Thomas Alexandre Dumas: Haiti’s black general at the heart of the French Revolution. Photo © Domaine public

Thomas Alexandre Dumas

Thomas Alexandre Dumas is undoubtedly one of the great forgotten figures in Franco-Haitian history. Born a slave in 1762 in Jérémie, in the colony of Saint-Domingue (now Haiti), he became the first black general in the French army, and the father of the famous writer Alexandre Dumas. His career, exceptional in every respect, embodies both French revolutionary ideals and Haiti’s fundamental contribution to universal history.

From Saint-Domingue to France: the origins of an extraordinary destiny

Born into a deeply unequal slave society, Thomas Alexandre Dumas was born on March 25, 1762. His father, a ruined aristocrat, and his mother, a slave of African descent, unwillingly passed on to him the weight of a violent, hierarchical colonial society. At the age of 13, he left Saint-Domingue with his father, who passed him off as a slave in order to circumvent French legislation banning slavery in metropolitan France.

Arriving in France in 1776, he was emancipated and received an aristocratic education. He took up fencing and horse-riding, and frequented the circles of high society. This transition from slavery to freedom marked a decisive turning point in Thomas Alexandre Dumas’s career, even if his relationship with his father soon deteriorated.

A revolutionary commitment and a meaningful choice of name

In 1786, at the age of 24, he joined the army as a private soldier, using his mother’s name, Dumas, which his father had forbidden him to use. This choice was not insignificant: it affirmed his black and Haitian identity at a time when French society was still strongly marked by colonial racism. The French Revolution offered Thomas Alexandre Dumas a setting in which his skills and courage could finally be fully expressed.

From 1792, he distinguished himself with spectacular feats of arms, including the capture of twelve enemies single-handedly. He joined the Légion franche des Américains et du Midi – also known as the Légion noire – and rose through the ranks at lightning speed. In 1793, he became a major general at just 31 years of age, commanding 53,000 men at the head of the Armée des Alpes. An unprecedented rise for a black man in a Western army.

Thomas-Alexandre Dumas
General Dumas defends the Klausen (Chiusa) bridge alone against Austrian soldiers. Composition by Louis Bombled in the illustrated supplement of Le Petit Journal, May 26, 1912. WIKIPEDIA

The "Black Devil" confronts the enemies of the Republic

During the Alps campaign, Thomas Alexandre Dumas distinguished himself by taking the Petit-Saint-Bernard pass, a strategic position held by the Austrians. His daring attack under extreme conditions earned him the respect of his men and the fear of his enemies. The Austrians nicknamed him the “Black Devil” (Schwarzer Teufel). Napoleon Bonaparte, then General-in-Chief, compared him to the Roman hero Horatius Coclès, a rare accolade.

Yet this recognition did not prevent growing tensions between the two men. Thomas Alexandre Dumas remained faithful to republican ideals, and rejected the exactions committed in Egypt, where he opposed Bonaparte’s methods head-on. This opposition, coupled with the black general’s popularity with the troops and the Egyptians themselves, fanned Napoleon’s jealousy.

Thomas Alexandre Dumas
©BnF

Captivity, disgrace and obliteration

In 1799, exhausted and ill, Thomas Alexandre Dumas left Egypt. His ship ran aground in Italy, where he was captured and imprisoned for two years in inhuman conditions. He was tortured, poisoned and deprived of all communication with his family. This period marked the beginning of a slow decline.

On his return to France in 1801, the Napoleonic Empire was established. The Consulate, then the Empire, progressively excluded black officers. Slavery was re-established in the colonies in 1802. Bonaparte refused to receive Dumas and deprived him of any command. Despite repeated requests, Thomas Alexandre Dumas received neither pension nor recognition. He died in Villers-Cotterêts in 1806, ruined, aged 44.

Passing down memory through writing

His son, Alexandre Dumas père, who was just four years old when his father died, grew up remembering the heroic tales his mother passed on to him. This moral and symbolic legacy would nourish a literary body of work that would become universal. The figures of the Count of Monte Cristo, D’Artagnan and the Musketeers echo the courage and injustices suffered by Thomas Alexandre Dumas.

Through his son’s novels, the memory of this Haitian general and hero of the Revolution is passed on to future generations. The influence of this family story on 19th-century literature is considerable, as is its symbolic significance for the French-speaking black diaspora.

Thomas Alexandre Dumas
Thomas Alexandre Dumas (1762-1806) © L'Armarium - Bibliothèque numérique Hauts-de-France

A heritage shared by Haiti and France

The story of Thomas Alexandre Dumas illustrates Haiti’s vital contribution to French history. A military hero, a model of integrity and a man of republican principles, he embodied the ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity at a time when few blacks could rise to such responsibilities.

His memory is slowly resurfacing. A statue in his honor, erected in Paris in 1912, was destroyed by the Nazis in 1942. In 2008, the work “Fers”, depicting broken chains, was installed on the same site. In 2021, the Paris City Council voted to reinstall a statue of the general. The burial of Alexandre Dumas père in the Panthéon in 2002 also revived the tribute to his father.

Thomas Alexandre Dumas
Portrait of the writer Alexandre Dumas(1802-1870) © gallica.bnf.fr Bibliothèque nationale de France

A memory to be rebuilt

Recognizing Thomas Alexandre Dumas is a reminder that the history of France cannot be read without the history of its former colonies. It also means affirming that figures from Haiti and the Caribbean have made a profound contribution to France’s cultural and political heritage. At a time when debates on colonial memories are running through contemporary societies, its rehabilitation symbolizes a step towards a shared and appeased history.

Hero of the Revolution, victim of the Empire, Thomas Alexandre Dumas is the embodiment of an era of contradictions and hopes. Through his life, France and Haiti find a memorial, historical and symbolic junction. The rediscovery of this major historical figure must go hand in hand with an effort to pass on and recognize his legacy, so that the name of this black general, born a slave in Haiti, regains its rightful place in the national and universal narrative.

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