Ogé
Bornc. 1757
DiedFebruary 6, 1791 (aged 33–34)
Cap‑Français, Saint-Domingue
Occupation(s)Merchant, military officer and goldsmith
Known forLeading a failed uprising against French colonial rule
Parent(s)Jacques Ogé
Angélique Ossé

Born on Saint-Domingue into a slaveholding family, Ogé was sent at the age of eleven to the city of Bordeaux, France by his parents to be apprenticed to a goldsmith. Returning to the colony after seven years, he settled down in Cap‑Français as a coffee merchant in the employ of his uncle, acquiring partial ownership of his family's plantation. By the 1780's, Ogé's business dealings had made him the richest merchant of African descent in the city.

In 1788, Ogé travelled to France to both clear his debts and bring several lawsuits his family was engaged in before the Conseil du Roi. A year later, the French Revolution began, and he joined the revolutionary camp. After absentee white planters rejected his proposals for abolishing discriminatory colonial laws against free people of colour, he joined an advocacy group whose members demanded political representation in the national assembly.

On March 1790, deputies of the assembly approved a law granting voting rights to free people of colour in French colonies. In the same month, Ogé returned to Saint-Domingue, where he rebelled against the colonial government after it refused implement the law. The uprising was suppressed, and Ogé was captured and executed. After his death, Ogé was used to promote mulatto supremacy, which led to the eventual collapse of his reputation.

Early life

Vincent Ogé was born c. 1757 in Dondon, Saint-Domingue.[2] At the time, Saint-Domingue formed the western part of the island of Hispaniola and was under French colonial rule as part of France's colonies in the West Indies. Ogé's parents were Jacques Ogé, a white Frenchman, and Angélique Ossé, a free woman of color; he also had several brothers and sisters.[3] The Ogé family owned a coffee plantation, which was operated by a number of enslaved labourers and provided the primary source of the family's wealth. Ossé also held a contract to supply meat to the Dondon markets.[4]

At the age of eleven, Ogé was sent to Bordeaux in France by his parents in 1768. There, he was apprenticed to a goldsmith for approximately seven years, returning to Saint-Domingue in 1775.[5] Instead of returning to Dondon, Ogé settled down in the colonial capital of Cap‑Français, working for his uncle Vincent as a commission agent in the colony's coffee trade. During this period, Ogé acquired partial ownership of his family's slave plantation. In the 1780's, Ogé also became the owner of a merchant schooner operating out of the colony along with three of his business partners.[6]

Ogé soon expanded his commercial network, engaging in business deals with merchants in many of Saint-Domingue's major ports and working as a real estate agent in Cap‑Français, subletting valuable properties to the colonial elite.[7] In large part due to his business dealings, Ogé eventually became the wealthiest businessman of African descent who was active in Cap‑Français during the 1780's. However, by 1788 Ogé fell deeply in debt, owing 60,000 to 70,000 livres to his creditors, and decided to relocate to Port-au-Prince with a quantity of trade goods and several slaves.[8]

Revolutionary activities

After settling down in Port-au-Prince, Ogé resumed working as a merchant, selling his goods and helping a ship's captain liquidate his cargo. However, he continued to acquire debt, though after six months he had earned 120,000 livres. Around the same time, Ogé made plans to travel to France and purchase goods to resell in Saint-Domingue and pay off his creditors. There was also the issue of construction efforts in Dondon leading to Ogé's family to file a number of lawsuits (over their slaves being injured by falling boulders), which Ogé hoped to bring before the Conseil du Roi.[9]

In 1788, he travelled to France for a second time. A year later, the French Revolution began, and Ogé, who was in Paris at the time, embraced the cause of the revolutionaries. On August 1789, he approached a group of absentee planters to discuss proposals for abolishing discriminatory laws against free people of colour in Saint-Dominingue. The planter's rejection of his proposals led Ogé to join a group of free people of colour led by white lawyer Étienne de Joly, whose members demanded representation for mulatto people from the colonies in the National Constituent Assembly.[10]

By October 1789, Ogé had enlisted an officer in the Paris militia, joining the abolitionist Society of the Friends of the Blacks around the same period. Along with Julien Raimond, he quickly became the leaders of de Joly's group, and the public face of the political concerns of free people of colour in France. In their arguments to the National Constituent Assembly, Ogé and Raimond, pushed for Black representation and total voting rights for free people of colour in Saint-Domingue. As both men were slaveholders, they expressed support for slavery's continued existence in the colonies.[11]

