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HREF="http://amistad.mysticseaport.org/discovery/themes/connscholar.92/smith.g
lobal.context.html">Gaddis Smith, The Connecticut Scholar</A>
-----
Smith, Gaddis. "The Amistad in a Global Maritime Context." The Connecticut Sch
olar: Occasional Papers of the Connecticut Humanities Council (1992) no. 10:
37-43.



The Amistad in a Global Maritime Context

Gaddis Smith

The famous case of the Amistad illustrates the ambiguous relationship of the
sea to the history of human freedom. For the Africans of the Amistad, the sea
was first an avenue of bondage over which they were carried in the notorious
illegal slave trade across the Atlantic to Cuba. And then, on the coastal
voyage whose nature and consequences we have been studying, the sea provided
a risky opening toward freedom. The importance of that case in the history of
the United States, and especially in the history of the African-American
people, is now fully established and properly commemorated.

The purpose of this essay is to suggest that the Amistad can also be seen in
a global context wherein the sea connects the rapidly rising demand for
agricultural products which characterized the mid-nineteenth century, the
grim persistence of slavery and other forms of bondage in the face of an
awakened concern for human rights in Britain, America, and elsewhere, and
clashing interpretations of national and international law. The Amistad
incident also illuminates two other large issues: the contradictory impact of
the sea on the lives of individual Africans in American waters in the decades
before the Civil War; and the efforts of slave-owning interests to protect
their institution from sea-borne threats while being forced to rely on the
sea for the trade which sustained their prosperity.

In the first years of the nineteenth century, all maritime nations made the
transportation of slaves from Africa illegal under domestic and treaty law.
But only the British committed substantial naval and political resources to
stamping out the illegal trade. The United States gave little more than
lip-service to that goal and, until the Civil War, actually obstructed the
suppression of the slave trade by refusing to allow the British to board and
search American ships. Slavers, whether American or not, routinely used the
American flag as a cover for their crimes. That sorry episode in our national
history has been amply documented.(1)

Although the international slave trade was illegal, no laws prevented the
carriage of slaves from one place to another within countries where slavery
itself remained legal. The intended voyage of the Amistad was such a coastal
carriage�with the ultimate legal issue resting, as we know, on whether the
Africans being carried were legally slaves. In the United States there was,
as in Cuba, an active internal slave trade. Surplus slaves from the eastern
seaboard were sold and transported to the booming cotton frontier along the
Gulf coast. Since the railroad network in the South was rudimentary even on
the eve of the Civil War, much of this transportation was by sea.

The long coastal voyage out of Chesapeake Bay, around the shoals and storms
of Cape Hatteras, into and across the Gulf Stream, and through the narrow
passage south of Florida, was extremely difficult. The same currents and
winds that carried the Amistad north and east all the way to Long Island
pushed and battered many a vessel on the voyage south. Frequently vessels
were driven by stress of weather into the Bahamas, British territory; and on
several occasions the vessels carried slaves. When those slaves escaped, the
United States government, on behalf of the owners of legal property, demanded
that the British provide compensation.

In 1833 the British Parliament emancipated all slaves in the British Empire.
That made a difference in how slaves arriving in the Bahamas by stress of
weather or revolt�-as in the case of the Amistad -�would be treated. The most
famous case was that of the brig Creole, which sailed from Hampton Roads,
Virginia, for New Orleans in October, 1841, with one hundred and thirty-five
slaves on board. The passage was difficult, and after eleven days the vessel
put into Abaco, in the Bahamas. There a number of the slaves staged a
successful mutiny. The white owner of some of the slaves was killed and
members of the crew were wounded. The mutineers then ordered the Creole to
Nassau, the major port and capital of the Bahamas. The British authorities
freed the slaves on the grounds that no slavery existed in the Bahamas.(2)

John C. Calhoun led the American slaveowners' outcry against the British,
arguing that vital interests of the United States were at stake. Northern
abolitionists, in contrast, applauded the British action and pointed to the
somewhat analogous case of the Amistad. The Creole case, as Howard Jones has
shown, was only one of a cluster of contentious issues between the United
States and Great Britain. Although there was loose talk of war between the
two countries, an amicable settlement was reached through the diplomacy of
Secretary of State Daniel Webster and British diplomat Lord Ashburton. The
British did not pay compensation for the freed slaves from the Creole or for
any slaves escaping in the Bahamas after emancipation in 1833, but Lord
Ashburton gave private assurance that the British authorities would not
actively assist slaves in gaining their freedom. Calhoun and his colleagues
were unmollified, and the issue became moot because the coastal slave trade
was carried on thereafter primarily on steam vessels, less liable to be
carried off course.

