Clotilda: Last American sl*ve Ship (2022)

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Clotilda: Last American sl*ve Ship (2022)

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- [birds chirping]

[woman vocalizing]

[Jeremy Ellis]

I am the voice of Pollee and Rose Allen.

[Garry Lumbers]

I am the voice of Cudjo Lewis.

[Ted Keeby Jr.]

I am the voice of Ossa Keeby.



Clotilda is the only sl*ve ship

that's been discovered

that is essentially intact

as an archaeological site.

[Delisha Marshall] To actually be able

to see it with your own eyes

over 160 years later,

six, seven generations,

here we are.

We're still talking about the story.

We're still preserving it.

I mean, seeing the actual ship

that our ancestors came in on.

Man, it's quite amazing.



[Dr. James Delgado] Today, we're heading

to the site of the Clotilda shipwreck.

We're starting a series

of archaeological dives

to assess the condition of the ship

and the best way to preserve it.

We've invited some of the descendants

to join us

so that they can connect

with their ancestors,

but also because

they're such an important part

of the Clotilda's story.

Just being able to be at the very site

of the location of Clotilda,

knowing that this is where, essentially,

evidence wasn't destroyed,

evidence that humans

were illegally transported here

back in 1860.

It's a very surreal moment.

[Stacye Hathorn] We have very few

identified sl*ve ships worldwide

to begin with.

And certainly, Clotilda is very unique

in my experience as an archaeologist

to have a site

to which you can

directly tie descendants.

[Keeby Jr.]

I hope they find as much as they can

of our history down there,

and some kind of way

to get it back up here

so we can see it.

[Joseph Grinnan]

Primary is 28.

[Mary Elliott] The Clotilda was the last

documented illegal sl*ve ship

to come to the United States.



[Dr. Sylviane Diouf] The story

of the people who were on the Clotilda

is the best documented story

of the entire

Transatlantic sl*ve trade.

We are talking about

over 12 million people,

and so far, there's just one ship

where we can have the entire story.

[Dr. Natalie S. Robertson]

The Clotilda cargo

numbered 110 West African captives

being smuggled into the country

against their will.

[Dr. Delgado]

Clotilda is the last ship

known to have illegally brought slaves

to the United States

following the abolition of the sl*ve trade

in the United States in 1808.

[Dr. Diouf]

The story goes that Timothy Meaher

bet that he could bring

a ship full of Africans,

and that's not the word he used,

under the nose of the authorities.

[Dr. Robertson] Timothy Meaher

was a wealthy plantation

and shipyard owner.

[Kamua Sadiki] And so they did it

using deception, very clever deception.

This was a ship-building family.

They built a ship that was not modeled

like the classical sl*ve ship.

[Altevese Rosario]

It was a lumber ship.

It happened to be

a very fast lumber ship.

And then, when the bet was made,

it was re-outfitted for slaves.

And the fact that it was fast,

they thought that that was

obviously on their side.

That was a benefit.



Now, the fact is

Captain Foster kept a log.

[Foster]

Fitted out for the coast of Africa

to purchase a cargo of slaves.

Cleared and sailed from Mobile March 4th

with the following cargo

and $9,000 in gold.

Nine men for the mast,

first and second mates

and myself.

[Elliott]

Captain Foster kept a log,

but that's his story.

The fact is

we also have the oral history,

and those are the stories

that we have to get at.

It helps us reveal the truth.

I am a fifth-generation descendant

of Pollee and Rose Allen

who were both enslaved Africans

on the Clotilda.

There's not a lot written

about Pollee Allen,

and a lot of my information

that I've been able to capture

has been through my research,

and my reading,

and my grandmother,

and some of my cousins.

He was possibly

from the western part of Nigeria.

His African name was Kupollee.

He was late teens, early 20s age

and he was probably

a warrior of his tribe.

I'm the great-grandchild

of James and Lottie Dennison.