On March 1790, deputies of the National Constituent Assembly approved an ambiguously worded law granting full voting rights to free people of colour in French colonies. After the law had passed, Ogé returned to Saint-Domingue, travelling in secret to avoid attracting attention from hostile planters. During his journey, he made a stop in London to consult with abolitionists in Britain, including Thomas Clarkson. After meeting with Clarkson, who was sympathetic towards Ogé's arguments for rights for free people of colour, he landed in Saint-Domingue via Charleston, South Carolina.[12]

On October 1790, in the same month as his arrival in the colony, Ogé met with Jean-Baptiste Chavannes, a non-commissioned officer in the colonial militia. Together, the two men sent a latter to Governor Philibert François Rouxel de Blanchelande and the colony's assembly, demanding that the colonial government grant free people of color the full rights stipulated in the March 1790 law. However, both refused, leading to Ogé and Chavannes to conspire to overthrow the colonial government by force, gathering approximately 300 free men of color 12 miles outside Cap‑Français.[10]

Uprising, capture and execution

 
A late 19th-century illustration of Jean-Baptiste Chavannes

After receiving reports of Ogé and Chavannes' activities in late October, the colonial government dispatched a force of roughly 600 militia led by a Général de Vincent to defeat the rebels. However, the rebels managed to hold their ground and repulsed the force sent against them, which was forced to retreat back to Cap‑Français. The rebels, many of whom had served in the colonial militia, organised themselves into battalions, elected officers and fortified their positions.[13]

In response to the failure of the initial attack, a subordinate of de Vincent, Colonel Cambefort, was sent from Cap‑Français with 1,500 men to launch a second attack on the rebels. Cambefort's troops, many of them French Royal Army soldiers, routed Ogé and Chavannes' rebels, a large number of which had already deserted. Ogé and Chavannes managed to escape the colonial government and fled to the nearby Captaincy General of Santo Domingo, a Spanish colony.[14]

On 20 November 1790, Ogé and 23 rebels, including Chavannes, were captured by the colonial authorities in the town of Hinche, surrendering after receiving guarantees of safety from the Spanish. However, the Spanish colonial authorities handed over Ogé and his associates to their French counterparts; the rebels were marched to Cap‑Français under armed guard and imprisoned. On January 1791, Ogé was interviewed by the French prosecutor Bocquet de Frévent.[15]

In February 1791, Ogé was finally place on trial by the colonial government in Cap‑Français.[16] He was sentenced to death, and Ogé was executed by being broken on the wheel on 6 February in the presence of Blanchelande and several politicians from the colonial assembly.[17] After his execution, Ogé's head was decapitated and placed onto a pike for public display, a punishment previously inflicted on rebels by the colonial government in previous slave rebellions.[15][18]

Six months after Ogé's executions, rebel slaves led by Dutty Boukman rose in revolt, sparking the Haitian Revolution.[19] Though Ogé never fought against the institution of slavery itself, his execution was frequently cited by rebel slaves during the revolution as a justification for continuing to resist the French colonial government rather than accept prospective peace treaties. After twelve years of fighting, the rebels successfully overthrew French rule in Saint-Domingue.[20]

Personal life, family and legacy

As noted by historian John D. Garrigus, "Ogé's identity, even his name, has been the subject of some confusion."[21] After his death, historians made disparate claims about Ogé's background and revolutionary activities, though they consistently remarked on the uniqueness of someone from the mostly-conservative mulatto upper class attempting to overthrow French rule by force. Garrigus also noted that Ogé's 1791 interview with de Frévent stated that his surname was actually spelt with an "Au" instead of an "O", meaning that it could've been spelt Augé or Auger instead of Ogé.[15]

Ogé was born into a large family and had seven siblings in addition to a unknown number of whom died at a young age. He had three brothers, Joseph, Jacques, Jean-Pierre and Alexandre, the last of whom had been adopted by Ogé's parents. Ogé also had three sisters, Françoise, Angélique and a third sister whose name is unknown; prior to 1788, Françoise and Angélique had moved to Bordeaux.[22] Though he never married, Ogé employed a housekeeper named Marie Magdeleine Garette from 1781 until 1783, when he finally paid her by deeding Garette a young slave girl.[15]

