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Introduction
The Last Slave Ships
Key West was
never a slave trading port - a place where people were imported
to be bought and sold - but because of its unusual geography it
was often affected by the Transatlantic Slave Trade. A remote
outpost, poised along the maritime highway of the Gulf Stream
current and very close to the plantations of Cuba, the small
island saw a number of slave ships sail through, wreck in, or be
forcibly brought to her waters.
In the Spring
of 1860, three slave ships intercepted by the US Navy in its
efforts to stop the illegal trade in humans, were brought to Key
West. These American-owned ships were bound for Cuba, where
their human cargo was to be sold to the thriving sugar
plantations. A total of 1,432 Africans arrived from these ships,
and they came with nothing. The 3,000 citizens of the island,
led by United States Marshal Fernando Moreno, came together and
built housing, donated clothing, and provided food and medical
attention for them during their stay.
For eighty-five
days the newly liberated refugees found shelter at Key West. But
because of the horrific conditions they suffered aboard the
slave ships, many of the Africans were quite ill, and 295 of
them died. They were buried in shallow sand graves on the
southern shore of the island.
Eventually it
was decided they would be sent to Liberia, a country on the West
African coast established as a home for liberated American
slaves. Ships were chartered by the United States through the
American Colonization Society for yet another voyage across the
Atlantic. Three months after they had first arrived, all the
Africans left Key West and were on their way to a new life.
This remarkable
incident speaks to the pivotal nature of the times. Slavery was
the leading topic of political discussion, and its polarizing
effects were about to tear the United States in two. The
confused character of the American, and even global, mindset is
expressed in so many ways when looking at the microcosm of
events that occurred here in 1860. A few corrupt African kings
resisted development of stable industries in favor of quick
profit, and continued to sell their rivals to American ships,
while hastening their own economic demise. The American military
was combating the maritime traffic in slaves, while millions
were still held in bondage on U.S. soil. As for the African
refugees, there was never a question of their plight, or their
freedom, yet no one suggested they stay. At Key West, men who
were slave owners, and soon to be supporters of the Confederacy,
devoted many of their personal resources to ensure the welfare
of the Africans, and some, without irony, employed their own
slaves to give them aid. In the courts, only the ships were
found guilty of participation in the slave trade, not the crews.
And at one point, the U.S. Marshal was compelled to consider the
use of deadly force against a group intending to steal the
Africans – nearly bringing Americans to blows with Americans
in what could have easily been the catalyst of the Civil War.
And across the Atlantic, the development and support of what was
supposed to be an African “paradise” was only sowing the
seeds of misery.
Despite all the
missteps and contradictions, this was adding up to a tremendous
shift in the social and political mindset from even a few years
before. As difficult and messy as abolition might be, slavery,
and the support for it, was rapidly collapsing. With the
interrupted missions of the Wildfire, the William
and the Bogota – among the last slave ships to touch on
American shores – an institution nearly four centuries old was
coming to a close.
View
Last Slave Ships Video
Listen
to The Florida Humanities Council's Radio Story on
The Last Slave Ships Exhibition
(click on Cut 4: The Last
Slavers)
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