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THE
AMISTAD CASE and
ITS CONSEQUENCES IN U.S. HISTORY
BY CLIFTON JOHNSON
Introduction
Set in the floor of the rotunda of Savery
Library at Talladega College in Alabama is a bas-relief of
the ship La Amistad. It is a tradition at the college that
the plaque is never stepped upon. On the walls are three dramatic
and colorful murals by Hale Woodruff that depict the revolt,
trial, and return to Africa of the Mendians who were the central
characters in what is commonly known as the Amistad Incident.
Talladega is one of nine prestigious American
institutions of higher learning existing today that trace
their heritage to the Amistad Incident. Other institutions
that share this heritage include Ryder Hospital in Puerto
Rico, which celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary in 1989,
and the Amistad Research Center, a major archive for the study
of America's ethnic history located on the campus of Tulane
University in New Orleans. Poems have been written about the
incident, notably by William Cullen Bryant, Robert Hayden
and Oscar Bouise. In addition to numerous published historical
accounts, two novels, one "comic" book and at least
three film scripts based on the incident have been written.
The noted composer Hale Smith has written a secular cantata,
Meditations in Passage, about it. For many Americans and Africans
the Amistad case is a cherished symbol in the continuing struggle
for human freedom and justice. But what was the Amistad Event
and why has it continued to capture such wide interest?
The Black Schooner
In the summer of 1839, numerous ships reported
sighting a long, black schooner manned by armed blacks cruising
not far from the eastern shore of the United States. It was
first believed to be a pirate ship. Then, a story of a slave
rebellion aboard a Cuban vessel surfaced. Some American sea
captains had attempted to board the ship but met such resistance
from the blacks, they were forced to withdraw. Finally, the
commander of the Brooklyn Navy Yard ordered a search for the
mysterious vessel. On August 26, Lieutenant Richard W. Meade,
on board the USS Washington, a revenue cutter, spotted the
battered schooner about a mile off Long Island near Culloden
Point. Meade alerted his commander, Lieutenant Thomas R. Gedney,
who ordered him to seize the ship. When Meade and his crew
boarded the schooner, named La Amistad they found, in addition
to blacks, two whites, Pedro Montes and Jose Ruiz. Meade could
not communicate with the blacks, who spoke neither English
nor Spanish, but he could converse with the Spaniards. He
spoke some Spanish and Ruiz spoke English. He was told that
La Amistad had left Havana two months earlier for a three-hundred-rnile
coastal voyage to Guanaja with a cargo of merchandise and
fifty-three slaves on board, forty-nine adults being the property
of Ruiz and four children, three girls and a boy, belonging
to Montes. On the third night, under the leadership of one
of their number, Cinque, the blacks rose in revolt and killed
the cook and the captain, Ramon Ferrer, who was also the owner
of the vessel. Two crew members jumped overboard; the cabin
boy, Antonio, a slave of the captain, was allowed to live,
as were Ruiz and Montes but only because they were needed
to sail the ship to Africa. Sailing toward the rising sun
during the day, as directed by the blacks, the Spaniards secretly
turned the vessel toward the northwest at night, hoping to
reach American soil. Two of the blacks had been killed during
the revolt and eight other adults died at sea.
Some of the blacks, including Cinque, were
on shore when Meade boarded the ship. When they returned,
they were seized, but not without resistance. Lieutenant Gedney
then took his prize in tow and set sail for New London, Connecticut.
It is not clear why Gedney chose to go to New London rather
than to a New York port. It was later charged that he did
so because slavery was legal in Connecticut and not in New
York, which meant that salvage rights to slave property would
not be considered in New York courts.*
Arriving in New London on August 27, Gedney
sent a message to the United States marshal at New Haven,
who went immediately to see United States District Judge Andrew
T. Judson. The two men left that day for New London. Judge
Judson opened a hearing on board the Washington on August
29 in New London harbor with La Amistad only a few yards away,
After Judson examined the ship's papers and heard the testimony
of Ruiz and Montes, along with their request that the ship
and its cargo, including the blacks, be handed over to the
Spanish consul in Boston, Cinque and thirty-eight of his companions
were bound over to the next session of the United States Circuit
Court to be held at Hartford on September 17. The blacks were
to be charged with murder and mutiny. The captives, now forty-four
in number--including Antonio and the children, who were held
as material witnesses--were then placed on a sloop to be transported
to New Haven, where they were to be confined in jail until
the Circuit Court trial. Meanwhile, Gedney and Meade had laid
claim for salvage of La Amistad and its cargo.
The Abolitionists Take Action
At this time, the foreign slave trade in
Spain and its colonies had been outlawed by treaty with Great
Britain in 1817 and by royal decree of the queen in 1838.
Dwight P. Janes, a Connecticut abolitionist, knew this, and
the day following Judson's decision he wrote to Roger Sherman
Baldwin, the distinguished attorney who would later become
the state's governor and a United States Senator. Janes said
that Ruiz had told one person that he had bought the forty-nine
men from a foreign slave trader and then had taken them directly
aboard La Amistad. Janes wrote, "At any rate they cannot
have been at Havana long enough to become subjects of Spain.
None of them can speak anything but their native language
... It seems clear that the schooner was engaged in an unlawful
business." Janes said that abolitionists in New London
had directed him to ask Baldwin to find some African who could
speak the language of the prisoners so that they could tell
their story. Janes also wrote to Josiah Leavitt, editor of
the Emancipator, requesting that Leavitt check in New York
the validity of La Amistad's papers and the Spaniard's legal
title to the Africans as slaves. The next day, Janes again
wrote to both Baldwin and Leavitt, requesting that Leavitt
ask Baldwin to take the case of the blacks.