Africans, slave and free, went to sea in many different situations, finding
there both opportunities not afforded on land and special dangers and
disabilities. Seafaring employment was much favored by free Africans in the
United States, and in the early nineteenth century perhaps 20 percent of all
seamen on American flag vessels were of African descent. Seamen's wages were
low and perils of the sea were great, but Africans received the same wages as
all others for the same work. Ironically, employment which provided relative
opportunity for free blacks was often seen by whites as akin to slavery. And
indeed it was, in respect to the severe conditions under which seamen
labored: the arbitrary and often brutal authority of the captain, the use of
flogging and other corporal punishment, and the service to which the seaman
was held --under penalty of imprisonment--for the duration of a voyage.(3)

Until the twentieth century, a seaman dissatisfied with working conditions on
a vessel could not leave at an intermediate port without facing arrest. After
the Civil War, advocates of seamen's rights said that this was involuntary
servitude, unconstitutional by the thirteenth amendment. The Supreme Court
said no--and seamen, both on American ships in foreign waters and on foreign
ships in American ports, were regularly hunted down like fugitive slaves and
returned to their ships. All seamen--black, yellow, or white suffered equally
in this regard.(4)

Free seamen of African descent were subject, from the 1820s until the Civil
War, to one serious disability on account of race. Slave-owning seaboard
states, beginning with South Carolina, passed the Negro Seamen Acts, designed
to prevent subversive, insurrectionary ideas from being infused into their
slave population. These laws required that whenever a vessel arrived in a
Southern port, all black crew members had to be held in jail until the vessel
sailed--at which time they would be escorted back on board. The owner of the
vessel had to pay the cost of the incarceration, and tight-fisted captains
were in the habit of deducting those costs from the wages paid the victims.
If an imprisoned seaman were abandoned in jail, he was liable to be sold into
slavery.(5)

The validity of the Negro Seamen Acts was challenged in the Federal Courts.
In one 1844 case, for example, Judge Peleg Sprague, of the Federal District
Court of Massachusetts, declared:

A State cannot thus interfere with the navigation of the United States, nor
dictate to the owners of an American vessel the composition of her crew. The
only ground of disability is color. If one color may be excluded, any other
may;--if dark complexions may be subject to prohibition, white may be equally
so;--or both whites and blacks may be excluded; or any other physical
quality, or religious or political opinion, may be selected as the criterion
of exclusion, or admission. If the parties may be subjected to imprisonment,
expenses and bond, any other penalties and punishments may be inflicted. Such
legislation is not consistent with the regulations of commerce established by
the laws of the United States, pursuant to authority expressly given by the
constitution; and this statute is invalid.(6)
The Southern states ignored this and other decisions. The Negro Seamen Acts
remained in force. One result was that the number of African seamen on
vessels entering Southern ports declined in the years before the Civil War,
thus restricting an avenue of employment.

In the late eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth century, slaves were
often found as seamen on American vessels, hired out by owners, who received
the wages. This practice continued until the end of slavery on local vessels
operating entirely within the Southern states or on Southern inland waters.
But the hiring out of slaves for international voyages disappeared in the
1830s, because the slave seamen often saw and seized the opportunity for
freedom by deserting in a foreign port where there was no slavery. Free
seamen were somewhat deterred from desertion because it meant loss of all
wages, but the slave had no wages to lose. Owners of slaves escaping in such
a manner tried to hold the captain of the vessel responsible, but the courts
did not agree. The hiring of slaves as seamen on international voyages thus
ended--and with it an opportunity for escape.

Slaves also stowed away on vessels leaving Southern ports for the North or
for foreign ports, or signed as seamen pretending to be free. This was a
risky game, because if one's deception were discovered, the captain was in
line for a sizable reward for the apprehension and return of the runaway. To
acquiesce in the slave's escape would bring no gain and, after the passage of
the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850, might put the captain in trouble with the law.

