To craft rugged luxury itineraries for open minded explorers seeking faraway and bespoke experiences
As we come to the end of Black-History month, we honor the victims to the tragedy of slavery. Schooners played a large role in both the trade movement and battling of slavery, as the course of their use for the US government lasted until the industrial revolution was booming.
177 years ago, in February of 1839, slave hunters from Portugal abducted 53 documented Africans from Sierra Leone to be shipped to Havana, then a center for the slave trade. This transaction was breaking all treaties that had been formed. On July 1st, after reaching Cuba and being purchased by two Spanish Planters, the group of abducted Africans seized control of the new ship they were on, the Schooner Amistad, killing the captain and the cook, and ordering the planters to sail them back to their home in Africa. In August, the ship was seized by U.S. brigantine Washington, and while the planters were freed, the Africans were held in prison on account of murder.
President Van Buren was in favor of extraditing the Africans back to Cuba, and the U.S. government had the Alligator Class Schooner Grampus waiting in New Haven Harbour, so that if the government ruled in favor of the Spanish “slave owners” the Grampus could extradite them to Cuba before they could file an appeal.
Fortunately the US government, with pressure from the abolitionist North, ruled within favor of the Africans, stating they were illegally held as slaves within federal jurisdiction. The Amistad case then went to the supreme court in 1841 and finally those withheld regained their Freedom. 35 returned to their homeland, the others had died at sea or awaiting trial.
Other facts about Alligator Class Schooners:
The Boho Traveller is independently affiliated with Explorateur Travel, a Virtuoso agency.
Brand and Website design by Sonrisa Studio