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Salomon
was born in 1815 in Les Cayes. His family was influential and well-known
throughout the south of Haiti and mostly clashed with the elite mulattoes of
south. During Charles Riviere-Hérard regime, the Salomons were wanted for
arrests after a heated battle with the mulattoes and exiled to Neyba. As Faustin
Soulouque came into power, Louis returned along with other powerful black
leaders to serve the new government. Louis became the minister of finance under
Faustin and began to monopolize export transactions in coffee and cotton, run
foreign imports through state monoplies, and levies on capital. As a result,
smuggling and piracy exploded during Soulouqure reign. After the fall of
Soulouque, Louis was exiled to Paris and London where he read widely and
traveled the world.
On August
18, 1879, Louis returned to Haiti and became president after a huge support from
the people. His plan as president was to restart public education, fix Haiti's
financial woes, restore agriculture productivity, improve the army, and to fix
the public administration. Within 4 months, he established the National Bank and
by 1880 he resumed payments to France. The 1880s saw a huge amount of effort by
the Salomon administration to bring modernization to Haiti. He adhered to the
International Postal Union and issued its first postage stamp in October,
granted a British cable company to connect Port-au-Prince and Kingston and by
1887 he negotiated to link Môle Saint-Nicolas to Cuba, Restructured the medical
school, imported French teachers from France to teach at the Lycees, and more.
With the military, the armed forces was reorganized to 16,000 and assigned to 34
infantry regiments and 4 artillery regiments. Also, Salomon reorganized the
ranking distribution in the Haitian army, which only carried private and
general.
In May
1883, Salomon offered the U.S. the island, Tortuga, in return for U.S.
protection. In November, Salomon offered Môle Saint-Nicolas or Tortuga to the
U.S., but both offers were not accepted.
Within the
4 months of Salomon presidency, Haitian refugees from Kingston were in contact
with the elite community in Port-au-Prince in order for a coup. When Salomon
went to tour the south, general Nicholas headed to St. Marc to plan another coup
but was met with government soldiers. In 1883, exiled Haitian rebels from Jamaica
and Cuba reached Haitian shores to start another coup against Salomon. Names
such as Jean-Pierre Boyer-Bazlais and Desormes were involved. While Salomon
improved parts of Haiti problems, he also was draining every resources to pay
Haiti's debt to France. During 1881-1882, a outbreak of smallpox spread
throughout the country and consumed most of the finances in those years. In
April 1883, the infamous Cacos from the north rebelled against Salomon and his
administration but were crushed by government troops mixed with former Piquets.
By 1884 to the end of his presidency, Salomon faced numerous rebellions from the
Cacos. By May, Cacos from south rebelled in Jeremie and in July Jacmel rebelled.
In October, a huge outburst emerged between Salomon's government forces, the
exiled rebels from Cuba and Jamaica, and Cacos from different cities from the
south and north. Flames engulfed government records and building and mass murder
were being dealt to the elite class, foreigners, and merchants. This conflict
was known as the "Bloody Week". Following the rebellion, inflation grew and a
scandal called "Affaire des Mandays" became known involving the national bank, a
French director, a British chief accountant and the Haitian government.
In 1886,
Salomon was "re-elected" for a 7-year term because of his rewriting of the
constitution. In 1887, Port-au-Prince rebelled because of lack of individual
freedom and the tyrannical system of the republic. Government officials began
their betrayal of Salomon and by 1888, Le Cap rebelled in the north. With so
much stress and too much to handle, Salomon left Haiti and returned to Paris
where he died on October 19, 1888.
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