Lewis Tappan
News of the case spread. By September 4,
New Yorkers Joshua Leavitt, Simeon S. Jocelyn, and Lewis Tappan,
all stalwart abolitionists,* had established themselves as
a committee and were conducting a nationwide appeal for funds
to provide for the legal defense and other needs of the imprisoned
blacks, who, according to the three abolitionists, had been
"piratically kidnapped from their native land, transported
across the seas, and subjected to atrocious cruelties."
The line of defense was thus developed and counsel employed.
Along with Baldwin, Seth P. Staples and Theodore Sedgwick
of New York made a brilliant and distinguished defense team,
but all sensed that the case would be lost if the blacks did
not have the opportunity to tell their story. A desperate
search began. Day after day, persons from near and far who
spoke any African language were taken to see the captives.
The effort was only partially successful. On September 6,
Lewis Tappan brought three native Africans from New York to
see the captives. One of the three, John Ferry, a native of
the Kissi tribe who had spent some time in Mendi country in
Sierra Leone, was able to converse with some of them to a
limited extent. He was able at least to obtain sufficient
facts to corroborate the contention of the abolitionists that
the blacks were native Mendians who had been kidnapped in
Africa and illegally sold into slavery in Havana. The abolitionists
were encouraged.
Spanish Claims
Meanwhile, the Spanish government had made
demands upon the United States concerning La Amistad. On September
6, the Spanish minister, Angel Calderon de la Barca, wrote
to John Forsyth, the secretary of state. Forsyth, a former
congressman and governor of Georgia, had been minister to
Spain from 1819 to 1823. He was a defender of slavery. The
Spanish minister told Forsyth that when La Amistad had been
"rescued" by the Washington the vessel should have
been set free to return to Cuba so that the blacks could have
been "tried by the proper tribunal, and by the violated
laws of the country of which they are subject." Since
this had not been done, he now requested
1st. That the vessel be immediately delivered
up to her owner, together with every article found on board
at the time of her capture by the Washington, without any
payment being exacted on the score of salvage, nor any charges
made other than those specified in the (Pinckney) treaty of
1795, article 1st.
2nd. That it be declared that no tribunal
in the United States has the right to institute proceedings
against, or to impose penalties upon, the subjects of Spain,
for crimes committed on board a Spanish vessel, and in the
waters of the Spanish territory.
3rd. That the negroes be conveyed to Havana,
or be placed at the disposal of the proper authorities in
that part of Her Majesty's dominions, in order to their being
tried by the Spanish laws which they have violated; and that,
in the meantime, they be kept in safe custody, in order to
prevent their evasion.
4th. That if, in consequence of the intervention
of the authorities of Connecticut, there should be any delay
in the desired delivery of the vessel and the slaves, the
owners both of the latter and the former be indemnified for
the injury that may accrue to them.
In support of this request, the Spanish
minister invoked "the law of nations, the stipulations
of existing treaties, and those good feelings so necessary
to the maintenance of the friendly relations that subsist
between the two countries and are so interesting to both."
Specifically, the Spanish appeal cited four articles of Pinckney's
Treaty, which had been reaffirmed by the Adams-Onis Treaty
of 1819. U.S. President Martin Van Buren had no strong views
on the slavery question, but he depended upon the support
of southern Democrat slaveholders and wished to maintain his
position of power. And 1840 was a presidential election year.
Therefore, Secretary Forsyth, on September 11, instructed
United States District Attorney William D. Holabird to "take
care that no proceedings of your Circuit Court, or of any
other judicial tribunal, place the vessel, cargo, or slaves
beyond the control of the Federal Executive." The instructions
came too late, for the case had already been placed on the
docket of the Circuit Court.
Salvage Claims
Before the hearing, another claim had been
levied against La Amistad and its cargo. While on shore before
their capture by the Washington, Cinque and his companions
had met some seamen, including a Captain Henry Green and had
tried to enlist the seamen to take them to their homeland.
These seamen now entered a libel for salvage, holding that
they had aided in the capture of the Africans. When the trial
began on September 17, the issues before the Circuit Court,
in addition to the criminal charges, were the following:
1. Lieutenant Gedney and his crew had libeled
the vessel, the cargo, and Africans for salvage.
2. The libels of Green and his associates.
3. Ruiz and Montes had filed claims to the
Africans as their slaves.
4. The United States Attorney of the District
of Connecticut had filed an information stating that the minister
of Spain had claimed of the government of the United States
that the vessel, cargo, and slaves should be restored under
provisions of the Pinckney Treaty. The information asked that
the court make such an order, or, if it should appear that
the blacks had been brought from Africa, in violation of the
laws of the United States, the court would make an order for
their return to Africa.
5. A claim for Antonio had been filed by
the Spanish consul on behalf of the heirs of Captain Ferrer.
6. Cuban merchants, owners of part of the
cargo of the vessel, had filed claims for their property,
denying salvage and asserting their right to have same delivered
to them under treaty.
7. The blacks, except Antonio, filed an
answer, denying that they were slaves, or the property of
Ruiz or Montes, and denying the right of the court under the
Constitution and laws of the United States to exercise any
jurisdiction over their persons, claiming that they had been
kidnapped in Africa the previous April and carried illegally
to Cuba.