The ambiguous relation of Africans to the sea is also illustrated in the law
of salvage. The customs and law of salvage in the United States and all other
maritime countries were intended to encourage people to take great risks to
save property in danger on the sea. Those who saved property could apply to
the courts to receive a reward, based on the judge's estimate of the risk
involved and the likelihood that without the saving effort the property would
have been lost. Awards could range from a low of 5 percent of the value of
the property to as high as 90 percent. Seamen participating in salvage could
on occasion receive huge sums, equivalent to many years' wages.

The law of salvage, however, provided no entitlement to compensation for
saving life on the grounds that the value of life was beyond calculation and
that common humanity should dictate life-saving regardless of the expectation
of award. But what if life were property, the life of a slave? This, recall,
was a subsidiary issue in the Amistad case. The officers and crew of the
United States vessel apprehending the Amistad sought a salvage award based on
the value of the Africans as slaves. When the Africans were declared free
men, they ceased to have monetary value and, of course, were not returned to
their "owners"-- hence no salvage award.

But it happened from time to time that slaves on legal voyages were saved and
salvage was paid. It also happened that slaves attempting to reach freedom by
sea in small rafts were found adrift by passing vessels, taken aboard, and
restored to owners in return for payment of salvage. Salvage law thus
encouraged vessels to save the lives of seagoing runaways, who in many cases
were in danger of dying from thirst and starvation. For example, five
runaways in a canoe were found near death one hundred and eighty miles off
South Carolina. The ship that picked them up received salvage. Life saved in
such instances was freedom denied. Another case involved the ship Leander
with fifty-six slaves and no crew, adrift off Charleston. The slaves claimed
that the whites had simply died. The judge, however, decided that there had
been a revolt. The fact that the ship was seaworthy and had ample food and
water created some difficulty. But the judge concluded that "there being no
white persons on board and the slaves being regarded as cargo, I must
consider the Leander as derelict." The salvers received $16,000�one-third the
value of the ship and the slaves.(7)

The illegal African slave trade, the coastal transportation of slaves in the
Caribbean and the United States, and the punitive Negro Seamen Acts were all
part of the response of slave-owning economies to the rising demand for
cotton and sugar. Labor was scarce and soil fertility was being rapidly
depleted. These conditions came together to create a phenomenon that could
well be called "the other slave trade"--a phenomenon which links African
slavery and the bondage of the Chinese in the mid-nineteenth century, some of
the issues that arose in the case of the Amistad with tragedy in the Pacific,
and contention between an American and a foreign authority.

In the 1840s and 1850s the desperate need for powerful fertilizer produced a
world-wide search for guano, the accumulated droppings of sea birds. Abundant
deposits of guano were rare, because they required a surrounding ocean
teeming with small fish for the birds to consume, rocks on which the birds
could nest, and no rain to wash off the droppings. In the 1840s such
conditions existed around the Chincha Islands, off the coast of Peru. Through
centuries, guano deposits hundreds of feet deep had accumulated. The material
was the most effective and valuable fertilizer then known. The Peruvian
government moved to exploit this treasure by digging and selling it to
American and European ships arriving at the islands.(8)

Digging the stuff was very dangerous. The fine dust, loaded with ammonia,
filled the lungs and killed workers in months or perhaps a year. Slavery had
been abolished in Peru, and the Indians could not be induced to work the
guano for any amount of money. Where to turn? The Peruvians turned, as did
other interests throughout Latin America, to China, a country then suffering
extreme social and political instability. The port of Amoy, and later the
Portuguese enclave of Macao, became the Chinese equivalent of the slave coast
of Africa. British and European firms built barracoons--the name used also
for slave enclosures on the African coast--and paid Chinese agents to trick,
drug, and otherwise gather young Chinese men, or coolies.