I, um...

know more about this

than I probably would have

if it hadn't been for my mother.

She was the author of two memoirs

for James and Lottie.

I am the great-great-granddaughter

of James and Lottie Dennison.

This is James' headstone.

[Dennison]

Lottie was kidnapped.

Her mother had sent her

on an errand one day.

And Lottie was taken

and her parents never saw her again.

We think she was around 18 or 19 years old

when she was captured.

[Lorna Gail Woods]

My grandmama,

she was the one that instilled in me

about history.

Charlie had came over on the Clotilda.

That was my great-great-grandfather.

He was the head of the Tarkar tribe.

They were hunting for food.

But while they was

on their way back to the camp,

people were out huntin' for people

that they captured to take back

or bring to America for slaves.

Cudjo is my grandmother's

great-grandfather.

I'm his second generation,

she's the third.

I'm the third great.

There's a really wonderful book

based on the oral history

of one of the survivors of the Clotilda

who we know as Cudjo Lewis,

also went by the name Kazoola.

[Rosario]

This touches me in such a way.

It's amazing.

It is just truly amazing...

for us to have...

our history documented so well.

- To be so fortunate.

- Yeah.

You know?

[Cudjo] Thankee, Jesus.

Somebody come ask about Cudjo.

I want to tellee somebody who I is,

so maybe dey go

in de Afficky soil some day

and callee my name,

and somebody dere say,

"Yeah, I know Kossula."

[Lumbers] Cudjo came from Benin

and he came from the Yoruba tribe.

[Rosario]

And they were farmers.

[Lumbers]

So he was 17 going on 18,

so he was going to become a warrior.

He actually never had a chance

to see that happen

because of the village got raided.

[Cudjo] It about daybreak when de folks

dat sleep get wake wid de noise

when de people of Dahomey

breakee de Great Gate.

I see de people gittee k*ll so fast.

Dey grab me, and tie de wrist.

I beg dem, please let me go back

to my mama.

[Lumbers]

They got him.

He never did see his mom,

never did see his siblings.

He never did see anybody after that.

[Dr. Robertson] Generally,

Africans are captured

200 or more miles in the interior,

then forced to walk

that very long distance

from the interior down to the coasts

where they are sold to Europeans,

and, later, American buyers.

[Cudjo]

All day dey make us walk.

De sun so hot.

We sleepee on de ground dat night.

I thinkee too about my folks and I cry.

All night I cry.

[Dr. Diouf]

For Cudjo and his group,

it was about five or six days.

And people were tied one to the other.

There was very little food,

very little to drink.

And once they arrived on the coast,

they were held in prisons

called barracoons, sl*ve pens.

And you have men, women, children

held in those barracoon settings

for sometimes two months at a time.

And you're sitting in that barracoon

disoriented,

likely starved,

likely in pain having been marched

all those miles.

[Woods]

And once they got there,

they said Charlie said,

"Oh, Lord."

They knew then that they were at the place

that they wasn't gonna never return

back to they camp

where they had left.

So, imagine living with that lack of hope,

but still trying to survive.



[Dr. Delgado]

We're here on the Mobile River...

at the site of the Clotilda shipwreck.

Twenty-five.

[Dr. Delgado] It's in pretty shallow water

between five and about 20 feet deep.

Fifteen, drop.

[Dr. Delgado]

I think we'll get a pretty good sense,

not only of the condition of the wreck,

but if the visibility has improved at all,

we may be, on this dive,

able to... the very first time...

To see Clotilda underwater.

[Grinnan] We're gonna jump in

and we're gonna find the bow,

start there, which is where

our buoy is located,

and then, likely,

we'll investigate the bow,

then just take measurements and points

along that starboard side of the hull,

and see what we find when we get there.

The Mobile River is not

your ideal diving conditions.

Yeah, there tends to be a lot of debris.

We have seen snakes

and alligators on site.

We typically don't have

any visibility at the site.

Let me know when you get

on... on bottom.

