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      Also by Serge Bilé

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      La légende du sexe surdimensionné des Noirs

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      Quand les Noirs avaient des esclaves blancs

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      Mango Publishing

      Coral Gables, FL

      Copyright © 2019 Serge Bilé

      Published by Mango Publishing Group, a division of Mango Media Inc.

      Cover Design: Morgane Leoni

      Layout & Design: Morgane Leoni

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      Black Man on the Titanic: The Story of Joseph Laroche

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication number: 2019932090

      ISBN: (print) 978-1-63353-958-7, (ebook) 978-1-63353-959-4

      BISAC category code HIS056000—HISTORY / African American

      Translated from French by: Logan Masterworks, Miami, FL

      Printed in the United States of America

      Contents

       Preface

       I. The New York Express

       II. The Earth Shakes

       III. King Christophe

       IV. Institution Du Saint-Esprit

       V. Bread and Games

       VI. There Is Wind and Joy

       VII. Closer to You, My Lord

       Acknowledgments

       Bibliography

       About the Author

       Endnotes

      The sinking of the Titanic in April 1912 generated within a century a multitude of books, films, and video games. Each of these honed in on the drama of the accident in all its forms, focusing mostly on the personality and the psychology of many of the passengers. But the tragic story of Joseph Philippe Lemercier Laroche has been largely excluded from history.

      At a time of heightened racial imbalance and hostility, a Black man from Haiti boarded the RMS Titanic—not as a crew member, but as a paying passenger: one of the few Black passengers on board the famous ship. Raised in a world of stultifying expectations about race, Joseph Laroche was educated in France, where he found professional successes and contributed to the construction of the Parisian railway. What do we know about Laroche, a direct relative of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, the first ruler of independent Haiti? How was his childhood in Cap-Haïtien, and how did he come to travel to Beauvais, Lille, and Paris? Why did he give up first-class tickets for the luxury ship La France to board the Titanic with his wife and two daughters? Where was he going—and why?

      That is the story I tell: the true story of one black man whose triumphs were shadowed by prejudice, social expectations, and tragedy, but also the remarkable story of a time period. As I delve into black history and the singular bonds between the United States and the Antilles, this is definitely not “just another book about the Titanic.” While The Black Man on the Titanic covers the tragedy, offering a new approach to a slice of history that still fascinates millions, it also presents little-known aspects of the African American and Caribbean experience.

      In order to properly honor Joseph Laroche’s story, I used a narrative style throughout much of this book, combining source material from letters, interviews, newspapers, and archives to create a more engaging narrative.

      Because I relied on testimonials and secondary sources and, as we all know, human memory is deeply flawed, some events have been compressed and some conversations and inner dialogue have been recreated in varying degrees. I retold them in a way that evokes the feeling and meaning of what was said and, in all instances, the essence of the dialogue (both internal and external) is accurate. Any mistakes are mine.

      I would like to thank the descendants of the family portrayed in this book for the privilege of interviewing them, particularly Christina Schutt, the great-grandniece of Joseph Laroche, who not only provided letters and other written materials, but also shared her family’s oral history.

      Thank you to Georges Michel, Christian Boutillier, and Bruno Rousseau. All the interviewees are good, hard-working people who helped with my research immensely. Christian Boutillier shared with me a file that documented everyday life at École du Saint-Esprit in Beauvais, which allowed me to recreate the time Joseph Laroche spent at the school, although nothing in the file directly referred to Laroche himself. Bruno Rousseau, who attended the same Jesuit school I did, forty years ago in France, helped me remember the details of boarding school life: the masses, the studies, the games… Our conversations revived my own memories and helped me walk in Joseph Laroche’s shoes.

      I was given access to a variety of written sources thanks to François Codet of the French Titanic Society, Father Roger Tabard of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit, and Myriam Sylvain, who generously introduced me to Gaétan Mentor from the Haitian Historical Society.

      The French Titanic Society

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