Marysville Appeal-Democrat

TODAY IN HISTORY

- Appeal Staff Report

Survivors of Amistad mutiny released

The Supreme Court issued a ruling on March 9, 1841, freeing the remaining 35 survivors of the Amistad mutiny. Although seven of the nine justices on the court hailed from Southern states, only one dissented from

Justice Joseph Story’s majority opinion. Private donations ensured the Africans’ safe return to Sierra Leone in January 1842.

The events leading up to the decision began on July 2, 1839, when Joseph Cinqué led 52 fellow captive Africans, recently abducted from the British protectora­te of Sierra Leone by Portuguese slave traders, in a revolt aboard the Spanish schooner Amistad. The ship’s navigator, who was spared in order to direct the ship back to western Africa, managed, instead, to steer it northward. When the Amistad was discovered off the coast of Long Island, New York, it was hauled into New London, Connecticu­t by the U.S. Navy.

President Martin Van Buren, guided in part by his desire to woo pro-slavery votes in his upcoming bid for reelection, wanted the prisoners returned to Spanish authoritie­s in Cuba to stand trial for mutiny. A Connecticu­t judge, however, issued a ruling recognizin­g the defendants’ rights as free citizens and ordering the U.S. government to escort them back to Africa.

The U.S. government eventually appealed the case to the Supreme Court. Former president John Quincy Adams, who represente­d the Amistad Africans in the Supreme Court case, argued in his defense that it was the illegally enslaved Africans, rather than the Cubans, who “were entitled to all the kindness and good offices due from a humane and Christian nation.” Adams’s victory in the Amistad case was a significan­t success for the abolition movement.

The Amistad survivors were aided, in their defense, by the American Missionary Associatio­n, an organizati­on affiliated with the effort to colonize freed slaves overseas.

Source: Library of Congress

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