The Courts Rule on Jurisdiction and Bail
When the trial opened, Seth P. Staples asked
for a writ of habeas corpus directing the United States marshal
to release the young girls from jail since they were charged
with no crime. District Attorney Holabird asked the court
to issue a mandate placing the matter in the hands of the
president, who should decide whether the captives ought to
be delivered up to Spain or returned to Africa. Baldwin argued
that the captives were not Spanish subjects, but native Africans
and guilty of no crime: they had acted only in self-defense
against illegal enslavement. Both the Spaniards and the Africans
testified the latter through John Ferry. On the fourth day
of the trial, the presiding judge, Justice Smith Thompson
of the United States Circuit Court, gave his opinion: (1)
neither the United States Circuit Court nor any other American
court had jurisdiction over the charges of murder and mutiny
in this case, since the alleged crimes had been committed
on a Spanish ship and in Spanish waters; (2) the various property
claims that had developed must be decided in a United States
District Court; (3) the writ of habeas corpus for the release
of the girls was denied while the property claims were pending.
Immediately following the adjournment of
the Circuit Court, Judge Judson convened the District Court
in the same room. In his opinion the property claims needed
further investigation and he set the third Tuesday of November
for hearing the case in New Haven. Judson was willing to release
the captives on bail, since they were no longer charged with
a crime, but the amount of the bail must depend on their appraisal
as slaves in the Cuban market. The abolitionists refused to
allow them to be given a monetary value as chattel and they
were returned to jail. However, Judson then directed the United
States marshal to remove them from the New Haven jail and
hold them elsewhere until the trial. Eventually quarters were
found for the males in Westville, and the three girls stayed
in the home of the jailer, Colonel Stanton Pendleton and his
wife.
The Amistad Africans File Counter Claims
In the third week of October, newspaper
headlines announced that Montes and Ruiz had been arrested
in New York City on warrants brought by two of the Africans
charging them with assault, kidnapping, and false imprisonment.
This incident was recognized by all as the work of the abolitionists,
not the Africans. Conservatives were horrified; most people
blamed Lewis Tappan, the real leader of the Amistad Committee
and one of the nations most determined - some said fanatical
- abolitionists.
Bail for the two Spaniards was fixed at
$1,000 each. Montes paid his bail and immediately departed
for Cuba, but Ruiz chose to remain in jail, hoping to create
public sympathy on his behalf, an effort that was to prove
successful. Forsyth instructed the U.S. district attorney
to give the Spaniards all the assistance in his power. The
New York Courier & Enquirer accused the abolitionists
of "making sport of the law and perverting the power
of the courts of justice to factious and fanatical ends."
The New Haven Register said, "After the fatigues and
hardship which they (Montes and Ruiz) endured on their late
cruise in the Atlantic, and the personal violence and abuse
they received from Cinque and his fellows, to be thus shamefully
dealt with ... is abominably wicked."
The Spanish minister lodged a furious protest
with the Department of State and observed that the New York
courts had no jurisdiction over alleged crimes committed in
Cuba. Regardless of how justifiable the charges brought against
the two Spaniards might have been, it appeared that the abolitionists
had made a tactical error. Even moderate antislavery men were
repelled by the action. However, in spite of his comfortable
quarters and the special treatment accorded him, Ruiz apparently
soon tired of his confinement. He posted bail and returned
to Cuba. Neither he nor Montes attended the trial of the case
in District Court.
The Africans Tell Their Story
Ferry had not been too effective in the
trial before the Circuit Court, so the search for an interpreter
continued until one was found who was more confident and had
better knowledge of Mendi, the prisoners' native language.
Josiah Willard Gibbs, professor of theology and sacred literature
at Yale, had taken a great interest in the captives, and after
their return to New Haven, he resumed his efforts to communicate
with them. He learned to count to ten in Mendi. He then went
to New York, where he walked up and down the docks counting
until he found a person who understood him. The man's name
was James Covey and he was a seaman on the British warship
Buzzard, which had been on slave patrol and had put into New
York for supplies. Covey was about twenty years old and a
native Mendian. He had been captured and sold as a child but
before reaching America had been rescued by the British patrol.
Since then he had lived in Freetown, Sierra Leone. He spoke
and thought in English, but he did remember his native tongue.
Professor Gibbs took Covey to New Haven, along with another
sailor he had found who had some knowledge of Mendi. The African
then began to fill in the details of their story, which was
corroborated by Spanish documents and a deposition taken from
Dr. Richard Robert Madden, a member of the Anglo-Spanish Commission
charged with the suppression of the African slave trade.
The Mendians of La Amistad had been among
five or six hundred Africans purchased by a Portuguese slave
trader the previous April from Pedro Blanco, who operated
a notorious slave factory on the island of Lomboko, south
of Freetown. They had been brought from Africa on board the
Portuguese slaver Tecora to Havana, where they were moved
under cover of darkness to a barracoon outside the city and
advertised for sale. Ruiz and Montes purchased the fifty-three
slaves and transferred them to La Amistad before setting sail
from Havana on June 28. The ship also carried a full cargo
of dishes, cloth, jewelry and other luxury items and staples.
The cargo was insured for $40,000. Ruiz insured the forty-nine
men for $20,000, and Montes carried insurance of $1,300 on
the four children. Normally the trip to Guanaja could be made
in less than three days, but the winds were not good and the
schooner had not gone far when, on the third night, the Africans
revolted. As it followed its zigzag course, east by day and
northwest by night, food and water were soon exhausted. Now
and then meager food supplies were acquired, sometimes from
another ship and sometimes from the islands they encountered,
but the Africans soon suffered hunger, exposure, the bloody
flux and other illnesses, resulting in part from having eaten
various medicines from the schooner's cargo.
