
Looking into Cap-Haïtien from the northern edge of downtown

Cap-Haïtien market.

Fishing boat being built in Cap-Haïtien

Old cargo ship moored in Cap-Haitien is now ready to be scrapped

A wooden boat stranded in Cap-Haitien's harbour (Haiti). The transverse framing system can clearly be seen.
'Cap-Haïtien' (''Okap'' or ''Kapayisyen'' in
Kréyòl) is a city of about 130,000 people on the north coast of
Haiti. It is the capital of
Nord department. Due to its proximity to wide
Caribbean beaches to its northwest, Cap-Haïtien has traditionally been a resort and vacation destination for Haïti's upper classes comparable to that of
Pétionville. As of recently, Cap-Haïtien has enjoyed a recent increase in tourist activity due to the rather unstable political situation in the capital
Port-au-Prince.
The central area of the city is located between the Bay of Cap-Haïtien to the east, and nearby mountainsides to the west, which are increasingly dominated by flimsy urban slums. The streets are generally narrow and arranged in grids. As a legacy of the
U.S. occupation of Haïti from
1915-
1934, Cap-Haïtien's north-south streets were renamed as single letters (beginning with Rue A, a major avenue), and its east-west streets with numbers. This system breaks down outside of the central city, which is itself dominated by numerous markets, churches, and low-rise apartment buildings (3-4 floors each) constructed primarily before and during the U.S. occupation. Many such buildings have balconies on the upper floors which overlook the narrow streets below, creating an intimate communal atmosphere during the Haitian dinner hours.
Cap-Haïtien is also the nearest sizeable city to the historic Haïtian town of
Milot, which lies 12 miles to the southeast along a gravel road.
Milot was Haïti's former capital under the self-proclaimed King
Henri Christophe, who ascended to power in
1807, three years after Haïti had gained independence from
France. As a result,
Milot hosts the ruins of the
Sans-Souci Palace, wrecked by a
19th-century earthquake, as well as the
Citadelle Laferrière, a massive stone fortress bristling with cannons. The Citadelle is located five miles from
Milot, atop a nearby mountain. On clear days, its silhouette is visible from Cap-Haitien.
In general, the grinding poverty combined with instability caused by several coups and rebellions since
1991 have sharply curtailed the number of foreign visitors to Cap-Haïtien compared to what its tourist levels had been. Nevertheless, Cap-Haïtien is rather more stable than Port-au-Prince and so currently receives higher levels of tourism.
The small Cap-Haïtien airport, located on the southeast edge of the city, is currently served by several small domestic airlines, and is patrolled by
Chilean
UN troops. International service to
Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida is provided five days per week by
Lynx Air International. The city hosts several hundred
UN personnel as part of the ongoing United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (
MINUSTAH).
Cap-Haïtien's distance from Haïti's capital,
Port-au-Prince, combined with the dire condition of Haïti's transportation infrastructure, has often made Cap-Haïtien an incubator for revolutionary or anti-government figures. In February
2004, the city was taken over by militants opposed to the rule of Haïtian president
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, presaging Aristide's eventual exile from power.
The walled
Labadie beach resort compound is located six miles to the city's northwest, and has served as a brief stopover for
Royal Caribbean cruise ships. Today, major Royal Caribbean Cruise ships, including the largest and most luxurious (
Freedom of the Seas), dock weekly at Labadie, and plans are in the making for additional stopovers in
Fort-Liberté, and
Jacmel. The resort is connected to Cap-Haïtien by a mountainous dirt and gravel road.
'Media'
Radio
★ Radio 4VEH
★ Radio Cap-Haitien
★ Radio Citadelle
★ Radio Etincelle
★ Radio Gama
★ Radio Sans Souci
★ Radio Venus FM
★ Voix de l’Ave Maria
★ Voix Du Nord
★ Radio Paradis
★ Radio Nirvana
★ Radio Hispaniola
Television
★ Radio Tele Venus
★ Radio Tele Paradis
★ Chaine 6
★ Television Nationale d'Haiti
'Major Schools'
★ Freres de l'Instruction Chretienne (F.I.C)
★ College Notre-Dame Du Perpetuel Secours (C.N.D.P.S)
★ College Saint-Joseph de Cluny
★ College Reggina Asumpta (C.R.A)
★ College Matin Luther King (C.M.L.K)
★ College Pratique Du Nord (C.P.N)
'Vertieres'
Vertieres around Cap-Haitien was the place of the
Battle of Vertières—the
last and defining battle of the
Haitian Revolution, leading to the
Treaty of Ryswick. This last battle of Haitian Revolution on November 18 1803, led to the independence of Haiti, was fought between Haitian rebels led by
Jean-Jacques Dessalines and the French colonial army under General Comte de Rochambeau. This decisive blow was major loss for
France and its colonial empire. Before independence Cap-Haïtien was called Cap Français.
'External links'
★
short article - Columbia encyclopedia
★
The Louverture Project:
Cap Haïtien - Article from Haitian history wiki.