Views of Ogé in historiography, both inside and out of Haiti, varied enormously. In 1914, American racial scientist Lothrop Stoddard dismissively wrote in The French Revolution in San Domingo that Ogé was "convinced that he was destined to lead a successful rising of his caste." Twenty-four years later, Trinidadian historian C. L. R. James denounced Ogé in The Black Jacobins as a member of the French bourgeoisie "whose gifts were unsuited to the task before him." In 1988, British historian Robin Blackburn claimed Ogé was a fellow traveller of the Freemasons in France.[15]

Among African Americans, Ogé was remembered positively during the Antebellum Period. In 1853, the poet and abolitionist George Boyer Vashon wrote a 359-line poem titled Vincent Ogé, which included the stanzas "Thy coming fame, Ogé! Is sure; Thy name with that of L'Ouverture". A similarly positive view of Ogé prevailed in Haiti during the 19th century, and was used to promote the supremacy of Haiti's mulatto elite. This led Ogé's reputation in Haiti to collapse by the 20th century, and he was described in Haitian historiography as a "flawed and minor revolutionary figure."[15]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Arsène Francoeur Nganga (2019). Les origines Kôngo d’Haïti: Première République Noire de l’Humanité. Diasporas noires. p. 174.
  2. ^ Garrigus 2010, p. 23.
  3. ^ King 2007, p. 208.
  4. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 23–24.
  5. ^ Garrigus 2010, p. 24.
  6. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 24–25.
  7. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 25–26.
  8. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 25–27.
  9. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 24–26.
  10. ^ a b Garrigus 2010, p. 21.
  11. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 26–28.
  12. ^ Kennedy 1989, pp. 130–138.
  13. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 30–35.
  14. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 32–38.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Garrigus 2010, pp. 20–33.
  16. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 21–33.
  17. ^ Tise 1998, p. 219.
  18. ^ Tise 1998, pp. 219–220.
  19. ^ Lester 1996, p. 110.
  20. ^ Rogozinski 2000, p. 167.
  21. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 24–28.
  22. ^ Garrigus 2010, pp. 21–29.

