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Lisbon - Confronting Legacy of Portuguese Explorers - October 13th - 21st, 2007

On record as the first European power to begin the systematic trade of Africans for purposes of slavery. Leader of the international trade until eclipsed by the British and then it resumed its leadership position after 1807..

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Date Item Title Author Hits
Sunday, 21 October 2007 Cruising the Tagus River Wojtek (Voytec) Wacowski 2382
Friday, 19 October 2007 School is in Session Aboard the Freedom Schooner Amistad Dwayne Williams - AAI Director of Education 2199
Wednesday, 17 October 2007 The Sea Connects Us All: Thinking about the Legacy of Slavery in Portugal Dwayne Williams - AAI Director of Education 2209
Monday, 15 October 2007 Arriving In Lisbon Dwayne Williams - AAI Director of Education 1775
Saturday, 13 October 2007 Bem-vindo ŕ Lisboa, Amistad! Wojtek (Voytec) Wacowski 2130
Monday, 08 October 2007 Amistad Schedule in Lisbon - October 13-21 AAI 3115
Sunday, 30 September 2007 Days in Lisbon Wojtek (Voytec) Wacowski 1543
Monday, 06 August 2007 Amistad's partners in Portugal Kevin McLaughlin 2577
Wednesday, 20 June 2007 Lisbon - Port Overview Kevin McLaughlin 1933
 
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Results 1 - 9 of 9
  • New Haven - Leaving Amistad's Homeport - June 21st , 2007  ( 1 items )
  • Nova Scotia - Halifax, Shelburne, Birchtown - Amistad's Black Loyalist Connection  ( 16 items )

    Halifax , Nova Scotia was the demarcation point of the African Americans who founded Freetown in Sierra Leone . Slavery was practiced for a brief period in Quebec and Nova Scotia as records indicate slave transactions as early as 1749. Overcoming a legacy of racial strife Halifax is now home to the Amistad Freedom Society of Nova Scotia, the Office of African Cultural Affairs and the Black Cultural Center of Nova Scotia.

     

    Visiting Halifax and  Africville  at the end of July has become  an Amistad  tradition.  The current  visit  is  the third in a row  and  the Freedom Schooner and her crew feel already at home in Halifax Harbor.

     

  • Liverpool - Opening of International Slavery Museum - August 19th - September 8th, 2007  ( 5 items )
    The center of the Atlantic Slave Trade for the British Empire.  August 23rd marks the opening of the International Slavery Museum at the Albert Docks complex just across from the Cotton Exchange.  August 23 - UNESCO International Day
  • Bristol - August 29th - September 8th, 2007  ( 4 items )

    Formerly the second largest slave ship port in England.  Strong ties to the trade and a legacy of racial tension.

  • London - Bicentennial of Wilberfoce Act - September 14th - 19th, 2007  ( 8 items )
     

    London played a central role in the transatlantic slave trade as its financial institutions provided the capital to invest in the practice. In 1807 Parliament abolished the slave trade. The historic document is on display in Westminster Hall. The British Government officially supports the tour and will welcome Amistad into the country.

  • Freetown - Tribute to Sengbe Pieh's Homeland - December 9th, 2007 - February 3rd, 2008  ( 15 items )

    Home of the original captives and the locations where they were returned in 1841.  The sister city of New Haven, CT, Halifax Nova Scotia and Hull, England.

  • Dakar - Remembrance of Ancestors at Goree Island  ( 8 items )

    February 15th, 2008. Due to the latest delays and the need to divert the vessel to Cape Verde the port visit in Dakar, Sengal had to be canceled.  More info will be provided ASAP. 

  • Praia, Cape Verde - Port Visit  ( 5 items )


  • Barbados - Port Visit - April 4th-20th  ( 11 items )

    One of the centers of the African slave trade in the Caribbean to support its vast sugar plantations.  While the slave trade ceased in 1804, the continuation of slavery caused, in 1816, the largest major slave rebellion in the isle’s history.

  • Charleston SC - Port Visit - May 16th -27th  ( 9 items )

    ... Charleston became more prosperous in the plantation-dominated economy of the post-Revolutionary years. The invention of the cotton gin in 1793 revolutionized this crop's production, and it quickly became South Carolina's major export. Cotton plantations relied heavily on slave labor. Slaves were also the primary labor force within the city, working as domestics, artisans, market workers or laborers. Many black Charlestonians spoke Gullah, a language based on African American structures which combined African, French, German, Jamaican, English, Bahamian and Dutch words. In 1807 the Charleston Market was founded. It soon became a hub for the African-American community, with many slaves and free people of color staffing stalls.

    By 1820 Charleston's population had grown to 23,000, with a black majority....    Learn More About Charleston's history

     

Freedom Schooner Amistad - the main medium of fulfilling the AMISTAD America's mission
 

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