A racy depiction of social life among the rich settlers during the Haitian Revolution, first published in 1808.First published in 1808, this is an narrative by an American woman of her life in the French colony of St Domingo during, and after, the slave rebellion which evetually resulted in the independence of Haiti. The tone is anecdotal, but is an eyewitness account of a turbulent period.First published in 1808, this is an narrative by an American woman of her life in the French colony of St Domingo during, and after, the slave rebellion which evetually resulted in the independence of Haiti. The tone is anecdotal, but is an eyewitness account of a turbulent period.Leonora Mary Hassal Sansay (b. 1781), also known as Mary Hassal, was U.S. Vice-President Aaron Burr's niece. This work, first published in 1808, takes the form of a series of letters to her uncle, describing the events which she witnessed between 1802 and 1805 in the French colony of St Domingo, which became the Republic of Haiti in 1804 after a fierce revolution. A large French army under General Leclerc was sent by Napoleon to retake the colony from the ex-slave Toussaint Louverture and his army. Hassal depicts life under the French occupation, and also in Cuba and Jamaica, to which many settlers from St Domingo fled. She comments particularly on the position and occupations of women, but regrets their subjection to and dependence on men. The tone is anecdotal, but the volume will be of interest to social historians as an eyewitness account of a turbulent period.Letters I-XXXII.