Home / Full timeline / A Black Vermont missionary, Prince Saunders, promotes efforts in Africa and Haiti.
A Black Vermont missionary, Prince Saunders, promotes efforts in Africa and Haiti.
1815
Vermont's Prince Saunders arrived in England seeking backers for education and missionary efforts in Africa. Saunders also supported emigration of Black Americans to Africa. In England, however, Saunders' interest turned to Haiti when he met up with English reformers with the long-term goal, supported by Haitian king Henri Christophe, of changing the island's language and religion. Saunders joined them and taught in Haiti from 1816 to 1818. He then returned to Philadelphia to rekindle his colonization efforts, this time with Haiti in mind. He arrived again on the island in 1820, supposedly representing colonists-in-waiting. But when Christophe arranged passage to Haiti for them, his army rebelled and his regime collapsed, taking Saunders's plans down with it. Saunders published Haitian papers while in London. The work was a translation of Haitian laws, and the Code Henri laws which were regulating agriculture, commerce, police, and social-political organizations in the kingdom. Saunders had been born to Cuff and Phyllis Saunders. He was baptized on July 25, 1784. Saunders received his early education at Thetford, Connecticut. Later he taught at a school for Blacks in Colchester. During 1807 and 1808, Saunders studied at Moor's Charity School at Dartmouth College. In 1811, he sewed as secretary of the African masonic lodge and organized the Belles Lettres Society, a group of literary white men. Saunders died in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in 1839.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.