Dr. Richard Robert Madden, a native of Ireland,
was an unqualified opponent of slavery. His service in Havana
on the mixed commission had been a long, frustrating experience.
He had recently published a pamphlet entitled Regarding the
Slave Trade in Cuba in which he described the widespread and
almost open violations of the treaties and decrees against
the trade. He charged that the violations were sanctioned
by the captain general of Cuba and other government officials,
and that Nicholas Trist, the American consul in Havana, was
heavily involved and reaping tremendous financial benefits
from the traffic. When Madden heard of the case, he volunteered
to come to America and offer testimony. He arrived in New
York in early November and met with Lewis Tappan. He visited
the captives at New Haven and offered the deposition in quarters
before Judge Judson. His conversations with the Mendian interpreter
Covey, plus the information he had been able to ferret out
in Havana, left no doubt in his mind that the captives, under
Spanish law, were bozales, that is, recent arrivals in Cuba
from Africa, who could not have been legally enslaved. Yet
he noted that on the licenses (traspasos) permitting them
to be taken from Havana to Guanaja they were called ladinos,
the designation of slaves who were native Africans but enslaved
in Cuba prior to 1820. He explained that it was common practice,
in complicity with Spanish officials, to describe bozales
as ladinos on such licenses for the simple purpose of foiling
the British and other slave cruisers off the coast. It was,
of course, impossible for the children to have been native
Africans enslaved before 1820. Madden's testimony thus established
the fact that the papers Ruiz and Montes had submitted to
the court in support of their claims of property rights to
the Mendians had been fraudulently obtained.
Further Questions of Jurisdiction
Meanwhile, a question had arisen concerning
the jurisdiction over the case in the United States District
Court of Connecticut. If La Amistad had been taken by the
Washington in the territorial waters of New York, jurisdiction
lay with the District Court for that state. If the schooner
had been taken on the high seas, jurisdiction lay with the
District Court where she had been brought into port. In a
special hearing, before Judge Judson on October 19, it was
determined that when the Washington took charge of La Amistad
the ship had been anchored about a mile from shore without
inlets or bays. Therefore, under admiralty law, she was on
the high seas, and the case was properly being litigated in
the District Court of Connecticut.
Meanwhile, the abolitionists, displeased
with the treatment of the captives, began to make efforts
to provide for their comfort and for their intellectual and
religious instructions. The New York Amistad Committee requested
two New Haven ministers, Leonard Bacon and Henry G. Ludlow,
and Amos Townsend, Jr., also of New Haven, to form a committee
for that purpose. This committee employed George E. Day, a
former professor in the New York Institution for the Deaf
and Dumb, to supervise the instruction of the adult Mendians
by Yale divinity students. A matron was employed.
Before the trial in the District Court,
Secretary of State Forsyth requested an opinion on the case
from United States Attorney General Felix Grundy. Grundy maintained
that the United States Supreme Court in its decision in the
Antelope case in 1825 had established the following points:
1. That, however unjust and unnatural the
slave trade may be, it is not contrary to the laws of nations.
2. That, having been sanctioned by the usage
and consent of almost all civilized nations, it could not
be pronounced illegal, except so far as each nation may have
made it so by its own acts or laws; and these could only operate
upon itself, its own subjects or citizens; and of course,
the trade would remain lawful to those whose Government had
not forbidden it.
3. That the right of bringing in and adjudicating
upon the case of a vessel charged with being engaged in the
slave trade, even where the vessel belongs to a nation which
has prohibited the trade, cannot exist. The courts of no country
execute the penal laws of another, and the course of the American
Government on the subject of visitation and search would decide
any case in which that right had been exercised by an American
cruiser, on the vessel of a foreign nation not violating our
municipal laws, against the captors.
Grundy maintained that the United States
must accept a ship's papers as prima facie evidence and, therefore,
must consider the blacks as the property of the individuals
in whose behalf the Spanish minister had laid a claim. He
further argued that the United States was obligated to return
the ship and all its cargo to Spain under the ninth article
of Pinckney's Treaty, which provided that "all ships
and merchandises of what nature soever, which shall be rescued
out of the hands of pirates or robbers on the high seas, shall
be brought into some port of either State and shall be delivered
to the custody of the officers of that port, in order to be
taken care of, and restored entire to the true proprietor,
as soon as due and sufficient proof shall be made concerning
the property thereof."
Grundy advised that the president issue
an order directed to the marshal holding custody to deliver
the vessel and cargo "to such persons as may be designated
by the Spanish minister to receive them." He stated that
since the Mendians were charged with crimes under Spanish
law, the surrender should be made only to a representative
of the Spanish government so that "they may not escape
punishment," if guilty. He added another reason why the
Mendians should be surrendered only to the Spanish minister
or to persons designated by him: since they maintained they
were not slaves, if delivered to Ruiz and Montes they would
have no opportunity to prove their right to freedom. Forsyth
informed the Spanish minister of Grundy's opinion and stated
that it had been approved by the president's cabinet.
The fate of the Africans rested upon one
issue. Did the court have the right under treaty and international
law to look beyond the ship's papers, the traspasos, or must
they be accepted as prima facie evidence of ownership? The
abolitionists maintained that article nine of Pinckney's Treaty
"could never have meant to have submitted conflicting
rights of property to mere official discretion, but that it
was intended to subject them to the same tribunals which,
in all other cases, guard and maintain our civil rights."
Therefore, the president could not act until the true facts
were substantiated in a court of justice.
The District Court Trial
The case opened in the United States District
Court at Hartford on November 19. The trial had not progressed
far when it was continued to the January term. Baldwin had
asked for a postponement because of the illness of James Covey.
