Toussaint Louverture was a man with both inspiring elegance and enigmatic perplexity. Although historians aren't exactly sure whether this man was as heroic and fearless as his appearance implied, it is an undeniable fact that his impact on military strategy, abolishing slavery, and the Haitian political climate is too big to be ignored, even if the impact he made wasn't always a positive one. Toussaint Louverture should be remembered first and foremost for his accomplishments as an abolitionist and a military commander, but one can not forget, when weighing the heroic stature of this man, the terrible atrocities he committed as the new leader of Haiti, making him all in all a figure to be commemorated, but never admired.
Toussaint Louverture was an outstanding military commander, having taught the people of Haiti European and guerrilla warfare, inspired his soldiers with his sheer courage and intelligence, and successfully fought off Napoleon’s forces when he was trying to reinstate slavery to Haiti. A timeline of the Haitian revolution collected from various sources, (Doc A) states that Toussaint “gains a reputation for running an orderly camp and for training his men in both guerrilla tactics and the European shoulder to shoulder style of war”. Toussaint teaching his troops guerrilla tactics was very important in the spreading of the guerrilla form of warfare to the rest of the world. This tactic also spread to the US during the American Revolutionary War and has lasted to this day; so Louverture, by doing this, was further supporting the groundwork for this revolutionary style of warfare, before it was expected for a small European colony like Saint Domingue to do so. Toussaint was also a very courageous and inspiring leader. William Wells Brown states in his book The Black Man, His antecedents, His Genius, and his Achievements 2nd edition (doc F), that Toussaint Louverture “by his superior knowledge of the character of his race, his humanity, generosity, and courage, had gained the confidence of all whom he under his command” showing the almost godlike vision that most of his soldiers held of him. But all these facts would be trivial if Louverture wasn't successful in his efforts. Louverture successfully lead his men to victory, fighting against Napoleon’s forces when he was trying to reinstate slavery, and maintained the freedom of his people.
Toussaint Louverture was also incredibly successful as a liberator of slaves, as the leader of the only successful slave revolt in history. On a timeline of the Haitian Revolution (doc A) it states that Toussaint in 1794 “The Revolutionary government in France under Robespierre abolishes slavery in France and all it’s colonies; Toussaint and his troops stop their revolt and now support the French”. This is a very important accomplishment because this revolution disproves the point that is still being made about slavery, that if slavery was so horrendous why didn’t they fight back? This revolution proves that they did indeed fight back, and their revolt laid the foundation for the liberation of slaves in other countries such as the civil war in America. This accomplishment from Toussaint almost overshadows the atrocities he committed as leader of Saint Domingue.
As leader of Saint Domingue, Toussaint Louverture committed several atrocities on his people that make it so he can never truly be called a hero. Louverture, during the revolution, fought long and hard to stop the feverishly long hours of plantation work for his fellow Haitians, but even after he worked so hard to abolish this, Toussaint continued to support plantation work in a blatant hypocrisy to his earlier views on the matter. Toussaint stated on November 25th in his 25th proclamation on the state of his newly formed nation (doc D) “as soon as a child can walk, he should be employed on the plantation according to his strength in some useful work” after all the work Toussaint did to finally end slavery in Haiti, he’s treating his liberated people as if he sees them only as the very thing he worked to prove they were not, property. But the true measure of a man is not found in his well written speeches, or his sense of politics, but instead what he does in his final moments, when the the persona he shows to the rest of the world dissolves, and he’s left with nothing more than his own sense of morality, no matter how twisted it may seem. Toussaint Louverture's final moments as leader of his country, hinges more on sadistic than heroic, in Madison Smartt Bell’s biography of Toussaint Louverture (doc E) he states that Louverture “ordered the mutineer regiments on parade and summed certain men to blow their brains out” no man who can ever be appropriately labeled heroic can also be held guilty of such a heinous act. Toussaint promised to protect his people, to liberate them, to love them, but instead betrayed them, and did on to them things that even the most vindictive plantation owner wouldn't attempt, and for this Louverture can never be a true hero and never can be truly admired.
Even though Louverture was by no means a good man, his revolutionary accomplishments certainly made him a great one. Like Napoleon if Toussaint had perished before his final moments as leader historians would probably have a far better opinion of his moral stature than is currently perceived, but with the knowledge that we have now, Toussaint stands as an extremely complex figure. Toussaint did far too much good not to be honored, but also far too much evil not to be reviled, making him one of the most intriguing figures in recent history.