Difference between revisions of "Vincent Ogé"

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'''Vincent Ogé''' ''(aka Jacques Vincent Ogé)'' - As a member of the [[Amis des Noirs|Friends of the Negro]] (a Mulatto organization), Ogé had been frustrated by the Assembly's refusal to extend the [[Rights of Man]] to mulattoes and decided to take matters into his own hands.  With money he got from [[Thomas Clarkson]] in London, he purchased firearms in the US ([[The Black Jacobins|James]] p. 73) and sent them to [[Saint-Domingue]] to attempt a Mulatto uprising.  Unfortunately, though an eloquent speaker, Ogé was no general and was decisively overpowered.  His exceptionally brutal ([[Orders From France|Kennedy]] p. 136) torture and death ([[The Black Jacobins|James]] pp. 73 - 74) served only to heat up an already rapidly boiling cauldron of dissatisfaction.
 
'''Vincent Ogé''' ''(aka Jacques Vincent Ogé)'' - As a member of the [[Amis des Noirs|Friends of the Negro]] (a Mulatto organization), Ogé had been frustrated by the Assembly's refusal to extend the [[Rights of Man]] to mulattoes and decided to take matters into his own hands.  With money he got from [[Thomas Clarkson]] in London, he purchased firearms in the US ([[The Black Jacobins|James]] p. 73) and sent them to [[Saint-Domingue]] to attempt a Mulatto uprising.  Unfortunately, though an eloquent speaker, Ogé was no general and was decisively overpowered.  His exceptionally brutal ([[Orders From France|Kennedy]] p. 136) torture and death ([[The Black Jacobins|James]] pp. 73 - 74) served only to heat up an already rapidly boiling cauldron of dissatisfaction.
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Read [http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/d/288/ Ogé's motion to the Assembly of Colonists] of 1789.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 19:16, 28 December 2004

Vincent Ogé (aka Jacques Vincent Ogé) - As a member of the Friends of the Negro (a Mulatto organization), Ogé had been frustrated by the Assembly's refusal to extend the Rights of Man to mulattoes and decided to take matters into his own hands. With money he got from Thomas Clarkson in London, he purchased firearms in the US (James p. 73) and sent them to Saint-Domingue to attempt a Mulatto uprising. Unfortunately, though an eloquent speaker, Ogé was no general and was decisively overpowered. His exceptionally brutal (Kennedy p. 136) torture and death (James pp. 73 - 74) served only to heat up an already rapidly boiling cauldron of dissatisfaction.

Read Ogé's motion to the Assembly of Colonists of 1789.

References

  • James, C.L.R. (1989). The Black Jacobins. Toussaint L'Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution. (2nd Ed., Revised) New York: Vintage Press. ISBN 0-679-72467-2.
  • Kennedy, Roger G. (1989). Orders from France: The Americans and the French in a Revolutionary World, 1780-1820. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-55592-9.