Then, the attorney for the naval officers who were claiming
salvage was called home on an emergency.
During the next weeks, the Spanish minister
pushed his claims and even threatened nullification of the
treaties between the two nations. Forsyth appeared to be weakening.
He told the minister that he was certain the District Court
would find itself incompetent to decide the case and order
the Mendians returned to Cuba. He promised to hold an American
vessel in readiness to transport them to Havana. Forsyth was
also pressuring District Attorney Holabird to make sure that
the case had the desired outcome. On the other hand, the British
government began to pressure Spain to prosecute Montes and
Ruiz for purchasing the Mendians in violation of laws and
treaties.
The hearing resumed in New Haven on January
8. Anchored in New Haven harbor, which was usually closed
at that time of the year, was the United States schooner Grampus,
whose skipper was instructed to hasten the Mendians to Havana
if that should be the decision of the court. Holabird was
instructed by Forsyth, on direction of President Van Buren,
to have this done, if possible, before an appeal could be
made; if the decision was against the Spanish claimants, Holabird
was to appeal the decision immediately.
Judge Judsons Decision
The testimony and submission of other evidence
required six days. On Monday, January 13, Judge Judson rendered
his decision in seven points.
1. The jurisdiction of the court was clear
since the whole affair had occurred on the high seas.
2. Gedney and his crew were entitled to
salvage on the vessel and its cargo to the amount of one-third
of its appraised value, and as soon as this payment was made
the vessel and cargo would be delivered to the Spanish government.
3. Salvage rights on the Africans were denied
since they had no value as property under the laws of Connecticut.
4. Captain Green and his companions were
not entitled to salvage because they had never boarded the
vessel.
5. The slave Antonio, having been born in
Cuba, was to be returned to his rightful owners.
6. The Africans were neither slaves nor
Spanish subjects.
7. They were, therefore, free by the "law
of Spain itself."
He found that the Mendians were bozales.
He said that Pinckneys Treaty must be subject to the
laws of Spain, and the laws of Spain did not hold that bozales
could be enslaved. Therefore, he said, the pass granted for
their transportation to Guanaja "contains on the face
an untruth." The Governor General has not given a pass
for these negroes. And consequently these bozales stand on
the deck of the Amistad without any passo whatever."
He concluded, "Cinqueze and Grabeau shall not sigh for
Africa in vain. Bloody as may be their hands, they shall yet
embrace their kindred. I shall put in form a decree of this
Court, that these Africans, excepting Antonio, be delivered
to the President of the United States to be transported to
Africa, there to be delivered to the Agent appointed to receive
and conduct them home.
Reactions to Judsons Ruling
The instructions from the president of the
United States to the skipper of Grampus did not include compliance
with this unexpected decision, so he hauled anchor and hastily
departed from New Haven. Holabird immediately entered an appeal
to the Circuit Court. Judge Judson's conduct of the trial
was a surprise as much to the abolitionists as to the rejected
claimants, for in the past Judge Judson had demonstrated no
love of blacks. In 1833 for example, he had gained notoriety
as the prosecuting attorney against Prudence Crandall for
admitting blacks to her school in Canterbury, Connecticut.
Furthermore, he had instigated the Connecticut statute under
which he prosecuted Miss Crandall. After his verdict in the
Amistad case, Lewis Tappan wrote,
The judge is certainly entitled to much
credit for the impartiality with which he presided, and for
his opinion and forthcoming decree, in many respects. It must
be acknowledged, however, that his application of the laws
of 1818 to these Africans--the law never having contemplated
such a case --will not give satisfaction to strict constructionists.
The Africans were either slaves or freemen, and it would seem
that consistency required the Judge to decree that they were
freemen, and, as such, entitled to their immediate freedom.
He doubtless acted--if not as a true interpreter of the law--as
he thought would be for the welfare of the Africans. He went
into jail twice to see them, and they expressed to him and
to others, a desire to return to their native land.
The act of 1818, as amended in 1819, under
which Judson had ruled for the return of the Mendians to Africa
by the president, covered only those persons illegally brought
to the United States to be sold as slaves. The Mendians, of
course, had not been destined for sale in the United States,
and Judson's ruling was not well received. Many considered
it a poor reading of the law. The concern of the abolitionists
was not his interpretation of this particular law. The concern
of the abolitionists was not his interpretation of this particular
law. While conceding that the Africans wished to return to
their home, they felt nevertheless that as free persons the
decision should be their own rather than that of the court.
John Quincy Adams Takes the Case
As the controversy over the decision raged,
John Quincy Adams, congressman from Massachusetts, introduced
a resolution to have all the correspondence of the Executive
Department regarding the Amistad case submitted to the House
of Representatives for review. This correspondence, printed
as House Document Number 85, clearly revealed the sympathies
of the Van Buren administration and also showed how severely
relations between the United States and Spain had been strained
by the incident.
When the appeal came before the Circuit
Court in April 1840, Justice Thompson upheld the decision
of the District Court but ruled that since the case had become
a major issue between the United States and Spain its importance
demanded a decision from the United States Supreme Court.
The case was placed on the agenda for the following January.
As the time approached for the Supreme Court hearing, Lewis
Tappan, even though he recognized the brilliant defense led
by Baldwin and his associates, was led to feel that the case
required someone of national renown for its presentation to
the Supreme Court justices, five of whom were Southerners,
including Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, who, in 1857, would
read the infamous Dred Scott decision. Tappan enlisted the
assistance of Ellis Gray Loring, a prominent Massachusetts
attorney. The two men went to Quincy to see John Quincy Adams.
