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Contemporary watercolor of ''La Amistad''
'''La Amistad''' (
Spanish: "Friendship") was a 19th-century two-
masted schooner of about 120
tons displacement. Built in the
United States, ''La Amistad'' was originally named ''Friendship'' but was renamed after being purchased by a
Spaniard. ''La Amistad'' became a symbol in the movement to
abolish slavery after a group of
African captives aboard revolted. Its recapture resulted in a
legal battle over their status.
The incident

1840 engraving depicting the ''Amistad'' revolt
On
July 2 1839, Africans being carried aboard ''La Amistad'' from
Havana were led by fellow captive
Joseph Cinqué in a revolt against their captors. Their transport from Africa to the
Americas was illegal, and they were fraudulently described as having been born in Cuba. After the revolt, the Africans demanded to be returned home, but the ship’s navigator deceived them about their course, and sailed them north along the North American coast to
Long Island,
New York. The
schooner was subsequently taken into custody by the
United States Navy; and the Africans, who were deemed
salvage from the vessel, were taken to
Connecticut to be sold as slaves. There ensued a widely publicized court case about the ship and the legal status of the African captives. This incident figured prominently in
abolitionism in the United States.

Text of the ''Amistad'' Supreme Court decision
Strictly speaking, ''La Amistad'' was not a
slave ship in the sense that she was not designed to transport
slaves, nor did she engage in the
Middle Passage of Africans to the Americas. ''La Amistad'' engaged in shorter, coastal trade. The primary cargo carried by ''La Amistad'' was
sugar-industry products, and her normal route ran from
Havana to her home port,
Guanaja. She also took on passengers and, on occasion, slaves for transport. The captives that ''La Amistad'' carried during the incident had been illegally transported to Cuba aboard the slave ship ''
Tecora''.
True slave ships, such as ''
Tecora'', were designed for the purpose of carrying as many slaves as possible. One distinguishing feature was the half-height ''between decks'', which allowed slaves to be chained down in a sitting or lying position, but which were not high enough to stand in, and thus were not suitable for any other cargo. The crew of ''La Amistad'', lacking the slave quarters, placed half the 53 captives in the hold, and the other half on deck. The captives were relatively free to move about, and this freedom of movement aided their revolt and commandeering of the vessel.
Later years
After being moored at the wharf behind the Custom House in
New London,
Connecticut, for a year and a half, ''La Amistad'' was auctioned off by the
U.S. Marshal in October 1840. Captain George Hawford, of
Newport,
Rhode Island, purchased the vessel and then had to get an
Act of Congress passed so that he could register her. He renamed her ''Ion'' and, in late
1841, sailed her to
Bermuda and
Saint Thomas with a typical
New England cargo of
onions,
apples, live
poultry, and
cheese.
After sailing her for a few years, he sold the boat in
Guadeloupe in
1844. There appears to be no record of what became of the ''Ion'' under her new
French owners in the
Caribbean.
The Spanish ship, Amistad - Spanish word for "Friendship" was later used in 1785 to transport Acadian Exiles from France, where they had been taken by the British after their Expulsion in 1758, to France and then in 1785 to Louisiana. The name it was called by in 1785 during this voyage, was "L'Amite" - the French word for Friendship.
The L'Amitie, a 400 ton ship led by Captain Joseph Beltremieux, left France on August 20, 1785. After 80 days at sea, they arrived on November 8, 1785. There were 270 people in 68 families on board On the way, there were 6 deaths after sickness spread through the ship (though there were no deaths once they got to New Orleans).
The number of families increased to 93 due to 24 additional adults, 10 births, and 17 marriages. When it came time to settle down: 17 families settled near Galveztown, 3 families went to the Attakapas, and 71 families chose to settled along Bayou Lafourche.
''La Amistad'' in culture
On
2 September 1839, a play entitled ''The Long, Low Black Schooner'', purporting to be based on the revolt, opened in
New York City and played to full audiences. ''La Amistad'' was painted black at the time of the revolt.
A 1997 film, ''
Amistad'', directed by
Steven Spielberg, examines the historical incident.
Artist
Hale Woodruff completed a mural depicting the events that occurred on board the ''Amistad''. The six-panel sequence is on display at the Savery Library (named for founder
William Savery), on the campus of
Talladega College,
Alabama. A mural of the ship itself is also embedded in the floor of the library, and school tradition dictates that it not be trodden on.
Freedom Schooner Amistad
Between 1998 and 2000, ''Freedom Schooner Amistad'', a replica of ''La Amistad'', was built in
Mystic Seaport,
Mystic,
Connecticut, using traditional skills and construction techniques common to wooden schooners built in the
19th century. Some of the tools used in the project were the same as those that might have been used by a 19th century shipwright while others were electrically powered. Tri-Coastal Marine
[1], designers of ''Freedom Schooner Amistad'', used modern computer technology to provide plans for the vessel. Bronze bolts are used as fastenings throughout the ship. ''Freedom Schooner Amistad'' has an external ballast keel made of lead and two
Caterpillar diesel engines. None of this technology was available to 19th century builders.
''Freedom Schooner Amistad'' is operated by
Amistad America Inc., a
non-profit organization based in
New Haven, Connecticut.
[2] The ship's mission is to educate the public on the history of
slavery,
discrimination, and
civil rights. Her homeport is New Haven, where the ''Amistad'' trial took place. She also travels to port cities for educational opportunities. The replica is the State
Flagship and
Tall ship Ambassador of Connecticut.
[3]
The Atlantic Freedom Tour
''Freedom Schooner Amistad'' set sail on
June 21,
2007, from New Haven on the "
Atlantic Freedom Tour", a 14,000-mile transatlantic voyage to
Great Britain,
Lisbon,
West Africa, and the
Caribbean to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the
Atlantic slave trade in
Britain (1807) and the (1808). The ship arrived in
Bristol on
30 August.
[4] UNESCO's designated International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade will be marked by the opening of the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool - the first museum of its type to open in the UK.
The International Slavery Museum will feature new dynamic, powerful and moving displays about the story of the transatlantic slave trade, uncovering the largely hidden account of the exploitation of Africa and Africans. The museum addresses the legacy of transatlantic slavery, both contemporary as well as historic, reflecting issues that are relevant to Britain today, as well as Western Europe, the Americas, the Caribbean and Africa. Throughout this year, Museums, libraries, galleries, faith groups and schools have, organized celebratory and commemorative exhibitions and events to mark the achievements of the abolition movement and to reflect on and speak out against the modern forms of slavery that persist today. The arrival in Liverpool on Sunday August 19th, 2007 of the replica of the "''Amistad''" - the ship, commandeered by its African captives in 1839 and a key symbol in the movement to abolish slavery - is an international example of this
See also
★ ''
The Amistad'', a Supreme Court case arising out of the rebellion aboard the ship
★
''Amistad'' (film), a movie about the court case.
References
1. Tri-Coastal Marine
2. Amistad America Inc.
3. STATE OF CONNECTICUT, Sites º Seals º Symbols; ''Connecticut State Register & Manual''; retrieved on January 4, 2007
4. Amistad Sails Into Bristol For Slave Trade Commemorations
External links
★
Amistad: Some historical considerations.
★
Amistad Atlantic Freedom Tour
★
Amistad America FAQ