[Grinnan] I'm on the wreck,

but I'm not on the bottom.

[man] Okay.

[Grinnan] Trying to figure out

where on the wreck I am.

He's on the wreck,

he landed on some of the debris

that's on top of the wreck right now.

[Dr. Delgado]

Any dive into this wreck is risky.

Any place where the ship

has been splintered or broken,

you now have very sharp projectiles

that can go through a wet suit

like a Kn*fe would.

[Grinnan]

Got some pretty heavy structure here.

It can be disconcerting

when we come up along a tree

or piece of debris,

or even a loose timber on the vessel,

you know.

You go over it, not under it,

so you don't get anything entangled.

[water sloshing]

- How's visibility?

- [Grinnan] Uh...

Right now, it kinda looks like

chocolate milk.

It's, uh... pretty dark.

A lot of particulates in the water

obscuring your vision.

Certainly well articulated here.

There's a lot of hull planking

in pretty good shape.

The integrity of this portion of the wreck

is pretty... pretty sound?

[Grinnan]

Yeah. I think I'm coming up.

[man] All right.

Diver coming up.

All right. Diver up.

Diver okay.

[Grinnan] So today, we actually had

what we would consider

great visibility,

about four to six inches.

I have never seen the vessel until today.

We focused most of today orienting around

the outside of the vessel,

focusing on that outer hull planking

and focusing on the condition

of the timbers themselves.

The vessel itself

is incredibly interesting,

but, really, when you pair that

with the story of the Clotilda

and... and, you know,

the individuals brought over,

and then you talk to the descendants,

it really kinda...

It's awe inspiring,

it's quite humbling.

You can't separate the two.



[Marshall] Gumpa is my great-

great-great-grandfather,

on my father's side.

So I'm his great-great-

great-grandaughter.

And he was from

what is now known as Benin.

Back when he was alive,

it was the Kingdom of Dahomey.

So around 1859, 1860,

in Dahomey,

they were a very turbulent nation.

So they would actually go to w*r

with surrounding countries

and other tribes,

and they would take the people c*ptive

and later sell them to whoever came

to the... the sl*ve Coast.

[Dr. Robertson]

The buyers like Captain Foster

would arrive there in Whydah,

and negotiate sales for Africans

through a series of appointed officials.

[Foster]

Arrived at Whydah May 15th.

Having gotten ashore safely,

I met with interpreters who gave me

charge of three natives

who put me in a hammock with canopy

and carried me into the city of Whydah

six miles distant.

Upon arrival, I found

splendid accommodations.

Slavers were treated very well,

you know.

And Foster was actually

very surprised

at the level of comfort of Whydah.

[Foster] I went to see

the King of Dahomey.

We went to the warehouse

where they had in confinement

4,000 captives in a state of nudity

from which they gave me liberty

to select 125 as mine,

for which I agreed to pay $100 per head.

And through a translator,

he told the people to stand in circles.

[Cudjo] Dey make

everybody stand in a ring,

'bout ten folks in each ring.

De man by dey self,

de woman by dey self.

Den de white man lookee and lookee.

He look hard at de skin

and de feet and de legs

and in de mouth.

Den he choose.

Every time he choose a man,

he choose a woman.

We all lonesome for our home.

We don't know what goin' become of us.

[Joycelyn Davis]

When you hear about the story,

you hear about the Door of No Return.

You had to forget where you came from,

forget your family,

forget your religion.

You just had to forget

everything that you knew.

Going through that door is...

Is just saying that

you would never return back,

and that just gives me so many chills.

[Elliott]

It was their last step that they did

to prepare them to embark on that ship.

And then they're taken by small boats

into the ships waiting off the coastline.

You get to that coast and you see that

beast of the ocean for the first time

and picture that you see ships

waiting off that coastline.

And they're waiting to fill their hull

with these people.

One of them is you.

[Hathorn]

This is an incredible story.

