Cap-Haïtien (French:[kapa.isjɛ̃]ⓘ;Haitian Creole:Kap Ayisyen; "Haitian Cape") is acommune of about 300,000 people on the north coast ofHaiti and capital of thedepartment ofNord. Previously namedCap‑Français (Haitian Creole:Kap-Fransè; initiallyCap-François[5] Haitian Creole:Kap-Franswa) andCap‑Henri (Haitian Creole:Kap-Anri) during the rule ofHenri I, it was historically nicknamed theParis of the Antilles, because of its wealth and sophistication, expressed through its architecture and artistic life.[6][7][8][9] It was an important city during the colonial period, serving as the capital of the French Colony ofSaint-Domingue from the city's formal foundation in 1711 until 1770 when the capital was moved toPort-au-Prince. After the Haitian Revolution, it became the capital of theKingdom of Haiti under King Henri I until 1820.
Cap-Haïtien's long history of independent thought was formed in part by its relative distance from Port-au-Prince, the barrier of mountains between it and the southern part of the country, and a history of large African populations. These contributed to making it a legendary incubator of independent movements since slavery times. For instance, from February 5–29, 2004, the city was taken over by militants who opposed the rule of the Haïtian presidentJean-Bertrand Aristide. They eventually created enough political pressure to force him out of office and the country.
Cap-Haïtien is near the historic Haitian town ofMilot, which lies 19 kilometres (12 mi) to the southwest along a gravel road. Milot was Haiti's first capital under the self-proclaimed KingHenri Christophe, who ascended to power in 1807, three years after Haiti had gained independence from France. He renamed Cap‑Français as Cap‑Henri. Milot is the site of hisSans-Souci Palace, wrecked by the 1842 earthquake. TheCitadelle Laferrière, a massive stone fortress bristling with cannons, atop a nearby mountain is eight kilometres (5 mi) away. On clear days, its silhouette is visible from Cap‑Haïtien.
The smallCap-Haïtien International Airport, located on the southeast edge of the city, is served by several small domestic airlines. It was patrolled byChileanUN troops from the "O'Higgins Base" after the2010 earthquake. Several hundred UN personnel, including nearby units fromNepal andUruguay, are assigned to the city during the 2010–2017 United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH). The airport was the only functioning international airport in the country after the closure of theToussaint Louverture International Airport inTabarre due to gang violence in March 2024. Significant migration from the capital occurred during theHaitian crisis, putting strain on infrastructure and on the educational system.[10]
The destruction in 2020 of Shada 2[11] (a slum with 1,500 homes in the southern part of the city) was credited with disrupting gang activity in the former capital.[10]
The well-preserved Cathedral Notre-Dame of Cap‑Haïtien
The island was occupied for thousands of years by cultures ofindigenous peoples, who had migrated from present-day Central and South America. In the 16th century, Spanish explorers in the Caribbean began to colonizeHispaniola. They adopted the nativeTaíno nameGuárico for the area that is today known as "Cap‑Haïtien".[12] Due to the introduction of new infectious diseases, as well as poor treatment, the indigenous peoples population rapidly declined.
On the nearby coastColumbus founded his first community in the New World, the short-livedLa Navidad. In 1975, researchers found near Cap‑Haïtien another of the first Spanish towns of Hispaniola:Puerto Real was founded in 1503. It was abandoned in 1578, and its ruins were not discovered until late in the twentieth century.[13]
In 1670 during the French colonial period, Cap-Haïtien, or Cap-Français as the settlement was then known, was founded by a dozen colonists-adventurers under the command ofBertrand d'Ogeron.
A street scene in Cap‑Haïtien
The French occupied roughly a third of the island of Hispaniola from the Spanish in the early eighteenth century. They established largesugar caneplantations on the northern plains and imported tens of thousands of African slaves to work them. Cap‑Français became an important port city of the French colonial period and the colony's main commercial centre.[6] It served as the capital of the French colony ofSaint-Domingue from the city's formal founding in 1711 until 1770, when the capital was moved toPort-au-Prince on the west coast of the island. Two thirds of the 15,000 inhabitants in 1790 were enslaved peoples, the remaining one third made up of colonists (24%) and free people of colour (10%).[14] After the slave revolution, this was the first capital of the Kingdom of Haiti under King Henri I, when the nation was split apart.
