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At 68, penniless and partially paralyzed from a stroke, Dumas died in his son's
Featured Event 1870 Death

December 5

At 68, penniless and partially paralyzed from a stroke, Dumas died in his son's house — the same son he'd once refused to acknowledge. The man who'd earned millions from *The Three Musketeers* and *The Count of Monte Cristo* spent it all: a château with a monkey theater, a private newspaper, mistresses across Europe, and 500 meals a week for anyone who showed up. He'd written 300 books, some dictated to ghostwriters he called his "factory." But he left behind something stranger than swashbuckling heroes: his father was a French general born to a slave in Haiti, making Dumas's adventure stories a quiet revolution — Europe's most popular novelist had Black ancestry nobody talked about.

December 5, 1870

156 years ago

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