The Clotilda story

has international significance.

This is the first phase

that we're working on,

the investigation that we're doing.

We're collecting

all the scientific information we can

to find out the best way to stabilize

and preserve the vessel.

Today, we're doing a sonar image

so we can get an idea

of how the dynamic environment,

the storm events, things like that,

are affecting the shipwreck.

[man] That's it.

Clear the deck, please.

[Hathorn] One thing

we're trying to get a handle on

if we're going to preserve in situ,

we need to know what we need to do

to keep that...

Keep it from deteriorating further.

[Dr. Delgado]

We need to process the sonar results

so that we can see our path forward.

[bird screeching]

[Dr. Diouf]

So for the first 13 days,

the people were held in darkness

in chains in the hold.

[Cudjo]

Soon we get in de ship.

Dey make us lay down in de dark.

We stay dere 13 days.

Dey don't give us much to eat.

Me so thirst.

Dey give us a little bit of water

twice a day.

Oh, Lord, Lord, we so thirst.

It's pitch black.

You are chained to another person.

Most often, the men

were chained to one another.

On ships, there were...

Women and children

had more ability to move about,

but they were still contained.

Cramped conditions,

using the bathroom where you ate,

where you laid.

[Dr. Diouf] So you can imagine,

you know, the horror of the situation,

and the filthiness of the...

Of the place as well.

I can imagine they were

prayin' and singin'.

They was afraid of being k*lled

or throwed overboard.

[Marshall]

They didn't speak the same languages,

they didn't practice the same religions.

But even without words,

they knew, each one knew

what the others were feeling.

They were all going through

the same horror,

the same agony,

the same separation, you know,

from everything that they knew,

from their loved ones,

and that created the birth of a family.

[Cudjo]

On de 13th day,

dey fetchee us on de deck.

We so weak, we ain't able

to walk ourselves,

so de crew take each one

and walk around de deck

till we get so we can walk ourselves.

[Dr. Roberson] Typically,

they would allow Africans to come up

to exercise their limbs

or take on some fresh air.

But they wouldn't allow them

to stay on deck for long periods of time.

They would keep them shackled below deck.

How do you hold on to your humanity

under the most inhumane circumstance?

How do you will yourself

to live through that?

It's this idea that you can break

my bones, you can strip me down,

but what you're not gonna do

is you're not gonna take away

my understanding

of what it is to be a human.

[man]

Buoy, drop!

[Dr. Delgado]

So what we're out here doing today

is that we're actually going to attempt

to enter the hold of the Clotilda

where the captives were kept.



[Dr. Delgado]

What makes this very powerful,

and it's chilling in this aspect,

is that that hold where those 110 people

were placed survives.

So that as we go into it,

we have the understanding

of being the first people in there

since those captives.



[Dr. Delgado]

He's gonna go into the water,

and what he's going do

is he's taking a look

over or in by feel into the hull,

seeing what he can with the visibility.

Yep.

[Dr. Delgado] And so his standing

rules of engagement on this dive

are not to go into the hold any further

than he can reasonably

lean over or take a look at.

We don't want him snagged.

[Grinnan]

Can you give me a little slack?

Yep. A little slack, Mike.

Understood.

Diver's going to the inside of the vessel.

[Grinnan]

This is awful.

[Dr. Delgado]

As we move along,

we go into a more open space,

and at this point,

the hull is widening from 18 feet

to the full 23 feet.

And this is the main cargo hold.

And that's when you realize

that what you're looking at

is the place of confinement

for the Clotilda captives.

Hold on one moment.

[Grinnan] We did go

a little bit inside of the hull,

and we see that there is probably

anywhere from a foot or two

to the mud line

in a number of spots inside the hull

and then a couple of feet of mud

down into the bottom of the hull.

And everything seems to be very similar

to what the sonar imagery is showing us.

[Hathorn]

It seems to be pretty stable.

That's good news that we don't have

a lot of sediment that's moved off of it.

