Joseph Cinqué

Joseph Cinqué

Portrait by Nathaniel Jocelyn, 1840
Born c. 1814
Sierra Leone
Died c. 1879 (aged 6465)
Sierra Leone
Other names Sengbe Pieh
Known for Amistad case
Signature

Joseph Cinqué (c. 1814 – c. 1879),[1] formerly known as Sengbe Pieh, was a West African man of the Mende people who led a revolt of fellow slaves on the Spanish slave ship, La Amistad. After the ship was taken into custody by the United States Coast Guard, Cinqué and his fellow slaves were eventually tried for killing officers on the ship, in a case known as United States v. The Amistad. This reached the US Supreme Court, where Cinqué and his fellows were found to have rightfully defended themselves from being enslaved through the illegal Atlantic slave trade and were freed. Americans helped raise money for their return to Africa.

Biography

Cinqué was born c. 1814 in what is now Sierra Leone. His exact date of birth remains unknown. He was a rice farmer, married, with three children, when he was captured illegally by African slave traders in 1839, sold to Portuguese slave traders, and imprisoned on the Portuguese slave ship Tecora, in violation of treaties prohibiting the international slave trade. Cinqué was taken to Cuba, where he was sold with 110 others to Spaniards José Ruiz and Pedro Montez.

The Spaniards transported the captives on the schooner Amistad, with the intention of selling them as slaves in Cuba for work at sugar plantations. On June 30, Cinqué led a revolt, killing the captain and the cook of the ship; two slaves also died, and two sailors escaped. The Africans took prisoner Ruiz and Montez, the merchants who had made the purchase, and demanded that they direct the ship back to Sierra Leone. Instead, at night, they directed the navigator in the opposite direction, towards the Americas, in the hope of attracting the attention of one of their fellow Spaniards who would save their ship and regain control. However, the ship vacillated between the coasts of the United States and Africa. After about two months, Amistad reached United States waters near Long Island. Members of the USS Washington boarded the vessel. When they discovered what had happened (according to the Spaniards), they charged the Africans with mutiny and murder, and took them to New Haven, Connecticut to await trial.

A print of Cinqué that appeared in The Sun on August 31, 1839

The two Spaniards claimed that the Africans were already slaves in Cuba at the time of their purchase and were therefore legal property. Interpreters from Mende to English were found, who enabled the Africans to tell their story to attorneys and the court. Cinqué served as the group's informal representative.

After the case was ruled in favor of the Africans in the district and circuit courts, the case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States. In March 1840, the Supreme Court ruled that the Africans mutinied to regain their freedom after being kidnapped and sold illegally. The advocacy of former U.S. President John Quincy Adams,[2] together with Roger Sherman Baldwin, was critical to the Africans' defense. The court ordered the Africans freed and returned to Africa, if they wished. This decision was against the protests of President Martin Van Buren, who worried about relations with Spain and implications for domestic slavery.

Cinqué and the other Africans reached their homeland in 1842. In Sierra Leone, Cinqué was faced with civil war. He and his company maintained contact with the local mission for a while, but Cinqué left to trade along the coast. Little is known of his later life, and rumors circulated. Some maintained that he had moved to Jamaica.[3] Others held that he had become a merchant or a chief, perhaps trading in slaves himself.[4] The latter charge derived from oral accounts from Africa cited by the twentieth-century author William A. Owens, who claimed that he had seen letters from AMA missionaries suggesting Cinqué was a slave trader. Although some of the Africans associated with the Amistad probably did engage in the slave trade upon their return, most historians agree that the allegations of Cinqué's involvement are not substantiated.[5] A dying Cinqué was said to have returned to the mission in 1879, where he requested and received a Christian burial.[6]

References in popular culture

See also

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References

  1. "Cinqué". American National Biography. Oxford University Press. (subscription required)
  2. The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution, page 393-394
  3. George Thompson, Thompson in Africa: or, An account of the missionary labors, sufferings ... (1852)
  4. ""Cinque (Sengbe Pieh)", Exploring Amistad at Mystic Seaport". Retrieved 2007-11-07.
  5. Joseph Yannielli, "Cinqué the Slave Trader: Some New Evidence on an Old Controversy", Common-Place, Vol. 10 (October 2009)
  6. "Joseph Cinque". Africa Within. Retrieved 2007-11-07.
  7. Osagie, Iyunolu Folayan (2000). The Amistad Revolt: Memory, Slavery, and the Politics of Identity in the United States and Sierra Leone. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press. xiii. ISBN 0-8203-2465-5.

Other sources and further reading

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