The
Amistad Affair
A
second legal cause celebre that took place in Connecticut
was the Amistad case. Fifty-four Africans being transported
on the Spanish schooner Amistad mutinied, killed some of
the crew, and ended on Long Island Sound. The international legal
questions involved were complicated, and the case was heard in
two different federal courts. John Quincy Adams was attorney for
the Africans before the United States Supreme Court in 1841. The
Amistad captives, who had been held in loose arrest in
Connecticut, were freed, and some stayed on for schooling.
Since
the production of the Speilberg film and a documentary by Karyl
K. Evans, the Amistad affair has generated a huge literature --
much of it hogwash. You can get a good survey of the scholarly
literature from Howard Jones, et al., in a collection of articles
and responses in the Journal of American History. 87 (December
2000). Jones is the author of the best accepted account of the
mutiny. It is: Jones, Howard, Mutiny on the Amistad: The Saga
of a Slave Revolt and Its Impact on American Abolition, Law, and
Diplomacy. Oxford, 1987. In the JAH, Jones' piece is: "Cinque
of the Amistad a Slave Trader? Perpetuating a Myth,"
Journal of American History 87 (December 2000) 3:923-50. An essay
by Howard Jones quite successfully undermines the generally accepted
claim that Cinque became a slave trader on his return to Africa.
A great case study of carelessness on the part of even the most
distinguished historians like S.E. Morrison and C. van Woodward
who relied on a novel for their information. Three accompanying
short essays from historians who helped perpetuate the canard.
See also: "Amistad: Controversy about the Film and
Its Use," Special Section in History Teacher 31 (May,
1998) 369-402.
Baldwin,
Simeon E. “The Captives of the Amistad.” Papers of the
NHCHS 4(1888):331-70. Long a standard account, this is based on
Barber, below, and an excellent account in Henry Wilson, Vol.
1 of The Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America. (Boston:
J. R. Osgood, 1872.) Baldwin had access to some people with ancient
recollections of the episode.
Barber,
John W. A History of the Amistad Captives. New Haven: E.,
L. and W., 1840. A sympathetic contemporary account.
Cable,
Mary. Black Odyssey. New York: Viking, 1971. A popular
but serious account for the modern, post-black-consciousness
reader. An appendix has a phrenological study of the captives
that appeared originally in Barber’s account of 1840.
Cook,
Fred J. “The Slave Ship Rebellion.” American Heritage 8(February,
1957)2:61-64. A popular account focusing on Cinque', the leader
of the mutiny. Includes a large color portrait of him.
Kromer,
Helen. The “Amistad” Revolt, 1839: The Slave Uprising Aboard
the Spanish Schooner. New York: Franklin Watts, 1973. Maps.
Junior-high level.
Lewis,
Alonzo N. “Recollections of the Amistad Slave Case: ... Several
Hitherto unknown Aspects of the Case Told.” Connecticut Magazine
11(1807)1:125-38. The author when a young boy saw the Mendi Africans.
Some eye-witness material written many years after the event.
Norton,
Charles Ledyard. “Cinquez—Black Prince.” Farmington Magazine
1 (February, 1901). About the leader of the Amistad captives.
Owens,
William A. Slave Mutiny: The Revolt on the Schooner “Amistad.”
New York: John Day, 1953. This work, or a version
of it, was published also as Black Mutiny: The Revolt on the
Schooner “Amistad.” Boston: Pilgrim Press, 1968. The author
rejects “a completely factual treatment” for a “dramatic telling.”
(p. 311) No citations, but Owens’ ms. notes are at the NHCHS.
Rukeyser,
Muriel. Willard Gibbs. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday Doran,
1942. A biography of one of the New Haven citizens most
involved; a full chapter is devoted to the Amistad case.
Walton,
Perry. “The Mysterious Case of the Long, Low, Black Schooner.”
New England Quarterly 6(June, 1933)3:353-61. Taken from
newspaper accounts of the ship’s activities before it was captured
and immediately afterward. Good detail, but reported in other
accounts.
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