That bodes well

for the preservation of the wreck.

I can almost imagine Ossa saying,

"I'm glad to see you, grandson."

[chuckles]

"Glad to see you.

This is where they...

This is where they put us.

This is what they did to us.

And tried to destroy the evidence."

- [Ellis] We're gonna do...

- [Keeby Jr.] We gonna... Yeah.

We gonna do fine

and I know they're proud of us.

- [Ellis] We're gonna do all right.

- [Keeby Jr.] They're very proud of us.

- Drink to you, Grandpa.

- [Ellis] We're here for them.

[laughing]

From the start, what we've been doing,

because this water is so murky,

is we've been using sound

to map it all with the sonar.

Of all of the ships engaged in this trade,

the... the thousands over the 400 years,

to date, this is the only one found now

and identified

that is so intact

that we're the first people in that space

since your ancestors left.



And this 500-square-foot area,

that's the area

in which people were confined.

Has to be.



So between these two spaces,

23, 18, 26.

- [Marshall] Right. Yeah.

- [Keeby Jr.] Mm-hmm.

[Keeby Jr.]

Wow. Wow.



[Keeby Jr.]

I mean, you had to lay down flat.

- You couldn't hardly turn and you...

- That's what I don't...

And you had to stay

in that position for...

- Until they let you up on board.

- Until they let you up on board, uh-huh.

[Dr. Roberson] And this represents

the hold of the Clotilda,

which, as you can see,

is not a very large space.

Even for the few of us.

Imagine 110 captives

aboard that vessel.

It's smaller than my basement.

[laughs]

So, that really puts, um...

a lot of things in perspective.

And then there's only six of us in here,

so to have 110 people...

[Dr. Roberson]

You also have to keep in mind, too,

that, you know, I don't think

we really have any portal holes

for fresh air to pass through.

- You only have the hatch.

- Only the hatch.

Right.

Well, that makes me,

uh, fighting mad now that, uh,

our ancestors went through that,

you know.

It... you know, it makes you get

kind of emotional.

The sl*ve ship Clotilda arrives in Mobile

July 9, 1860.

[Foster] July 9th.

I transferred my slaves

to a river steamboat

and sent them up into the canebrake

to hide them until further disposal.

I then b*rned my schooner

to the water's edge and sank her.

Foster took the Clotilda to a remote place

and he torched it.

He actually, in theory, could be hanged.

So he had to destroy the evidence.

[Dr. Roberson]

The Piracy Act of 1820

made smuggling Africans into the country

punishable by death by hanging.

So they hid Cudjo and his co-captives,

the Clotilda Africans,

in the canebreaks.



[Dr. Diouf]

They stayed in the swamps.

There were mosquitoes.

They had little to eat.



[Rosario]

How about this?

- You're shepherded off of a boat...

- [Marshall] Uh-huh.

You're in this.

- That's crazy.

- It is.

A hundred sixty years ago.

They had no idea what...

- What was ahead.

- Yeah.

Away from family,

away from home.

That's amazing.

It is.



[Dr. Delgado] Here,

where Captain Foster b*rned Clotilda,

and where it still rests today,

we're on a mission to recover

scientific samples

from the wreck itself.

What we're doing is documenting

positions of the things,

and then recovering them.

Even if the entire ship

remains in the river,

pieces of it,

artifacts that speak to the vessel

and to what happened on it

being available for people to look at.

[Dr. Diouf]

If those items are found,

it will... it will be the first time

that we have not only these items,

but the story of the people

who actually used them,

and then the descendants.

Don't stop, Daniel.

Yeah, that'd be great.

Joe, try not to move around, Joe.

[Dr. Delgado] When we were working

and picking samples

out of piles of broken wood,

it was a selective process

because we're looking for things

that are diagnostic.

They're gonna tell us a story.

It's not ironic

that the four of us are here

witnessing this at this point in time,

and there's a responsibility

that we carry.