Adams, a friend of liberty and an opponent of slavery, but
no abolitionist, had been outspoken in his sympathy for the
Amistad captives but was not easily convinced to take on the
responsibility. He was too old, he said, and had not argued
a case before the Supreme Court since 1809. But Tappan and
Loring persisted, and he finally consented to serve. Once
committed, he spared no effort.
Arguments before the
United States Supreme Court
For various reasons, the hearing before
the Supreme Court, originally scheduled for January 16,1841,
was delayed until February 20. Henry D. Gilpin, who had succeeded
Grundy as United States attorney general, opened the case
by presenting the papers of La Amistad, which, he said, were
all in order and thus the United States had no authority to
go behind the papers and rule on their validity. He stated
that if the blacks were slaves, they were property, and the
Spanish government had the right to demand that they be returned
to their owners and to Spanish soil for trial for any offenses
they might have committed under Spanish law. He added that
the law in the case so far as American courts were concerned
had been established in the case of the Antelope. He spoke
for two hours.
Adams felt he was not yet prepared to present
his argument, so Baldwin opened for the defense. He contended
that the United States was being used by the Spanish as a
man-stealer to aid in the recovery of the fugitives, who were
not fugitives at all but free men. They had been declared
free men by a United States court and neither Ruiz and Montes
nor the Spanish government had appealed that decision. It
had been appealed only by the government of the United States.
He meticulously covered the details of the case and the facts
that had led Judge Judson to declare the Mendians to be free.
He spoke for four hours.
Adams rose to speak on February 24. He spoke
for four and one-half hours that day and concluded his argument
on March 1 in another four-hour presentation. He opened his
argument by stating that he was speaking in a court of justice,
a point he felt it necessary to make since one branch of the
government, the Executive Department, had shown no concern
for justice in the case but only sympathy for the Spanish
claimants. He reviewed the correspondence between Spanish
diplomats and the secretary of state and criticized Van Buren
for attempting to assume unconstitutional powers in the case
in order to placate the Spanish, including an effort to have
the Africans hastened aboard the Grampus, thereby denying
them the basic right of appeal had the decision of the District
Court been against them. He said, "Had the precedent
once been set and submitted to, of a nameless mass of judicial
prisoners and witnesses, being snatched by Executive grasp
from the protective guardianship of the Supreme Judges of
the land (gubernativamente) at the dictate of a foreign minister,
would it not have disabled forever the effective power of
the Habeas Corpus?" Adams continued,
This review of all the proceedings of the
Executive I have made with utmost pain, because it was necessary
to bring it fully before your Honors, to show that the course
of that department had been dictated, throughout, not by justice
but by sympathy -- and a sympathy the most partial and injust.
And this sympathy prevailed to such a degree, among all the
persons concerned in this business, as to have perverted their
minds with regard to all the most sacred principles of law
and right, on which the liberties of the United States are
founded; and a course was pursued, from the beginning to the
end, which was not only an outrage upon the persons whose
lives and liberties were at stake, but hostile to the power
and independence of the judiciary itself.
Adams observed that the case was not covered
by Pinckney's Treaty, or the Adams-Onis Treaty, which, he
pointed out to the court, he had had a part in making. He
said that article nine of the treaty of 1795 did not include
human beings, since it spoke only of merchandise that must
restored entire -- "A stipulation to restore human beings
entire might suit two nations of cannibals!" Furthermore,
he asked, how could the Mendians be simultaneously "merchandise
rescued out of the hands of pirates and robbers and pirates
or robbers out of whose hand merchandise was rescued?"
Adams then examined point by point the decision in the Antelope
case and observed that the slaves taken from the Antelope
were restored to Spain explicitly because at the time of her
expedition from Havana and capture the Spanish prohibition
against the foreign slave trade had not taken effect. Therefore,
the decision had no bearing on the case of La Amistad. Gilpin
closed with a three-hour argument. The presentations of the
attorneys in the case thus totaled over seventeen hours.
The Supreme Courts Decision
Adams had hoped that there would come some
censure by the Court of the conduct of the case by the Executive
Department, but this was not forthcoming. The decision rested
primarily on the arguments Baldwin had used all along. Justice
Joseph Story of Massachusetts read the decision, which declared
that article nine of Pinckney's Treaty did not apply because
the Africans had never been the legal property of Montes and
Ruiz. Neither were they pirates or robbers, but kidnapped
Africans "who by the laws of Spain itself were entitled
to their freedom.' The license issued bearing Spanish names
of the so-called ladinos was no evidence since it was clearly
fraudulent. To Gilpin's argument that the ship's papers must
be accepted as prima facie evidence, the Court responded that
the language of Pinckney's Treaty requires the proprietor
"to make due and sufficient proof of his property --
and that proof cannot be considered due or sufficient which
is stained with fraud." "Fraud will vitiate any,
even the most solemn transactions; and any asserted title
founded upon it, is utterly void." The crew of the Washington
had performed a valuable service and were entitled to salvage.
However, when La Amistad came to Long Island, she was in the
possession of the Africans, who obviously had not come to
sell themselves as slaves. Consequently, they were not covered
by the law of 1818 and should not be returned to Africa by
the president. They were entitled to their liberty like any
other freeborn human beings and were to be discharged at once,
free to go wherever they wished. Lewis Tappan and Roger Sherman
Baldwin left Washington to carry the glad tidings to the Mendians
at Westville but as matters developed they had already heard
the news from Amos Townsend and Henry Ludlow. They received
it with joy, but there had been court decisions before, and
they could not understand the delays of American justice.
