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SABINE
LAKE:
FOCAL POINT OF
THE ILLEGAL
AFRICAN SLAVE
TRADE
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
April 4, 1974;
February 5,
1984.
One
of the most
heinous, yet
intensely
interesting,
sagas of
frontier East
Texas was the
traffic in
illegal
African
slaves.
Because of its
strategic
position as an
international
boundary,
Sabine Lake
was slated to
become a focal
point in that
illicit
commerce.
Contraband
slave-trading
was immensely
profitable. It
would have to
be for men to
risk their
necks to the
noose. Both
the United
States Slave
Trading Act of
1820 and the
first Texas
Constitution
defined
participation
in the African
trade as
piracy, with a
mandatory
death sentence
if committed
within
territorial
boundaries, or
for all
American
citizens
captured on
slave ships on
the high seas.
As
is often the
case, however,
precept was
far ahead of
practice, and
most offenders
went
unpunished.
Americans
could see
little
difference
between an
illegal slave
from Africa
and another
slave ship in
the coasting
trade,
transfering
slaves from
the worn-out
tobacco
plantations of
Virginia to
the canefields
of Louisiana.
Although
many offenders
were tried in
the courts,
only one
slave-trader
ever ended up
on the gallows
in the United
States.
Captain Nat
Gordon, master
of the
captured slave
ship "Erie,"
was hanged in
New York City
in 1862.
It
is an equally
ironic fact
that many of
the "slaves"
brought to
Sabine Lake in
1836-1837 were
actually
kidnaped
British
freedmen from
Barbados or
were
indentured
servants of
five years
tenure. The
latter
category
existed
because of the
British
capture of
illegal slave
ships in the
Caribbean Sea.
Such vessels
were often
condemned as
prizes of the
courts in
Barbados and
Cuba, but the
captive
Negroes were
indentured to
new masters
for five
years'
servitude to
pay for the
costs of their
"freedom."
It
is likewise a
fact of
history that
contraband
slave-trading
mars the image
of two Texas
heroes. In
June, 1835,
Colonel James
Fannin bought
152 West
Africans in
Cuba, and upon
arriving with
them at the
Brazos River,
unloaded them
from the slave
ship "Hannah
Elizabeth."
Between
the years 1818
and 1820,
Colonel James
Bowie and his
two brothers
realized a
$65,000 profit
from
transporting
1,500 illegal
slaves,
purchased from
Jean Lafitte
on Galveston
Island, from
Texas to
Louisiana.
While crossing
Sabine Lake on
two occasions,
the Bowies
stopped at the
home of Henry
Griffith at
Johnson's
Bayou,
Louisiana, to
purchase beef
to feed to
their slave
coffles.
John
Bowie left an
excellent
account of
their
slave-trading
activities
during his
lifetime. In
1852, he wrote
in "DeBow's
Review that:
"James,
Rezin, and
myself fitted
out some small
boats at the
mouth of the
Calcasieu
(River in
Louisiana) and
went into the
trade on
shares.....We
first
purchased
forty Negroes
from Jean
Lafitte at the
rate of $1.00
per pound, or
an average of
$140 for each
Negro. We
brought them
into the
limits of the
United States,
delivered them
to a
customhouse
officer, and
became the
informers
ourselves."
A
legal loophole
in the Slave
Trading Act
allowed them
to bid on the
seized
chattels and,
as the
informers in a
case of slave
piracy, the
Bowie brothers
received
one-half of
the bid price
as a rebate as
well as the
legal owners.
It was a
costly method,
but it
successfully
circumvented
the slave
trade laws of
that era. And
the sugar
planters of
Louisiana had
a voracious
appetite for
slaves, whose
average length
of life upon
reaching the
sugar cane
fields was
only five
years.
Even
before
Lafitte, ships
of another
filibusterer,
Don Luis De
Aury, were
already
capturing many
Spanish slave
ships off the
coast of Cuba
in 1816 and
bringing the
captured
chattels to
Galveston
Island. A year
later, ships
of the
buccaneer Jean
Lafitte also
carried slaves
on Lake Sabine
between 1817
and 1821.
Lafitte also
carried on a
privateering
war against
the Spanish,
having
enlisted into
his service
nearly all of
De Aury's old
pirate
captains, and
many of their
prizes
continued to
be Spanish
slave ships
captured in
the Caribbean
waters.
Beginning
in 1818,
Lafitte built
slave barracks
on the Sabine
River at a
point, called
Ballew's
Ferry, which
is ten miles
north of
present-day
Orange, Texas.
He conducted a
brisk trade
with the
Louisiana
sugar and
cotton
planters, who
came to the
Sabine River
to buy the
slaves of
their choice,
and as late as
1836, William
F. Gray
reported in
his diary that
Lafitte's old
slave barracks
on the Sabine
were still
standing,
although
abandoned.