Bibliography

vincent, ogé, 1757, february, 1791, dominican, creole, revolutionary, merchant, military, officer, goldsmith, best, known, role, leading, failed, uprising, against, french, colonial, rule, colony, saint, domingue, 1790, mixed, race, member, colonial, elite, og. Vincent Oge c 1757 6 February 1791 was a Dominican Creole 1 revolutionary merchant military officer and goldsmith best known for his role in leading a failed uprising against French colonial rule in the colony of Saint Domingue in 1790 A mixed race member of the colonial elite Oge s revolt occurred just before the Haitian Revolution which resulted in the colony s independence from France and left a contested legacy in post independence Haiti Vincent OgeBornc 1757 Dondon Saint DomingueDiedFebruary 6 1791 aged 33 34 Cap Francais Saint DomingueOccupation s Merchant military officer and goldsmithKnown forLeading a failed uprising against French colonial ruleParent s Jacques Oge Angelique OsseBorn on Saint Domingue into a slaveholding family Oge was sent at the age of eleven to the city of Bordeaux France by his parents to be apprenticed to a goldsmith Returning to the colony after seven years he settled down in Cap Francais as a coffee merchant in the employ of his uncle acquiring partial ownership of his family s plantation By the 1780 s Oge s business dealings had made him the richest merchant of African descent in the city In 1788 Oge travelled to France to both clear his debts and bring several lawsuits his family was engaged in before the Conseil du Roi A year later the French Revolution began and he joined the revolutionary camp After absentee white planters rejected his proposals for abolishing discriminatory colonial laws against free people of colour he joined an advocacy group whose members demanded political representation in the national assembly On March 1790 deputies of the assembly approved a law granting voting rights to free people of colour in French colonies In the same month Oge returned to Saint Domingue where he rebelled against the colonial government after it refused implement the law The uprising was suppressed and Oge was captured and executed After his death Oge was used to promote mulatto supremacy which led to the eventual collapse of his reputation Contents 1 Early life 2 Revolutionary activities 3 Uprising capture and execution 4 Personal life family and legacy 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 BibliographyEarly life EditVincent Oge was born c 1757 in Dondon Saint Domingue 2 At the time Saint Domingue formed the western part of the island of Hispaniola and was under French colonial rule as part of France s colonies in the West Indies Oge s parents were Jacques Oge a white Frenchman and Angelique Osse a free woman of color he also had several brothers and sisters 3 The Oge family owned a coffee plantation which was operated by a number of enslaved labourers and provided the primary source of the family s wealth Osse also held a contract to supply meat to the Dondon markets 4 At the age of eleven Oge was sent to Bordeaux in France by his parents in 1768 There he was apprenticed to a goldsmith for approximately seven years returning to Saint Domingue in 1775 5 Instead of returning to Dondon Oge settled down in the colonial capital of Cap Francais working for his uncle Vincent as a commission agent in the colony s coffee trade During this period Oge acquired partial ownership of his family s slave plantation In the 1780 s Oge also became the owner of a merchant schooner operating out of the colony along with three of his business partners 6 Oge soon expanded his commercial network engaging in business deals with merchants in many of Saint Domingue s major ports and working as a real estate agent in Cap Francais subletting valuable properties to the colonial elite 7 In large part due to his business dealings Oge eventually became the wealthiest businessman of African descent who was active in Cap Francais during the 1780 s However by 1788 Oge fell deeply in debt owing 60 000 to 70 000 livres to his creditors and decided to relocate to Port au Prince with a quantity of trade goods and several slaves 8 Revolutionary activities EditAfter settling down in Port au Prince Oge resumed working as a merchant selling his goods and helping a ship s captain liquidate his cargo However he continued to acquire debt though after six months he had earned 120 000 livres Around the same time Oge made plans to travel to France and purchase goods to resell in Saint Domingue and pay off his creditors There was also the issue of construction efforts in Dondon leading to Oge s family to file a number of lawsuits over their slaves being injured by falling boulders which Oge hoped to bring before the Conseil du Roi 9 In 1788 he travelled to France for a second time A year later the French Revolution began and Oge who was in Paris at the time embraced the cause of the revolutionaries On August 1789 he approached a group of absentee planters to discuss proposals for abolishing discriminatory laws against free people of colour in Saint Dominingue The planter s rejection of his proposals led Oge to join a group of free people of colour led by white lawyer Etienne de Joly whose members demanded representation for mulatto people from the colonies in the National Constituent Assembly 10 By October 1789 Oge had enlisted an officer in the Paris militia joining the abolitionist Society of the Friends of the Blacks around the same period Along with Julien Raimond he quickly became the leaders of de Joly s group and the public face of the political concerns of free people of colour in France In their arguments to the National Constituent Assembly Oge and Raimond pushed for Black representation and total voting rights for free people of colour in Saint Domingue As both men were slaveholders they expressed support for slavery s continued existence in the colonies 11 On March 1790 deputies of the National Constituent Assembly approved an ambiguously worded law granting full voting rights to free people of colour in French colonies After the law had passed Oge returned to Saint Domingue travelling in secret to avoid attracting attention from hostile planters During his journey he made a stop in London to consult with abolitionists in Britain including Thomas Clarkson After meeting with Clarkson who was sympathetic towards Oge s arguments for rights for free people of colour he landed in Saint Domingue via Charleston South Carolina 12 On October 1790 in the same month as his arrival in the colony Oge met with Jean Baptiste Chavannes a non commissioned officer in the colonial militia Together the two men sent a latter to Governor Philibert Francois Rouxel de Blanchelande and the