They did not know if this decision would be any more effective
than the earlier ones had been.
The Way Home
It was nearly two years since they had been
kidnapped from their homes. It would be many months before
they would return. What had happened to these unfortunate
people during this time? Seventeen of them had lost their
lives since being placed aboard La Amistad. Before they would
leave America, another of their number would die in what was
believed to be a suicide, because of longing for his homeland
and the belief that in death his spirit would be united with
his people.
The United States government had provided
for their basic needs until the Supreme Court decision, but
now all responsibility for the care and protection of the
Africans fell to the Amistad Committee. A problem developed
immediately over the custody of the three girls, who were
living with Colonel and Mrs. Pendleton, where, Pendleton maintained,
they preferred to remain. He refused to comply with an order
of the probate court that awarded guardianship to Amos Townsend.
Baldwin went to court on Townsend's behalf asking for a writ
of habeas corpus. This hearing lasted three days and the decision
was made in Townsend's favor. The girls then joined the other
Meridians in Farmington on the farm of the abolitionist A.F.
Williams. Instruction in English and religion continued under
the supervision of George E. Day.
Until the first hearing in the Circuit Court,
the Mendians had been confined in a New Haven jail, where
they had been exhibited by the jailer at the price of a New
York shilling (12 1/2 cents) a view. The abolitionists had
protested the circus atmosphere that surrounded them but had
been able to do little about improving conditions until after
the Circuit Court's decision and Judge Judson's orders that
they no longer be treated as criminals. Now that they were
free and the Amistad Committee had to provide for their physical
needs as well as raise money to return them to their homeland,
the abolitionists became the exhibitors. They were taken from
one community to another, where they appeared at churches
and public meetings, demonstrating their skills in reading
and writing English and telling their story to sympathetic
audiences. The purpose was to raise funds for transporting
them back to Africa and beginning a Christian mission among
the Mendi people.
During the long months of their captivity,
the Africans became well known to large segments of the American
people, particularly to abolitionist and religious communities,
and they became recognizable to some individuals with distinct
personalities. A Boston artist, A. Hewins, portrayed twenty-six
of them in a large (135 square feet) painting entitled The
Massacre. Although it did not portray the Africans in a manner
favorable to them or the abolitionist cause, the painting
received favorable reviews and was exhibited in New Haven
and Hartford. Engravings of it were sold as souvenirs. At
the Bowery Theater in New York, The Black Schooner, or, The
Pirate Slaver Amistad had a long, successful run, bringing
in $1,650 in ticket sales, a considerable box office for the
day. In 1840, John W. Barber published A History of the Amistad
Captives: Being a Circumstantial Account of the Capture of
the Spanish Schooner Amistad by the Africans on Board; Their
Voyages, and Culture ... With Biographical Sketches of Each
... Also, An Account of the Trials. This account contained
profiles of each taken by a pentagraph from wax figures that
were being exhibited throughout the country by Pendleton and
Curtiss. According to Barber, the profiles were "striking
and accurate likenesses of the Africans, taken from life by
Mr. Moulthrop. " In a day when phrenology was widely
respected and accepted as a science, a phrenologist by the
name of Fletcher examined the Mendians, and his findings were
published in many newspapers. He also used them as the topic
for a lecture tour. Two paintings, an oil portrait of Cinque
by Nathaniel Jocelyn and a watercolor of La Amistad, have
been preserved as valuable works of art by the New Haven Colony
Historical Society.
Eventually the Amistad Committee raised
sufficient funds to transport the thirty-five surviving Mendians
back to their homeland. Missionaries had been recruited, including
two blacks. On November 27,1841, the party embarked in the
Gentleman. Seven weeks later they reached Freetown in Sierra
Leone. Kinna, who had been one of the better students, wrote
Louis Tappan, "We have reached Sierra Leone and one little
while after we go to Mendi and we land very safely. Oh dear
friend, pray to God ... We will pray for you ... We have been
on great water. Not any danger fell upon us. Oh, no ... Our
blessed saviour Christ have done wonderous works. Dear Mr.
Tappan, how I feel for these wonderous things. I pray Jesus
will hear you; if I never see you in this world, we shall
meet in heaven."
Before the missionary party reached Mendi
country, most of the Africans, including Kinna, had deserted.
He, along with some others, would come in and out of the mission,
trying to adjust to ties to two cultures. Several remained
with the mission for the rest of their lives. One of the girls,
Sarah Margru, later returned to Oberlin for an education,
and then married and taught at the mission. Cinque deserted,
was seen from time to time, and returned to die at the mission
in 1879. It was said that he died a Christian.
Historical Impact of the Amistad Case
Too much should not be made of the court's
decision in the Amistad case. While thirty-six Africans regained
their freedom, the decision was by no means an attack on the
institution of slavery in the United States or abroad. On
the one hand, Justice Story declared that the Africans had
exercised the "ultimate right of all human beings in
extreme cases to resist oppression, and to apply force against
ruinous injustice." In other words, free men have a natural
right to resist enslavement. On the other hand, he stated
that the blacks, had they been legally recognized as slaves
of Spanish citizens, would have been deemed property within
the meaning of the treaty of 1795 and restored to the claimants.
Antonio was so restored.* Thus the Court recognized that the
natural right to freedom could be taken away by positive law.
Controversy about La Amistad did not end
with the Supreme Court decision or the return of the Africans
to Sierra Leone. Spain continued to press claims for indemnity
in Madrid and Washington. Disregarding the decision of the
Court, southerners on several occasions introduced resolutions
in both the Senate and House of Representatives calling for
votes to pay indemnity. President James K. Polk and James
Buchanan, both as Polk's secretary of state and later as president,
supported Spain's claims. The charge that Van Buren conspired
with Spain against the Africans resurfaced in the election
of 1848 when he was the candidate of the Free-Soil Party.
