The port city of New
Orleans, Louisiana was a vibrant slave destination since the early 1700s. Slavery in
Louisiana was first established by the French, followed by the Spanish and
English. The development of the Cotton Gin in 1793 and the Louisiana
Purchase by the United States in 1803 stimulated the agricultural slave
economy. The distance between Pike County, Mississippi to the city of New
Orleans is slightly over a hundred miles. Because of the close
geographic proximity, my assumption was most of my enslaved ancestors from
Africa arrived in New Orleans and then were transported to Mississippi. The
assumption may only be partially true.
The Act of
Prohibiting Importation of Slaves a United
States federal law and Abolition of The Slave Trade Act passed
by the British Parliament banned the import of slaves in the British
Empire in 1807. This stimulated the domestic slave trade. The enslaved
were also illegally imported into the United States from geographic areas that
were not part of the United States after 1807.
The ship Amistad is
a famous example of the illegal slave trade. The Portuguese ship Amistad in
1839 which held 53 African enslaved people initial route was Havana, Cuba. The
Africans seized the ship and killed the captain and cook and tried to return to
Africa. The ship was seized in New York and all on board were taken to
Connecticut. The plantation owners were freed and the Africans were charged
with murder. The murder charges were later dismissed. The plantation owners, the
Spanish government and the captain of the ship Washington claimed the African
people as property. The case was eventually adjudicated by the United States
Supreme Court in 1841 with the Africans represented by former President John Q.
Adams. The Supreme Court decided in favor of the Africans and they were
released. Thirty-four Africans survived and with the financial help of
abolitionists, they returned to Africa.
It is from this historical background, that I have continued
to look for my enslaved ancestors from the early transport before 1807 and the
domestic slave trade. From the domestic slave trade, I have received from a
cousin the documentation of the enslavement of Mary Johnson.
|
|