| Coffee | 54,579,059 | lbs. |
| Logwood | 167,005,650 | ” |
| Cotton | 1,473,853 | ” |
| Cacao | 1,743,853 | ” |
| Mahogany | 2,441,887 | feet |
1863.
| Coffee | 71,712,345 | lbs. |
| Logwood | 116,669,400 | ” |
| Cotton | 2,217,769 | ” |
| Cacao | 2,338,400 | ” |
| Mahogany | 2,016,557 | feet |
1864.
| Coffee | 45,168,764 | lbs. |
| Logwood | 153,235,100 | ” |
| Cotton | 3,237,594 | ” |
| Cacao | 1,399,941 | ” |
| Mahogany | 2,369,501 | feet |
No trustworthy statistics could be obtained for the time of Soulouque, on account of the monopolies and the various interferences with commerce. In 1865 the siege of Cap Haïtien, and the disturbances which followed in 1866, the fall of Geffrard in 1867, and the civil war of 1868 and 1869, completely disturbed trade, and no reliable statistics can be obtained.
The latest trade return which I have seen is of the year 1880:—
| Lbs. | |
| Coffee | 55,562,897 |
| Logwood | 321,729,801 |
| Cacao | 2,729,853 |
| Cotton | 957,962 |
| Mahogany, feet | 71,478 |
| Sugar | 2,397 |
Mr. Mackenzie, who was English Consul-General at Port-au-Prince during the years 1826 and 1827, gives a table of the commerce of Hayti in 1825, which includes the whole island.
Imports.