'Victor Hugues' (
1761—
1826) was a
French politician and
colonial administrator during the
French Revolution, who governed
Guadeloupe from 1794 to 1798,
emancipating the island's
slaves under orders from the
National Convention.
Early life and appointment
Hugues was born in
Marseille and was a
colonist in
Saint-Domingue in the late 1780s and early 1790s. He returned to France and became an official in
La Rochelle through his activity in the local
Jacobin Club. After the emancipation decrees of
Léger-Félicité Sonthonax and
Étienne Polverel during the
Haitian Revolution, the National Convention declared the end of slavery in all French territories in February 1794, and named Hugues civil
commissioner to Guadeloupe.
Conflicts with Great Britain and the United States
The island was under
British control when he arrived in the
Caribbean, as
planters and other
Royalists had called in France's rival as a way of rejecting revolutionary events. But by rallying slaves and ''
gens de couleur'', Hugues was able to retake the island. He ruled for four years before being recalled to France. During that time, he purged the island of counter-revolutionaries, using a
guillotine brought from France, and also worked to create a viable post-slavery regime, in which the islands farms and plantations still functioned. Hugues is perhaps best known for authorizing
privateers to attack shipping through the Caribbean, which brought great wealth to the island but also was part of the tensions between France and the
United States (known as the ''
Quasi-War'' in American history). With an army composed of
White,
Mulatto and ex-slave soldiers, Hugues worked to export the revolution to neighboring islands, including
Dominica,
Saint-Martin, la
Grenade,
Saint-Vincent and
Saint Lucia.
Guiana
In 1799, Hugues was envoyed to
French Guiana by the
French Consulate, where he was responsible for legislating
unfree labour, and then slavery itself. He remained an administrator under the early years
First Empire, but was forced out by a provincial maneuver of the
Napoleonic Wars, when
Portugal invaded the colony.
Upon his return, he was prosecuted for
treason and
conspiracy with the enemy.
Acquitted in 1814, he returned to Guiana in 1817, served as governor and then stayed on as a mere citizen. He later left for France, and died in
Bordeaux.