Another
notorious
slave trader,
Monroe
Edwards,
landed 170
Africans at
Velasco,
Texas, in
February, 1836
(the very
moment the
Alamo was
under seige),
and later he
set up a slave
market on
Galveston Bay.
In a letter he
later wrote to
President
Mirabeau B.
Lamar, Edwards
protested that
he had been
duped, the
"slaves" that
had been sold
to him at
Barbados
having
actually been
indentured
servants of
five years
duration.
Edwards was
soon
imprisoned in
New York by
the United
States
government on
a forgery
charge, and
the
slave-trading
charges
against him
were dropped.
Early
in 1836, three
brothers,
Pleasant,
Leander, and
Sterling
McNeel, who
were Brazos
River
plantation
owners, landed
forty Africans
on Caney Creek
near Velasco.
On April 19,
1836, while
thousands of
Texans were
scurrying
across
Jefferson
County as a
part of the
"Runaway
Scrape," W. F.
Gray
encountered
the McNeels
and their
slave coffles
in the
vicinity of
present-day
Nome in the
western sector
of Jefferson
County.
Apparently the
McNeels
succeeded in
crossing
Jefferson
County and
reaching
Louisiana.
Usually,
African slaves
were
identifiable
by their
tribal marking
and tattoos on
the bodies, as
well as their
native African
dialects.
In
1836, during
the social
upheaval
created by the
Texas
Revolution,
Capt. John
Taylor of
Barbados, a
West Indian
island,
brought a
shipload of
slaves aboard
the English
brig
"Elizabeth,"
the first
ship,
according to
Mrs. Sarah
McGaffey, to
dock at Sabine
Pass, Texas
after her
arrival there.
The vessel
anchored in a
marshy sector
of the Pass
that was known
thereafter as
the "Brig
Landing."
Taylor's
crewmen soon
espied the
smoke of the
McGaffey log
cabin on Shell
Ridge and went
there to
purchase
cattle to feed
the slaves. In
those days,
high sea cane
covered all of
the Sea Rim
marsh at
Sabine Pass,
but the wild
cattle, as
well as
wolves, bears,
deer and an
occasional
buffalo had
beaten trails
through the
cane to high
land. One day
while
returning
through the
marsh with
fresh meat,
one of
Taylor's
crewmen was
seized by a
black bear and
was badly
mauled. His
crew mates
rushed forward
with guns and
killed the
bear.
Capt.
Taylor took
fifty of his
chattels by
yawl boat to
Joseph
Grigsby's
plantation at
Port Neches
and then
marched them
overland to
San Augustine.
However, he
failed to sell
all of the
slaves, and
upon his
return to
Sabine Pass,
Taylor sailed
for Galveston
Bay.
One
slave escaped
and denounced
Taylor to the
British consul
at New Orleans
for selling
British
freedmen and
identured
servants. The
English sent
the brig of
war "Pilot" to
Galveston Bay,
where the
Texas
authorities
surrendered
Taylor to the
warship. There
are
conflicting
reports as to
his fate.
British consul
William
Kennedy, in
his well-known
volume about
Texas, stated
that Taylor
was sentenced
to 14 years
imprisonment,
but a
diplomatic
letter states
that he was
eventually
acquitted of
the charges.
Long after
Taylor left
Texas, the
English brig
"Elizabeth"
and a former
American slave
ship, the
"Waterwitch,"
were still
engaged in
legitimate
coasting
commerce in
Sabine Lake.
In 1865, the
"Waterwitch"
was the only
vessel of
twenty
anchored
in the Sabine
River at
Orange, which
did not
capsize and
sink during
the hurricane
of September
13, which
destroyed
Orange. But in
1867, the
ex-slaver went
down with all
hands during a
subsequent
hurricane in
the Gulf of
Mexico.
Consul
Kennedy is
also the
source of a
Spanish slave
ship under a
Captain Moro,
that arrived
in Sabine Lake
in 1836. The
vessel
reputedly
carred 200
slaves on a
voyage up the
Sabine River.
Kennedy added
that the
owner, an
American named
Coigley, was
aboard the
ship. Capt.
Moro reputedly
got into an
argument with
Coigley over
the sale of
the slaves,
murdered him,
and then,
fearing arrest
by the
American
authorities,
hastily fled
to the Gulf of
Mexico before
selling any of
his cargo.
A
British
frigate chased
another
English slave
ship into the
Sabine Pass in
1837. Upon
entering the
lake, the
vessel ran
aground on a
mud flat at
Blue Buck
Point, the
northern
terminus of
the lake.
According to a
history of
Johnson's
Bayou,
Louisiana,
traditions
within the
Griffith
families
maintain that
Henry
Griffith, who
had also
supplied beef
to James
Bowie, traded
cattle to the
slave ship's
owners in
exchange for
slaves who
spoke only
African
dialects.
Having arrived
direct from
Africa, the
emaciated
bondsmen
rioted while
eating the raw
meat and blood
of the cattle,
and three of
them were shot
before the
riot was
quelled.
