On 9 October 1889, Hyppolite was elected to a seven-year term as president of Haiti by the Constituent Assembly, which met at
Gonaives. As soon as he assumed the presidency, he had to deal with the
Môle Saint-Nicolas affair, a diplomatic incident in which the United States attempted to acquire
Môle Saint-Nicolas through intimidation. The US dispatched a fleet to
Port-au-Prince in a show of force, which provoked a protest throughout Haiti. President Hyppolite was forced to assume a firm anti-American stance particularly given that he was suspected of being in sympathy with the Americans.
Anténor Firmin, then Haitian Secretary of State for Exterior Relations, refused to grant any territory to the Americans, citing the
Constitution of Haiti, which forbade the alienation of any portion of the territory. The Môle Saint-Nicolas affair once disposed of, Hyppolite's government had to come to an understanding with the
French legation at Port-au-Prince concerning its recent practice of granting
naturalizations on Haitian territory. Natives of Haiti who claimed to be of French descent would go to the legation and have themselves registered as French citizens. The Haitian Secretary of State of Foreign Relations undertook to put an end to this practice. After drawn-out negotiations, France at last yielded; it ordered its Minister at Port-au-Prince to cancel the names of all those who had not had the right to have them registered. Former president
François Denys Légitime, who had fled to
Jamaica, instigated a number of uprisings against Hyppolite, which Hyppolite successfully repressed. To prevent future uprisings, he executed their leaders. It was his policy to exclude foreigners from the island as he claimed they stirred up insurrections. Nonetheless, Hyppolite held friendly intercourse with all foreign powers. In 1892 the
Vatican proved its good will toward the Republic of Haiti in accrediting a Delegate and Envoy Extraordinary to Port-au-Prince. Wanting to extend its commerce and make its products known abroad, Haiti took part in the
Chicago Exposition, where it won many high prizes. President Hyppolite devoted his earnest attention to the public works of the country.
Wharves were built in several ports; large markets were erected in Port-au-Prince and Cap-Haitien. In several towns
canals were constructed for the distribution of water to private houses.
Telegraph lines connected the principal towns in the Republic at about the same time that the
telephone was first introduced. The roads were kept in good repair; agriculture and commerce flourished. It now became possible for Haiti to redeem its
internal debt, upon which it was paying interest at the rate of 18 per cent per annum; for this purpose a loan of 50,000,000
francs at 6 per cent per annum was floated in
Paris in 1896. That was the last important act of Hyppolite's government. ==Death==