The central area of the city is between the Bay of Cap‑Haïtien to the east and nearby mountainsides, as well as theAcul Bay, to the west; these are increasingly dominated by flimsy urban slums. The streets are generally narrow and arranged in grids. As a legacy of the United States' occupation of Haiti from 1915 to 1934, Cap‑Haïtien's north–south streets were renamed as single letters (beginning with Rue A, a major avenue) and going to "Q", and its east–west streets with numbers from 1 to 26; the system is not followed outside the central city, where French names predominate. The historic city has numerous markets, churches, and low-rise apartment buildings (of three–four storeys), constructed primarily before and during the U.S. occupation. Much of the infrastructure is in need of repair. Many such buildings have balconies on the upper floors, which overlook the narrow streets below. With people eating outside on the balconies, there is an intimate communal atmosphere during dinner hours.
Cap-Haïtien is known as the nation's largest center of historic monuments and as such, it is a tourist destination. The bay, beaches and monuments have made it a resort and vacation destination for Haiti's upper classes, comparable toPétion-Ville. Cap‑Haïtien has also attracted more international tourists at times, as it has been isolated from the political instability in the south of the island.
It has a wealth of 19th century architecture, which has been well preserved. During and after theHaitian Revolution many craftsmen from then Cap‑Français who werefree people of color, fled to French-controlledNew Orleans. Later in 1842 Cap-Haitien was devastated by an earthquake and a resulting tsunami, and most of the reconstruction was influenced by the globally popular French-style steel frame architecture. As a result, New Orleans and Cap-Haïtien share many similarities in styles of architecture. Especially notable are thegingerbread houses lining the city's older streets.[citation needed]
Since 2021, there have been significant electrical outages in Cap-Haitien, due in large part to a lack of fuel. Those who can afford it have invested in solar energy.[15][16] A power plant built inCaracol to provide electricity to the Industrial Park reaches as far asLimonade 30 minutes from downtown Cap Haïtien.[16]
The walledLabadie (or Labadee) beach resort compound is located ten kilometres (6 mi) to the city's northwest. It serves as a brief stopover forRoyal Caribbean International (RCI) cruise ships. Major RCI cruise ships dock weekly at Labadie. It is a private resort leased by RCI, which has generated the largest proportion of tourist revenue to Haiti since 1986. It employs 300 locals, allows another 200 to sell their wares on the premises, and pays the Haitian government US$6 per tourist.
The resort is connected to Cap‑Haïtien by a mountainous, recently paved road. RCI has built a pier at Labadie, completed in late 2009, capable of servicing the luxury-class large ships.[17]
Attractions include a Haitian market, numerous beaches, watersports, a water-oriented playground, and azip-line.[18]
Water taxis parked at Labadie beachA view of the beach at Paradis
Cormier Plage is another beach on the way to Labadie, and there are also water taxis from Labadie to other beaches, like Paradis beach. In addition, Belli Beach is a small sandy cove with boats and hotels. Labadie village can be visited from here.[19]
Vertières is the site of theBattle of Vertières, the last and defining battle of theHaitian Revolution. On November 18, 1803, the Haitian army led byJean-Jacques Dessalines defeated a French colonial army led by theComte de Rochambeau. The French withdrew their remaining 7,000 troops (many had died from yellow fever and other diseases), and in 1804, Dessalines' revolutionary government declared the independence of Haiti. The revolution had been underway, with some pauses, since the 1790s.In this last battle for independence, rebel leader Capois La Mort survived all the French bullets that nearly killed him. His horse was killed under him, and his hat fell off, but he kept advancing on the French, yelling, "En avant!" (Go forward!) to his men. He has become renowned as a hero of the revolution. The 18 of November has been widely celebrated since then as a Day of Army and Victory in Haiti.
View of the Citadelle Laferrière, in northern HaitiInside the ruins ofSans Souci Palace
TheCitadelle Laferrière, also known as Citadelle Henry, or the Citadelle, is a large mountaintopfortress located approximately 27 kilometres (17 mi) south of the city of Cap‑Haïtien and eight kilometres (5 mi) beyond the town ofMilot. It is the largest fortress in the Americas, and was listed by UNESCO as aWorld Heritage Site in 1982 along with the nearbySans-Souci Palace. The Citadel was built byHenry Christophe, a leader during the Haitian slave rebellion and self-declared King of Northern Haiti, after the country gained its independence from France in 1804. Together with the remains of hisSans-Souci Palace, damaged in the 1842 earthquake, Citadelle Henry has been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[20]
Bois Caïman (Haitian Creole:Bwa Kayiman), three kilometres (2 mi) south of road RN 1, is the place whereVodou rites were performed under a tree at the beginning of the slave revolution. For decades,maroons had been terrorizing slaveholders on the northern plains by poisoning their food and water. Makandal is the legendary (and perhaps historical) figure associated with the growing resistance movement. By the 1750s, he had organized the maroons, as well as many people enslaved on plantations, into a secret army. Makandal was murdered (or disappeared) in 1758, but the resistance movement grew.
