Baltimore Sun Sunday

Ala. to exhibit artifacts from last slave ship

-

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The state of Alabama will provide artifacts from the last slave ship to dock in the United States for a special public exhibition later this year, officials have announced.

The Alabama Historical Commission said an exhibit named for the slave ship Clotilda is set to open this fall in Mobile, where the schooner arrived with African captives in 1860.

The artifacts include pieces of wood and metal taken from a muddy river bottom where the ship was discovered, said Jim Delgado, a maritime archaeolog­ist who helped identify the wreck.

The History Museum of Mobile will add pieces from its own collection to help tell the story of the port’s maritime history, the commission said.

“Through this exhibit and collaborat­ive effort, everyone will have the opportunit­y to experience the moving story of the Clotilda and its survivors,” said Lisa Demetropou­los

Jones, executive director of the state agency.

To settle a bet between wealthy white men on whether slaves could be imported into the South in defiance of a federal ban, the wooden ship illegally transporte­d 110 people from West Africa to Alabama, where they became slaves.

The freed people later settled in a community called Africatown, which still exists and will be the site of the exhibition.

The U.S. banned the importatio­n of slaves in 1808, but smugglers kept traveling the Atlantic with wooden ships full of people in chains. Southern plantation owners demanded workers for their cotton fields.

Remains of the Clotilda were discovered in late 2018 near an island where the ship was believed to have been scuttled and burned north of downtown Mobile shortly after unloading the captives.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States