Um, and I think there's also a privilege

to be able to even see this.

- Oh, yes.

- To witness this.

- Oh, yes. An honor and a privilege.

- It is.

I think we might be the only four people

who've ever seen,

like, the actual ship...

- Yes.

- our ancestors came over on,

so that's really a unique situation.



[Dr. Roberson]

The Mobile custom officials

have discovered that the Clotilda

has come in to the port

under the cloak of night in a...

In a very stealthy way.

Timothy Meaher was subsequently arrested.

[Dr. Diouf] In the end,

his case was dismissed

because there was no proof,

there was no ship,

and there were no people.

Ultimately,

Timothy Meaher won his bet.

And Foster was fined $1,000

because he had not paid duties

on the "imports."

[Dr. Roberson] A thousand dollars

for not paying his customs duties,

not for victimizing

110 West African captives

who were brought to Mobile

against their will.



[Cudjo]

Our grief so heavy.

Look like we can't stand it.

I think maybe I die in my sleep

when I dream about my mama.

Oh, Lord.

[Keeby Jr.]

It's a quote Ossa said,

"I goes back to Africa every night

in my dreams."

It was traumatic in so many ways

because they were

kidnapped from their home

and brought to a... a strange place

where they didn't know nobody.

They just spoke the language

among themselves.

But they knew what they wanted to do,

they wanted to go back to Africa.

And they had no way of getting back.



[Dr. Diouf]

The Africans were auctioned off

to a number of people.

Seventy-six were divided

between Timothy Meaher,

his two brothers,

and... and William Foster.

[Frazier]

Lottie worked in the house.

Housecleaning, cooking,

you know, whatever,

but she was in the house.

And, you know, for that time,

that was unusual

because she was practically

right off the boat.

The Meaher family were very prominent

in the steamboat industry here.

And I do know that Pollee Allen

worked on those steamboats,

and they would be deckhands

and that sort of thing.

[Cudjo]

Captain Jim gottee five boats

run from de Mobile to de Montgomery.

Oh, Lord!

I workee so hard!

Every landing.

You understand me?

I tote wood on de boat.

Dey have freight,

and we have to tote dat too.

Oh, Lord, I so tired!

[Lumbers] They were slaves for

about five years until the w*r was over.

They found out that they were free

around April 12, 1865.

[Cudjo] After dey free us,

you understand me?

We so glad.

We make de drum and b*at it

like in de Africa soil.

The goal was always to go home.

They always wanted to go back home.

When they found out that they, um...

that they were free,

they went to the Meaher family

and said, "Hey, we want to purchase

our way back to Africa."

[Cudjo] Dey say,

"Cudjo, you always talkee good,

so you go tell de white man,

and tellee dem what de African say."

[Lumbers]

They chose Cudjo to be the leader

because of, uh...

He had a way with words.

- Right.

- He wasn't scared to go...

- Right.

- Go ask for what he wanted.

- Absolutely.

- Mr. Meaher told them that,

"I'm not gonna give you nothin' for free."

Mr. Meaher told them,

"You not goin' back to Africa.

You might as well make the best

out of this situation

because you not goin' back."

So what he did, he went back to the group

and told them what Mr. Meaher said.

And so they all sat down

and came up with a plan.

[Cudjo]

We workee hard and save,

and eat molassee and bread,

and buy de land from de Meaher.

Dey don't take off one five cent

from de price for us.

But we pay it all and take de land.

They couldn't go back home so they had

to make the best of the best.

"Okay, we can't go back to Africa,

so we'll make our own Africatown."

[Keeby Jr.] I have a deed

where Ossa Keeby purchased

the land from the Meahers.

I have that deed.

Uh-huh.

I think he purchased that land

for about $150.

Something like that.

Which was a lot of money back then.

[chuckles]

And... And, uh, Cudjo Lewis

had purchased land too.

And, uh, all of it together,

we called it Africatown.