At Bois Caïman, a maroon leader namedDutty Boukman held the first mass antislavery meeting secretly on August 14, 1791. At this meeting, a Vodou ceremony was performed, and all those present swore to die rather than to endure the continuation of slavery on the island. Following the ritual led by Boukman and amambo namedCécile Fatiman, the insurrection started on the night of August 22–23, 1791. Boukman was killed in an ambush soon after the revolution began. Jean-François was the next leader to follow Dutty Boukman in the uprising of the slaves, the Haitian equivalent of thestorming of the Bastille in the French Revolution. Slaves burned the plantations and cane fields, and massacred French colonists across the northern plains. They also attacked Cap-Français and some of the free people of color. Eventually the revolution gained the independence of Haiti from France and freedom for the slaves. The site of Dutty Boukman's ceremony is marked by aficus tree. Adjoining it is a colonial well, which is credited with mystic powers.
Morne Rouge is eight kilometres (5 mi) to the south of Cap. It is the site of the sugar plantation known as "Habitation Le Normand de Mezy", known for several slaves who led the rebellion against the French.[21]
On 7 May 1842, anearthquake destroyed most of the city and other towns in the north of Haiti and the neighboring Dominican Republic. Among the buildings destroyed or significantly damaged was theSans-Souci Palace. Ten thousand people were killed in theearthquake.[22] Its magnitude is estimated as 8.1 on the Richter scale.
In the wake of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, which destroyed port facilities in Port-au-Prince, thePort international du Cap-Haïtien was used to deliver relief supplies by ship.[23]
As the city's infrastructure suffered little damage, numerous businessmen and many residents have moved here from Port-au-Prince. The airport is patrolled byChileanUN troops since the 2010 earthquake, and several hundred UN personnel have been assigned to the city as part of the ongoing United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH). They are working on recovery throughout the island.
After the earthquake, the port ofLabadee was demolished and the pier enlarged and completely re-paved with concrete, which now allows larger cruise ships to dock, rather thantendering passengers to shore.
Cap-Haïtien is served by theCap-Haïtien International Airport (CAP), Haiti's second busiest airport.[24] It was a hub forSalsa d'Haiti prior to its cessation in 2013.American Airlines operated international flights to CAP for a number of years, but canceled their last connection in July, 2020, after theCOVID-19 pandemic significantly reduced passenger demand. American Airlines was the last major US flight operator to provide service to CAP and thereby Northern Haiti—in July, 2020, Cap-Haïtien became only accessible by air travel through limited flights fromPort-au-Prince'sToussaint Louverture International Airport.[25]Spirit Airlines, which had previously canceled their service due to political unrest and low demand in 2019, announced in October, 2020 that they would resume limited service to CAP in December of the same year.[26]
ThePort international du Cap-Haïtien is Cap-Haïtien's mainseaport.USAID financed $24 million of works to renovate the port beginning in May 2024.[27] The port is industrial cruise ships come in atLabadee nearby to the north west which is operated exclusively by and forRoyal Caribbean.
The Route Nationale 3 also connects Cap-Haïtien with Port-au-Prince via theCentral Plateau and the cities ofMirebalais andHinche.Cap-Haïtien has one of the best grid systems in Haiti with its north–south streets were renamed as single letters (beginning with Rue A, a major avenue), and its east–west streets with numbers.TheBoulevard du Cap-Haïtien (also called the Boulevard Carenage) is Cap‑Haïtien's mainboulevard that runs along the Atlantic Ocean in the northern part of the city.
A union of four Catholic Church private schools have been present for two decades in Cap‑Haïtien. They have higher-level grades, equivalent to the lycées that feed the Écoles Normale Supérieure in France. They have high standards of academic excellence, selectivity inadmissions, and generally their students come from the social and economic elite. Also, the lyceé Philippe Guerrier that was built in 1844 by the Haitian President, Philippe Guerrier, has been a fountain of knowledge for more than a century.
Collège Notre-Dame du Perpetuel Secours des Pères de Sainte-Croix
Collège Regina Assumpta des Sœurs de Sainte-Croix
École des Frères de l'instruction Chrétienne
École Saint Joseph de Cluny des Sœurs Anne-Marie Javoue
Lyceé Philippe Guerrier built by the Haitian President, Philippe Guerrier in 1844.
Cap-Haïtien is home to the Cap-Haïtien Faculty of Law, Economics and, Management; the Public University of the North in Cap-Haïtien (UPNCH). The newUniversité Roi Henry Christophe is nearby inLimonade.
^[1]"Radio Maxima 98.1 Fm". Archived from the original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^[2]"Lavpoix de l'ile". Archived from the original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)