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24707: Hermantin (News) Monument planned for Haitian soldiers of American Revolution



leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>


Posted on Thu, Apr. 07, 2005
Monument planned for Haitian soldiers of American Revolution
RUSS BYNUM
Associated Press

SAVANNAH, Ga. - Unsung Haitian soldiers who made up the largest military unit in the Revolutionary War's bloody siege of Savannah may finally get a monument in their honor 226 years later.

A proposed $500,000 bronze monument was expected to be approved by city planners Friday. Underscoring the project's importance to Haitians, Interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue scheduled a Savannah visit to meet with potential donors Saturday.

Though not well known in the U.S., Haiti's role in fighting for American independence is a point of national pride for Haitians.

In October 1779, a force of more than 500 Haitian free blacks joined American colonists and French troops in an unsuccessful push to drive the British from Savannah in coastal Georgia, the last of the 13 colonies.

More than 300 allied soldiers were gunned down charging British fortifications Oct. 9, making the siege the second-most lopsided British victory of the war Revolution after Bunker Hill.

"Not too many people know about the contributions of Haiti to the greatness of America," said Raymond Joseph, Haiti's ambassador-designate to the U.S.

He said Latortue, leader of Haiti's interim government since the ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide last year, was to fly to Savannah from Rome after attending the funeral of Pope John Paul II.

"The prime minister feels we have to do something to make Haitians proud again of the their homeland because we have gone through a very negative period in our recent history," Joseph said.

The Miami-based Haitian-American Historical Society began lobbying Savannah officials for a monument to the Haitian soldiers in October 2001.

Featuring lifesize bronze statues of six uniformed soldiers atop a concrete pedestal 14 feet in diameter, the monument would sit beneath a canopy of live oaks in Franklin Square near the downtown riverfront.

"It's a way to let people know Haitians didn't just come from the boat," said Daniel Fils-Aime, the historical society chairman. "We shed our blood in 1779 and that's something that should be recognized."

Haitian records from that era were destroyed by a fire in the 1830s, so it's unclear exactly how Haitian troops contributed to the battle at Savannah, said Scott Smith, director of Savannah's Coastal Heritage Society, which is developing a 9.5-acre park on the battlefield site.

But records do exist showing 545 Haitian troops sailed to Savannah in 1779 - making them the largest military unit of the Savannah battle, Smith said. The Haitians are also believed to be the largest black unit to serve in the American Revolution.

After returning home, Haitian veterans of the Revolutionary War soon led their own rebellion that established Haiti's independence from France in 1804.

"There was definitely experience gained for these Haitians to see a large-scale European battle and realize these Europeans were not invincible," Smith said. "Within a little over a decade, the Haitian leaders in Savannah were leading a revolution against the French."

One of the monument's statues, depicted as an adolescent drummer, is of Henri Christophe, who served in Savannah and became king of Haiti after its independence.

Savannah's Historic Sites and Monuments Commission, which has already approved the monument in concept, will meet to sign off on its final design Friday.

The City Council gets the final say, but approval is expected. Former Mayor Floyd Adams Jr. was a key supporter of the monument during his last term that ended in 2003.

The greatest obstacle remaining is money. Fils-Aime said only about $100,000 has been raised so far - one-fifth of the monument's cost. He hopes Latortue's visit will soon change that.

"People are skeptical about helping us to raise the money," Fils-Aime said. "By having him, this is something tangible to know that we're serious."

ON THE NET

Haitian-American Historical Society

http://www.hatianhistory.org