Baltimore Sun

Ship may make case for reparation­s

Discovery of last slave ship in Ala. could spur debate

- By Jay Reeves

MOBILE, Ala. — Alabama steamship owner Timothy Meaher financed the last slave vessel that brought African captives to the United States, and he came out of the Civil War a wealthy man.

His descendant­s, with land worth millions, are still part of Mobile society’s upper crust.

The people whom Meaher enslaved, however, emerged from the war with freedom but little else. Census forms that documented Meaher’s postwar riches list them as laborers, housewives and farmers with nothing of value. Many of their descendant­s today hold working-class jobs.

Now, the history of Meaher and the slave ship Clotilda may offer one of the more clear-cut cases for slavery reparation­s, with identifiab­le perpetrato­rs and victims.

While no formal push for reparation­s has begun, the subject has been bubbling up quietly among community members since earlier this year, when experts said they found the wreckage of the Clotilda in muddy waters near Mobile. Some say too many years have passed for reparation­s; others say the discovery of the ship makes the timing perfect.

Many Clotilda descendant­s say reconcilia­tion with the Meahers would suffice, perhaps a chance to discuss an intertwine­d history. Others hope the family helps with ambitious plans to transform a downtrodde­n community into a tourist attraction. Some want cash; some want nothing.

Reparation­s debates usually involve redress for the multitude of descendant­s from about 4 million black people who were enslaved in the United States. But with Congress considerin­g whether to create a reparation­s study commission, what might a single instance of reparation­s look like in the city where this nation’s Atlantic slave trade finally ended?

Pat Frazier, a descendant of Meaher slave James Dennison, isn’t sure. But she’s unhappy about the lack of justice and what many consider the deafening silence of the Meaher family.

“I’ve never known them to just own up to what happened,” said Frazier, 68.

In Mobile, like many Southern communitie­s, descendant­s of slave owners and enslaved people are often neighbors, though in vastly different circumstan­ces.

Originally from Maine, Meaher moved South and got rich off steamboats and a sawmill. He purchased the schooner Clotilda for a reported $35,000 and financed a slave expedition to West Africa the year before the war began.

The internatio­nal slave trade was already outlawed, but Meaher wagered he could import slaves in defiance of the ban. Arrested after the ship carrying about 110 captives arrived and was scuttled in Mobile in 1860, he was cleared of charges by a judge, according to “Dreams of Africa in Alabama,” a book by Sylviane A. Diouf.

Historical accounts say Meaher refused to provide land after the war to the freed Africans, who then scraped together money to purchase property. They founded a community called “Africatown USA,” where some of the westAfrica­n ways of the onceenslav­ed people were preserved. Its remnants still exist.

Meaher listed assets including $20,000 in land and personal property in the 1870 Census. Court records from 2012 say the Meaher family real estate company held $35 million in assets including 22,000 acres of land, timber plus rental income and cash. Tax records show Meaher relatives remain large landowners, with $20 million in property through the corporatio­n.

One of Timothy Meaher’s distant granddaugh­ters was feted as the white queen of the city’s racially segregated Mardi Gras in 2007. The black queen that year was a descendant of one of the Clotilda Africans.

The Mobile area features Meaher State Park and Meaher Avenue near Africatown, and the Meaher family has signs throughout the area offering land for lease. A red concrete marker bearing the family’s name stands in the Tensaw Delta near the spot where the Clotilda’s remains were found last year.

There’s no consensus on what reparation­s might include for Clotilda descendant­s.

Joycelyn Davis, who helped organize t he Clotilda Descendant­s Associatio­n, said conversati­on would be a good start. “If we could just sit down at the table and just talk that would be a powerful thing,” she said.

Bill Green, a descendant of Clotilda captive Ossa Keeby, said people are due more than talk. He called reparation­s an “excellent idea.” If not personal payments to Clotilda descendant­s, they could include contributi­ons to some group to help descendant­s, perhaps to revitalize Africatown parks, a memorial, a Clotilda replica, housing and businesses.

“I think it would be equitable for them to make some payment to the descendant­s of the Clotilda cargo. What is right? I think we’re in a prime position to have our court system decide something,” said Green, of Texas.

Diouf, who has closely studied the Clotilda and Africatown, said the Meaher clan inherited generation­al wealth while Timothy Meaher’s captives scraped by.

The National African American Reparation­s Commission, formed in 2015, is seeking an apology for slavery plus money for business developmen­t, health, education, historic preservati­on, housing, criminal justice reform and more.

The Meahers aren’t saying what if anything they want to do, and have made no public comment about the Clotilda discovery.

“The Meahers aren’t going to surface, particular­ly now that the Clotilda has been found,” said Eric Finley, who operates an African American heritage tour in Mobile.

 ?? KEVIN MCGILL/AP ?? A mural along Africatown Boulevard in Mobile, Alabama, depicts Clotilda, the last ship that brought slaves to the U.S.
KEVIN MCGILL/AP A mural along Africatown Boulevard in Mobile, Alabama, depicts Clotilda, the last ship that brought slaves to the U.S.
 ?? JAY REEVES/AP ?? The tomb of Timothy Meaher, who organized and financed
the last U.S. slave voyage to Africa using the schooner
Clotilda, is shown in Mobile, Alabama.
JAY REEVES/AP The tomb of Timothy Meaher, who organized and financed the last U.S. slave voyage to Africa using the schooner Clotilda, is shown in Mobile, Alabama.

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