Leading spokesmen against the Spanish claims in the House
of Representatives were Joshua Giddings and John Quincy Adams
until his death in 1848. In the Senate, John P. Hale, Salmon
P. Chase, William Fessenden, and William H. Seward fought
efforts to vote indemnity.
The Founding of
the American Missionary Association
The Civil War and the death of slavery closed the Amistad
case as an issue in relations between Spain and the United
States. There was, however, a lasting legacy. Evangelical
abolitionists felt an obligation to support the Mendi Mission.
The "Fugitive Blacksmith," James W.C. Pennington,
pastor of the First Colored Congregational Church in Hartford,
Connecticut, took the lead in the formation of the Union Missionary
Society in 1841, which soon absorbed the Amistad Committee.
James W.C. Pennington
The Union Missionary Society joined with
others in 1846 to form the American Missionary Association
(AMA). The AMA assumed support of the Mendi Mission and became
the largest and best organized abolitionist society in America
in the fifteen years preceding the Civil War. In 1840, the
members of the American Antislavery Society had split over
questions of political action, women's rights, the position
of American churches on the slavery issue, and the nature
of the United States government. Thereafter, the American
Antislavery Society was only a shell of what it had been.
Its opponents, under the leadership of Lewis Tappan, established
the American and Foreign Antislavery Society, but it never
became an effective voice for the cause of abolitionism. The
AMA, in addition to supporting the Mendi and other foreign
missions, established missions among Native Americans, fugitive
slaves in Canada, Chinese immigrants in California, and other
immigrant groups. It also planted hundreds of antislavery
churches in the North and border states of the South. Its
monthly magazine and other publications and the one hundred
or so missionary agents it had each year preaching the abolitionist
doctrine across the United States were powerful forces for
the cause.
In the very first year of the Civil War,
the AMA began education work among the Freedmen, establishing
hundreds of schools throughout the South during the war and
the Reconstruction period. Some of these were later given
over to public support or abandoned because of decreasing
funds as Americans became tired of the "Negro problem."
However, the association continued into the mid-twentieth
century to support both elementary and secondary schools for
blacks wherever there was a need and the means could be found.
Along the way, such important institutions as Hampton University,
Atlanta University, Talladega College, Fisk University, LeMoyne-Owen
College, Huston-Tillotson College and Berea College were founded.
The AMA still contributes today to the support of six of these
schools and also supports the school of religion at Howard
University.
While the AMA activities have been most
extensive among blacks, the association has also been concerned
with the plight of other minorities and impoverished people.
It has supported education and ministries among Natives, Asian-Americans,
Chicanos, Puerto Ricans, Eskimos, and Appalachian whites.
In 1942, the AMA, hoping to prevent race riots like those
that had occurred following World War 1, established a Race
Relations Department on the campus of Fisk University. For
twenty-six years, through research, education, and conferences,
the Race Relations Department was on the cutting edge of the
civil rights movement in the United States. Many activists
of the 1960s had been enrolled in one or more of its annual
Institutes on Race Relations. At one of the AMAs former
schools, Dorchester Academy in Liberty County, Georgia, the
Voters Education Project, headed by the Congregational minister
and former mayor of Atlanta, Andrew Young, was established
in the 1960s. The most recent institution established by the
AMA is the Amistad Research Center. An archives and research
library founded in 1966, Amistad holds over five thousand
linear feet of original manuscripts plus books, microfilm,
serials, audio and videotapes and films that document the
experience of Americas ethnic minorities and civil rights
in the United States. These resources provide the information
that is enabling scholars from across the United States and
abroad to reinterpret the American experience.
Footnotes
This article is based on records in the
Amistad Research Center, principally the Archives of the American
Missionary Association, which include the records of the Amistad
Committee and the Mendi Mission.
*A Connecticut law of 1784 provided that
no Negro or mulatto born after March 1, 1784, should be held
a slave after reaching the age of twenty-five. The holding
of slaves was not forbidden until 1848, when anyone who would
have been a slave would have been sixty-four years of age
or older. A New York law of 1799 provided that all children
born to slaves after July 4,1799,were to be freed at the age
of twenty-eight for males and twenty-five for females. Thus,
on July 4,1827, ten thousand slaves were freed in New York
without compensation.
*Joshua Leavitt was a lawyer and Congregational
minister, a graduate of Yale College and Yale Divinity School.
He was one of the founders of the Liberty party in 1840. Simeon
S. Jocelyn, born in New Haven, was a brother of the artist
Nathaniel Jocelyn. His plan to establish a college for blacks
in New Haven in 1831 was killed by popular opposition. Jocelyn
was the founder and first pastor of a black Congregational
Church in New Haven, which is today Dixwell Avenue United
Church of Christ. He became the secretary for home missions
of the American Missionary Association. Lewis Tappan, a wealthy
New York merchant, was the founder of the Journal of Commerce
and the mercantile agency that is known today as Dun &
Bradstreet. He devoted his fortune and great energy to philanthropic
causes, especially abolitionism. He served as unpaid treasurer
of the American Missionary Association, to which he was also
a liberal financial contributor.
*Although Antonio had once said in
court that he wanted to return to Cuba, shortly after the
Supreme Court decision he disappeared, and it was believed
the abolitionists had spirited him away to freedom in Canada.
He was working in Montreal in late April 1840.
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