9 March 1841 A.D. SCOTUS Ruling in Amistad Case: John Quincy Adams on Defense Team
9 March 1841 A.D. SCOTUS Ruling in Amistad Case: John Quincy Adams on
Defense Team
Editors. “Supreme Court rules on Amistad mutiny.” History Channel. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/supreme-court-rules-on-amistad-mutiny. Accessed 6 Mar
2015.
At the end of a historic case, the U.S. Supreme
Court rules, with only one dissent, that the African slaves who seized control
of the Amistad slave ship had been illegally forced into slavery, and
thus are free under American law.
In 1807, the U.S. Congress joined with Great
Britain in abolishing the African slave trade, although the trading of slaves
within the U.S. was not prohibited. Despite the international ban on the
importation of African slaves, Cuba continued to transport captive Africans to
its sugar plantations until the 1860s, and Brazil to its coffee plantations
until the 1850s.
On June 28, 1839, 53 slaves recently captured in
Africa left Havana, Cuba, aboard the Amistad schooner for a life of
slavery on a sugar plantation at Puerto Principe, Cuba. Three days later,
Sengbe Pieh, a Membe African known as Cinque, freed himself and the other
slaves and planned a mutiny. Early in the morning of July 2, in the midst of a
storm, the Africans rose up against their captors and, using sugar-cane knives
found in the hold, killed the captain of the vessel and a crewmember. Two other
crewmembers were either thrown overboard or escaped, and Jose Ruiz and Pedro
Montes, the two Cubans who had purchased the slaves, were captured. Cinque
ordered the Cubans to sail the Amistad east back to Africa. During the
day, Ruiz and Montes complied, but at night they would turn the vessel in a
northerly direction, toward U.S. waters. After almost nearly two difficult
months at sea, during which time more than a dozen Africans perished, what
became known as the “black schooner” was first spotted by American vessels.
On August 26, the USS Washington, a U.S.
Navy brig, seized the Amistad off the coast of Long Island and escorted
it to New London, Connecticut. Ruiz and Montes were freed, and the Africans
were imprisoned pending an investigation of the Amistad revolt. The two
Cubans demanded the return of their supposedly Cuban-born slaves, while the
Spanish government called for the Africans’ extradition to Cuba to stand trial
for piracy and murder. In opposition to both groups, American abolitionists
advocated the return of the illegally bought slaves to Africa.
The story of the Amistad mutiny garnered
widespread attention, and U.S. abolitionists succeeded in winning a trial in a
U.S. court. Before a federal district court in Connecticut, Cinque, who was
taught English by his new American friends, testified on his own behalf. On
January 13, 1840, Judge Andrew Judson ruled that the Africans were illegally
enslaved, that they would not be returned to Cuba to stand trial for piracy and
murder, and that they should be granted free passage back to Africa. The
Spanish authorities and U.S. President Martin Van Buren appealed the decision,
but another federal district court upheld Judson’s findings. President Van
Buren, in opposition to the abolitionist faction in Congress, appealed the
decision again.
On February 22, 1841, the U.S. Supreme Court
began hearing the Amistad case. U.S. Representative John Quincy Adams of
Massachusetts, who served as the sixth president of the United States from 1825
to 1829, joined the Africans’ defense team. In Congress, Adams had been an
eloquent opponent of slavery, and before the nation’s highest court he
presented a coherent argument for the release of Cinque and the 34 other
survivors of the Amistad.
On March 9, 1841, the Supreme Court ruled that
the Africans had been illegally enslaved and had thus exercised a natural right
to fight for their freedom. In November, with the financial assistance of their
abolitionist allies, the Amistad Africans departed America aboard the Gentleman
on a voyage back to West Africa. Some of the Africans helped establish a
Christian mission in Sierra Leone, but most, like Cinque, returned to their
homelands in the African interior. One of the survivors, who was a child when
taken aboard the Amistad as a slave, eventually returned to the United
States. Originally named Margru, she studied at Ohio’s integrated and
coeducational Oberlin College in the late 1840s, before returning to Sierra
Leone as evangelical missionary Sara Margru Kinson.
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