| DECEMBER 25, 1839 |
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| Written by AAI Staff | |
| Wednesday, 30 May 2007 | |
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"Adams Letter on Amistad Africans," New York Journal of Commerce,
Communicated for the Journal of Commerce.
LETTER FROM JOHN QUINCY
[Extract ] Dear sir,#The restitution of fugitive or rebellious slaves never can be claimed under any general stipulation for the restitution of property. The Treaty of Peace concluded at
The Africans of the Amistad were cast upon our coast in a condition perhaps as calamitous as could befall human beings: not by their own will#not with any intention hostile or predatory on their part, not even by the act of God as in the case of shipwreck, but by their own ignorance of navigation, and the deception of one of their oppressors whom they had overpowered, and whose life they had spared to enable them by his knowledge of navigation to reach their native land. They were victims of the African Slave Trade, recently imported into the Island of Cuba in gross violation of the laws of the Island and of Spain: and by acts which our own laws have made piracy#punishable with death. They had vindicated their natural right to liberty, by conspiracy, insurrection, homicide and the capture of the ship in which they were embarked#and of her cargo. For this act of homicide and capture they were accused by the two Cuban Spaniards embarked with them in their ship, of murder and piracy,#and they were claimed by the same two Cuban Spaniards, accessaries[sic] after the fact to the slave-trade-piracy#by which they had been brought from Africa to Cuba, as their property, because they had bought them from the from the slave-trade-pirated. They knew nothing of the Constitution, laws or language of the country upon which they were thus thrown, and accused as pirates and murderers, claimed as slaves of the very men who were then their captives, they were deprived even of the faculty of speech in their own defence [sic]. This condition was sorely calamitous;#it claimed from the humanity of a civilized nation compassion;#it claimed from the motherly love of a Christian land sympathy;#it claimed from a Republic professing reference for the rights of man justice#and what have we done? A naval officer of the United States, seizes them, their ship and cargo, with themselves; tramples on the territorial jurisdiction of the State of New York, by seizing, disarming and sending on board their ship, without warrant of arrest, several of them whom he found on shore; [illegible word] their captives; admits the claim of the two captives to the fifty masters as their slaves; and claims salvage for restoring them to servitude. They are then brought before a Court of the
Truly yours, J. Q. ADAMS.
[Extract of another letter.]
I see it asserted in the newspapers that Gov. Ellsworth has offered his services to aid the counsel of those unfortunate men. Most cheerfully would I follow his example and offer mine, could I indulge for a moment the hope that any service of mine would save the lives of those most distressed and most injured fellowmen, and our country from the deep damnation of delivering them up to the merciless revenge of their oppressors. J. Q. A. |
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