And so the picture of him relaxing in...

in his chair at the fireplace.

[Lumbers]

It was a flat, open house...

with a, uh... with a fireplace.

And, uh, he pretty much

had all his blacksmith tools

and, uh... his gardening tools.



[Marshall]

We are at Gumpa's Chimney.

This is the last remaining part

of Gumpa's house that he built

along with the rest of the people

in Africatown.

So this is kind of

the last remaining, um...

I guess remnant of that time.

Africatown started to thrive

as its own little community.

Like, they founded Union Baptist Church.

They started a school,

Mobile County Training School,

which is still there.

People have also talked about

they had movie theaters,

so they had, like, all kinds of things.

[birds chirping]

My uncle and them

just stayed in them houses

just like they were from Africa.

And they left the windows open,

and we could just go in

and they ain't lock no doors.

[Davis] They all collectively

worked and saved money

to buy this piece of land.



- Water is vital.

- [drumming]

And as we think about...

[Davis] They kept some of their, um...

Their customs and languages,

and those Africans would play their drums.

They can bring African dishes,

and just have a good time

and speak the language.

[Marshall]

If you were to go there today,

it's pretty much a shell

of what the community used to be.

The houses that are still there

are very dilapidated.

It's very rare that people have

a nice house living in Africatown.



[Sadiki]

Well, what is Africatown like today?

I say it's a...

It's a community,

it's, uh... that was once vibrant

that's struggling to survive

both economically, culturally,

even environmentally.

So that descendant community

is looking for some healing

because they're trying

to reclaim memory,

and reclaim identity

and reclaim culture

that was stolen from them.



[Darron Patterson] You need to know

the story of Africatown

to appreciate Africatown.

What we are seeing here

is going to be the future home

of the Africatown

Museum Heritage House.

This will house artifacts.

It will take you through

the story of the Clotilda,

through the story of Africatown,

and how the two mesh together.

Well, hopefully,

next time you see this place,

there will actually be

a welcome center here

and not just a sign.

If we get on the shore,

you can take your boat...

[Dr. Delgado]

The next steps for Clotilda

are to finish the scientific studies

that will help us determine

the best ways to stabilize

the shipwreck for the future.

We've just started to explore

the science, the artifacts,

and the additional secrets it may hold.

There is certainly discussion

of some sort of memorial

on the water or nearby for the shipwreck.

Hopefully, our study will help inform that

and show a path forward towards

memorializing the shipwreck.

I see it as a physical anchor

for the story.



For the ocean.

[Marshall] I do have flowers

that I would like to place here

in honor of the people who made it over.

For the ancestors.

[murmurs]

To be able to be here

and honor them today

is just like... I can't even

put it into words.



[Elliott] All of us look for a touchstone.

Where do we put our sorrow?

Where do we reconcile our history?

And where do we reconnect

with our heritage?

And so I think that's important

for people to be able to have that.

- [Lumbers] We feel proud.

- [Rosario] We're very proud.

[Lumbers] We feel proud

that we have that bloodline.

I think that's one of the reasons

we are who we are.

These are our people.

That's our history.

This is us. This is us.

[Ellis]

There's a sort of privilege, right?

The fact that I have the ability

to at least trace my heritage

and my ancestors

to the last known sl*ve ship.



[Rosario]

Most African-Americans don't have this.

They can't point back to the person,

to the spot, to the day and say,

"This is where my story

in the United States began."

And we're extremely fortunate

to be able to do so.

[Keeby Jr.]

This is part of African-American history.

And it needs to be in the history books.

[Woods]

Let's tell about Mobile, Alabama,

where the last sl*ve ship come.

Just because it's in the South

and it's been a long time comin',

and they still there,

so they want their story told.



[Davis]

We have to keep it alive too.

It's for the younger generation

to be proud of who they are

and where they came from.

Absolutely, I am my ancestors'

wildest dream.

That spirit of my ancestors,

that spirit lives in me.
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