colony s assembly demanding that the colonial government grant free people of color the full rights stipulated in the March 1790 law However both refused leading to Oge and Chavannes to conspire to overthrow the colonial government by force gathering approximately 300 free men of color 12 miles outside Cap Francais 10 Uprising capture and execution Edit A late 19th century illustration of Jean Baptiste Chavannes After receiving reports of Oge and Chavannes activities in late October the colonial government dispatched a force of roughly 600 militia led by a General de Vincent to defeat the rebels However the rebels managed to hold their ground and repulsed the force sent against them which was forced to retreat back to Cap Francais The rebels many of whom had served in the colonial militia organised themselves into battalions elected officers and fortified their positions 13 In response to the failure of the initial attack a subordinate of de Vincent Colonel Cambefort was sent from Cap Francais with 1 500 men to launch a second attack on the rebels Cambefort s troops many of them French Royal Army soldiers routed Oge and Chavannes rebels a large number of which had already deserted Oge and Chavannes managed to escape the colonial government and fled to the nearby Captaincy General of Santo Domingo a Spanish colony 14 On 20 November 1790 Oge and 23 rebels including Chavannes were captured by the colonial authorities in the town of Hinche surrendering after receiving guarantees of safety from the Spanish However the Spanish colonial authorities handed over Oge and his associates to their French counterparts the rebels were marched to Cap Francais under armed guard and imprisoned On January 1791 Oge was interviewed by the French prosecutor Bocquet de Frevent 15 In February 1791 Oge was finally place on trial by the colonial government in Cap Francais 16 He was sentenced to death and Oge was executed by being broken on the wheel on 6 February in the presence of Blanchelande and several politicians from the colonial assembly 17 After his execution Oge s head was decapitated and placed onto a pike for public display a punishment previously inflicted on rebels by the colonial government in previous slave rebellions 15 18 Six months after Oge s executions rebel slaves led by Dutty Boukman rose in revolt sparking the Haitian Revolution 19 Though Oge never fought against the institution of slavery itself his execution was frequently cited by rebel slaves during the revolution as a justification for continuing to resist the French colonial government rather than accept prospective peace treaties After twelve years of fighting the rebels successfully overthrew French rule in Saint Domingue 20 Personal life family and legacy EditAs noted by historian John D Garrigus Oge s identity even his name has been the subject of some confusion 21 After his death historians made disparate claims about Oge s background and revolutionary activities though they consistently remarked on the uniqueness of someone from the mostly conservative mulatto upper class attempting to overthrow French rule by force Garrigus also noted that Oge s 1791 interview with de Frevent stated that his surname was actually spelt with an Au instead of an O meaning that it could ve been spelt Auge or Auger instead of Oge 15 Oge was born into a large family and had seven siblings in addition to a unknown number of whom died at a young age He had three brothers Joseph Jacques Jean Pierre and Alexandre the last of whom had been adopted by Oge s parents Oge also had three sisters Francoise Angelique and a third sister whose name is unknown prior to 1788 Francoise and Angelique had moved to Bordeaux 22 Though he never married Oge employed a housekeeper named Marie Magdeleine Garette from 1781 until 1783 when he finally paid her by deeding Garette a young slave girl 15 Views of Oge in historiography both inside and out of Haiti varied enormously In 1914 American racial scientist Lothrop Stoddard dismissively wrote in The French Revolution in San Domingo that Oge was convinced that he was destined to lead a successful rising of his caste Twenty four years later Trinidadian historian C L R James denounced Oge in The Black Jacobins as a member of the French bourgeoisie whose gifts were unsuited to the task before him In 1988 British historian Robin Blackburn claimed Oge was a fellow traveller of the Freemasons in France 15 Among African Americans Oge was remembered positively during the Antebellum Period In 1853 the poet and abolitionist George Boyer Vashon wrote a 359 line poem titled Vincent Oge which included the stanzas Thy coming fame Oge Is sure Thy name with that of L Ouverture A similarly positive view of Oge prevailed in Haiti during the 19th century and was used to promote the supremacy of Haiti s mulatto elite This led Oge s reputation in Haiti to collapse by the 20th century and he was described in Haitian historiography as a flawed and minor revolutionary figure 15 References EditFootnotes Edit Arsene Francoeur Nganga 2019 Les origines Kongo d Haiti Premiere Republique Noire de l Humanite Diasporas noires p 174 Garrigus 2010 p 23 King 2007 p 208 Garrigus 2010 pp 23 24 Garrigus 2010 p 24 Garrigus 2010 pp 24 25 Garrigus 2010 pp 25 26 Garrigus 2010 pp 25 27 Garrigus 2010 pp 24 26 a b Garrigus 2010 p 21 Garrigus 2010 pp 26 28 Kennedy 1989 pp 130 138 Garrigus 2010 pp 30 35 Garrigus 2010 pp 32 38 a b c d e f Garrigus 2010 pp 20 33 Garrigus 2010 pp 21 33 Tise 1998 p 219 Tise 1998 pp 219 220 Lester 1996 p 110 Rogozinski 2000 p 167 Garrigus 2010 pp 24 28 Garrigus 2010 pp 21 29 Bibliography Edit Garrigus John D 2010 Garrigus John D Morris Christopher Charles eds Assumed Identities The Meanings of Race in the Atlantic World Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 6034 4192 6 Kennedy Roger G 1989 Orders from France The Americans and the French in a Revolutionary World 1780 1820 Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 3945 5592 8 King Stewart R 2007 Blue Coat or Powdered Wig Free People of Color in Pre Revolutionary Saint Domingue University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 3029 7 Lester Langley 1996 The Americas in the Age of Revolution 1750 1850 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 3000 6613 5 Rogozinski Jan 2000 A Brief History of the Caribbean From the Arawak and Carib to the Present Plume Books ISBN 978 0 4522 8193 6 Tise Larry E 1998 The American Counterrevolution A Retreat from Liberty 1783 1800 Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 0100 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vincent Oge amp oldid 1135453470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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