The coolies were assembled in the barracoons, forced to put their mark on
contracts obligating them to work for four or five years anywhere in the
world for any employer to whom the contract was assigned--and at extremely
low wages, usually four or five dollars a month. American ships flocked to
the trade, taking hundreds of coolies on board, packing them almost as
tightly as slaves from Africa, and delivering them to Panama, British Guyana,
and Cuba in large numbers, but most notoriously to Peru for labor and almost
certain death digging guano.(9)

One instance in particular links this other slave trade to the place where
much of the Amistad drama unfolded: the case of the ship Robert Bowne,
commanded and owned by one Leslie Bryson, of 32 Grand Avenue, New Haven.
Bryson, who bought his ship for almost nothing in San Francisco, loaded more
than four hundred coolies in Amoy and headed for Peru, where he intended to
deliver the men and their contracts for a good profit. Almost immediately
coolies on board began to die--from a combination of opium withdrawal,
seasickness, probably cholera, and the dreadful sanitary conditions on board.
Captain Bryson thought he could stem the mortality by cutting off the
pigtails of his cargo. The Chinese resented this treatment and more generally
the fact of their captivity. They rose in revolt, killing Bryson and the
other officers. Ultimately some of the mutineers were captured by a joint
Anglo-American naval expedition and brought to trial by the Chinese, who
acquitted them on the reasonable grounds that they had acted in self-defense,
having been taken aboard against their will in an enterprise blatantly
against Chinese law.(10)

The chief American diplomat in China, a Yale man named Peter Parker,
denounced the Chinese for dishonoring the United States and perpetrating a
travesty of justice. He wanted the American naval commander, recently arrived
in Chinese waters, Matthew Perry, to attack the Chinese in retaliation. Perry
said, in effect, "Go to hell, Peter Parker; I have other orders." Those
orders were to open up Japan. Parker, to his credit, soon changed his mind
and saw the coolie trade as the abomination it was. So did the British
Parliament and the U.S. Congress. Both countries passed laws excluding their
own ships from the trade. It continued, however, under Spanish, Portuguese,
and Peruvian flags until the 1870s--a lingering example of the efforts of
some men to find cheap alternatives, with scant respect for human rights.
They defied laws of particular nations and international ideals as long as
they could succeed.

Such men, of course, did not always succeed, and sometimes their intended
victims used the sea as a means of freedom, as the Amistad Africans here in
New Haven and the Chinese out of Amoy on a ship captained by a New Havener
illustrate.

NOTES

1. W. E. B. Du Bois, The Suppression of the African Slave-Trade to the United
States of America, 1638-1870 (New York: Harvard Historical Studies, 1, 1896),
although nearly a century old, is still valuable. See also Warren S. Howard, A
merican Slavers and the Federal Law, 1837-1862 (Berkeley, U. of California
Press, 1963).

2. Howard Jones, To the Webster-Ashburton Treaty: A Study in Anglo-American
Relations, 1783-1843 (Chapel Hill: U. of North Carolina Press, 1977), 78-86,
139-154; describes the Creole case and puts it in a legal and international
context. See also Jones, "The Peculiar Institution and National Honor: The
Case of the Creole Slave Revolt," Civil War History XXI (1975), 28-50.

3. For a more extended discussion see Gaddis Smith, "Black Seamen and the
Federal Courts," in Timothy J. Runyan, ed.,Ships, Seafaring and Society
(Detroit, 1987), 321-338.

4. The crucial Supreme Court case is Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U.S. 275
(1897).

5. The pioneering articles on this subject are by Philip M. Hamer, "Great
Britain, the United States, and the Negro Seamen Acts, 1802-1848," Journal of
Southern History I (1935), 3-28; and "British Consuls and the Negro Seamen
Acts, 1850-1860," ibid., 138-168.

6. The Cynosure, I Sprague 88 (1844).

7. Flinn v. The Leander, 9 Federal Cases 175 (1808).

8. For more detail see Gaddis Smith, "Agricultural Roots of Maritime
History," The American Neptune XLIV (1984), 5-10.

9. Watt Stewart, Chinese Bondage in Peru: A History of the Chinese Coolies in
Peru, 1849-1874 (Durham, N.C.,1951); Robert J. Schwendinger, Ocean of Bitter
Dreams: Maritime Relations Between China and the United States, 1850-1915
(Tucson, Arizona, 1988).

10. Extensive correspondence on the Robert Bowne affair is printed in "Slave
and Coolie Trade," 34th Congress, 1st Session, 1852, Senate Executive
Document 99.
____________

GADDIS SMITH is Director of the Center for International and Area Studies and
Larned Professor of History, Yale Universit
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