The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Officials: Last slave ship from Africa ID’d on Alabama coast

- By Jay Reeves

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. >> Researcher­s working in the murky waters of the northern Gulf Coast have located the wreck of the last ship known to bring enslaved people from Africa to the United States, historical officials said Wednesday.

Remains of the Gulf schooner Clotilda were identified and verified near Mobile after months of assessment, a statement by the Alabama Historical Commission said.

“The discovery of the Clotilda is an extraordin­ary archaeolog­ical find,” said Lisa Demetropou­los Jones, executive director of the commission. She said the ship’s journey “represente­d one of the darkest eras of modern history,” and the wreck provides “tangible evidence of slavery.”

In 1860, the wooden ship illegally transporte­d 110 people from what is now the west African nation of Benin to Mobile, Alabama. The Clotilda was then taken into delta waters north of the port and burned to avoid detection.

The captives were later freed and settled a community that’s still called Africatown USA, but no one knew the location of the Clotilda.

A Mobile-area news reporter discovered wooden remains of what was initially suspected to be the Clotilda, but the wreck turned out to be that of another ship. That publicity helped spark a renewed search last year that found another wreck now identified as the slave ship.

Officials didn’t say how much of the ship remains. But the dimensions and constructi­on of the wreck match those of the Clotilda, the commission said, as do building materials including locally sourced lumber and metal pieces made from pig iron. There are also signs of fire.

“We are cautious about placing names on shipwrecks that no longer bear a name or something like a bell with the ship’s name on it,” maritime archaeolog­ist James Delgado said in a statement. “But the physical and forensic evidence powerfully suggests that this is?Clotilda.”

Officials said they are working on a plan to preserve the site where the ship was located.

The United States 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.

With Southern resentment of federal control at a fever pitch, Alabama plantation owner Timothy Meaher made a bet that he could bring a shipload of Africans across the ocean, historian Natalie S. Robertson has said. The schooner Clotilda sailed from Mobile to western Africa, where it picked up captives and returned them to Alabama, evading authoritie­s during a tortuous voyage.

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