As
early as 1818,
there were
British
complaints of
slaves
entering the
United States
along the
Sabine River,
and the United
States
collector of
customs at New
Orleans
assigned the
revenue cutter
"Lynx" to
frequent
cruises in the
Gulf opposite
the Sabine
estuary. There
are no reports
of the
cutter's
interception
of any slave
ships, but in
October, 1819,
the "Lynx"
intercepted
Capt. George
Brown, one of
Lafitte's most
obnoxious
pirates, as he
battled an
unarmed
American
merchantman
off Sabine
Pass. The
cutter drove
Brown's
schooner onto
McFaddin
Beach, and a
month later,
Lafitte hanged
Brown from a
yardarm in
Galveston Bay.
There
is no accurate
information
about how many
African slaves
may have been
introduced
into Louisiana
between 1816
and 1821, but
a figure
between 3,000
and 5,000 may
be about
correct. And
only a
fraction of
these would
have passed
through Sabine
Lake. The
Bowies moved
slaves over
three routes,
some of them
being taken up
the Calcasieu
River to the
vicinity of
Lake Charles.
The remainder
were either
carried
through Sabine
Lake, or else,
the Bowies
moved them
overland along
a route from
Bolivar or up
the Trinity
River to
Liberty. One
story states
that in 1818
the Bowies
were camped
for the night
near Liberty
with 90
slaves, when
during the
night, the
only Comanche
Indian war
party ever to
swing into
East Texas
stumbled into
their camp.
The Bowies
escaped by
hiding in the
underbrush,
but the
Comanches took
all the
Africans back
to West Texas
and adopted
them into
their tribe.
In Civil War
days, it was
known that
descendants of
the Africans
made up a
portion of the
Comanche war
parties, but
it was
believed for
many years
that they were
escaped slaves
who had run
away to the
Indians.
Nor
is it known
exactly how
many illicit
slaves were
smuggled into
Texas and
Louisiana
during the
Texas
Revolutionary
years.
Certainly,
charges of
10,000 by the
British
government
were
incorrect, and
a figure of
about 500 into
Texas and a
like number
into Louisiana
is probaby
nearer to the
truth.
In
1843, the New
York "Sun"
vehemently
editorialized
against
annexing Texas
into the
United States
because of the
African slave
trade said to
exist there.
The "Sun"
stated that
large numbers
of slaves were
still being
introduced to
Texas and
Louisiana via
the Sabine
River. The
Houston"
Telegraph"
quickly
refuted the
"Sun's"
statement,
however,
stating that
tight money
had long
before killed
off any market
for African
slaves in the
Republic of
Texas. The
English ship
that wrecked
in 1837, so
the
"Telegraph"
claimed, was
the last slave
ship to
arrive.
One
result of the
charges of a
renewed slave
trade in
Sabine Lake
was the
establishment
of a United
States
customhouse on
Sabine Lake on
Green's Bayou.
By 1838, the
New Orleans
revenue cutter
"Woodbury,"
under Captain
Green, began
patrolling in
Sabine Lake,
in addition to
the Republic
of Texas
cutter "Santa
Anna." Later,
Green became
the first
United States
collector at
the Sabine, in
the
customhouse on
the bayou
which still
bears his
name. However,
there is no
record that
any other
slave ship
arrived in
Sabine Lake
after 1837.
Around 1840,
there were
schooners
being built in
New Orleans
which, one
newspaper
charged, were
destined to
carry African
slaves into
Sabine Lake.
It is
probable,
however, that
the charge was
without
foundation,
the boats
perhaps being
intended for
the West
African trade.
However,
American
slavers
continued the
bestial
traffic in
Africans until
long after the
Civil War
began, and
emancipation
was the actual
cause for its
final demise.
As late as
1865, the
American
slaver
"Huntress" is
known to have
excaped the
African coast
with slaves,
but it
probably
landed its
cargo in Cuba.
For 20 years,
the U. S. Navy
maintained its
U. S. Slaving
Squadron off
the coast of
West Africa,
but it soon
became a
Siberia for
drunks,
incompetent
officers, and
worn-out
ships. The
Piracy or
Slave Trade
Acts of 1820,
with their
mandatory
death penalty
upon
conviction,
remained
archaic laws
on admiralty
statute books
long after
their time.
They were not
subsequently
repealed until
1949.
There
is a tradition
handed down
within the
writer's own
family that an
African slave
ship arrived
at Cameron,
Louisiana, in
the fall of
1865, months
after the
Civil War had
ended and
slaves had
been freed.
With no market
for his cargo,
the captain
abandoned 200
starving
Africans,
their legs
still in
chains, on a
marsh
'chenier' of
the Calcasieu
River, where
within weeks,
all of them
were dead. For
years, the
site was
shunned
because of the
bleached bones
and skulls
that still
scarred its
surface.
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