Blog: My Unusual Road of Life....
by kerminator

The Caste War - Slaves

**Like other researchers of slavery, Meinecke points out a major gap in the otherwise rich historical record: In most cases, the identities of those who were enslaved remain unknown. At the same time, she writes, Maya descendants have been identified in various locales throughout Cuba, including Havana, Camagüey, and Pinar del Río, to name a few places*

Date:   6/12/2021 4:23:12 PM   ( 3 y ) ... viewed 729 times

Found: The Wreck of a Ship That Carried Enslaved Maya from Mexico to Cuba
This slave trade is well known to historians, but this is the first known wreck from it.

BY MATTHEW TAUB
SEPTEMBER 23, 2020

The wreck is just two nautical miles from the town of Sisal.
COURTESY HELENA BARBA MEINECKE, SAS

In This Story
DESTINATION GUIDE
Mexico

ON SEPTEMBER 19, 1861, A steamboat caught fire and sank in the Gulf of Mexico, two nautical miles from the Yucatán port town of Sisal. There were dozens of confirmed casualties, passengers and crew alike. But the full death toll will likely never be known, because the enslaved Indigenous Maya people held on the ship were never counted in the first place—they were simply listed as cargo.

Archaeologists from Mexico’s Sub-Directorate of Underwater Archaeology (Subdirección de Arqueología Subacuática, or SAS) announced recently that they’d identified the underwater remains of this ship, La Unión. Between 1855 and 1861, the Havana-based vessel brought, on average, 25 to 30 enslaved Maya people from Mexico to Cuba every month. The enslaved persons were then sold upon arrival in Havana.

The shipwreck was first found in 2017, after researchers found an 1861 document in the Yucatán state archive describing the fire and the approximate spot where it occurred. Local fishermen, who had heard about the wreck in oral retellings, also helped guide the researchers toward the search area. In tribute to one of these fishermen, the researchers temporarily named the shipwreck “Adalio,” after his grandfather. While it was clear that the team had something significant on their hands, it took three years of interdisciplinary research to confirm that “Adalio” was, in fact, La Unión.

It is now the first ship ever discovered known to have carried enslaved Maya people.

No other ships that carried enslaved Maya people have been previously found.
COURTESY HELENA BARBA MEINECKE, SAS

Helena Barba Meinecke, director of the Yucatán Peninsula division of the SAS, outlined her team’s research process in an email. One key clue that “Adalio” might really be La Unión was that its technological and skeletal components—the propulsion machine, boiler, axles, paddle wheels, and chimney—dated to the first era of steamboat technology (1837–1860), and La Unión began operating in 1855. In addition, the archaeologists found that the ship’s boilers had exploded and that its wood had been damaged by fire. Perhaps most importantly, the location of the wreck matched what was reported in contemporary accounts and documentation. Perhaps the eeriest find, however, was brass cutlery used by first-class passengers on La Unión, who would have been unaware of the enslaved people on board. The cutlery was also branded with the name of the shipping company that owned La Unión.


The enslavement of Mexico’s Indigenous population began during the so-called Caste War of Yucatán, a long-running conflict that lasted from 1847 to 1901.
Promised, and then denied, tax relief in exchange for military service—as they saw private estates rise throughout formerly public lands—Maya communities on the Yucatán Peninsula rebelled against Mexico’s European-descended government, and sustained enormous casualties in the process.

According to the University of North Carolina, the combination of death and desertion cut the peninsula’s population in half within just a few years, by 1850.

In a brutal 1848 decree, Meinecke writes, the Yucatán governor ordered the expulsion of all Maya captured in combat. They would be deported to Cuba, still a Spanish colony at the time, to toil in the island’s sugarcane plantations. It was irrelevant to these officials that Mexico had officially abolished slavery in 1829.

The rise of private haciendas, like this one on the outskirts of Mérida, throughout the Yucatán contributed to the Caste War.
WIKIMEDIA/INRI/CC BY 1.0

Indeed, one illegal tactic put to use during the Caste War was the deployment of enganchadores. Sent with fraudulent documents into Maya communities ravaged by the violence, these kidnappers led people to believe that they would be settled on uninhabited Cuban land and live as farmers—though their true destination was a life of slavery. As late as October 30, 1860, La Unión was actually caught at sea carrying 29 enslaved Maya, including children as young as seven years old. Even this, however, failed to stop the trade. It wasn’t until the fire of September 1861, four months after President Benito Juárez issued a decree against further kidnappings, that the government crackdown became sufficient to prevent the deportations, even if the violence would continue in Mexico for decades to come.

Like other researchers of slavery, Meinecke points out a major gap in the otherwise rich historical record: In most cases, the identities of those who were enslaved remain unknown. At the same time, she writes, Maya descendants have been identified in various locales throughout Cuba, including Havana, Camagüey, and Pinar del Río, to name a few places. Meinecke is hopeful that continued engagement with these descendants, and the recording of their oral histories, might one day reveal just who their ancestors were.

ATLAS OBSCURA TRIPS

Add This Entry To Your CureZone Favorites!

Print this page
Email this page
DISCLAIMER / WARNING   Alert Webmaster


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with https://www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - Advertise - Stats

Copyright 1999 - 2024  www.curezone.org

0.047 sec, (2)

Back to blog!
 
Add Blog To Favorites!
 
Add This Entry To Favorites!

Comments (20 of 340):
Re: Let's get a fe… been … 28 mon
Re: Thriving Marri… johnt… 31 mon
Re: Try to make ev… carme… 2 y
Re: How we should … chris… 3 y
Re: Medicine Recall James… 3 y
Re: If I had only … kermi… 3 y
Re: Is there balan… TomSa… 3 y
Re: Where we stand… kermi… 3 y
Re: Where we stand… Chef-… 3 y
Re: Black History … ren 3 y
Re: The brazen fra… kermi… 3 y
Re: The brazen fra… ren 3 y
Re: A Constructive… kermi… 3 y
Re: Were you in th… kermi… 4 y
Re: Critical Think… kermi… 4 y
Re: The Ministry O… North… 4 y
Re: Organize Your … kermi… 5 y
Re: Get Rid Of You… kermi… 5 y
Re: Forgiveness is… kermi… 5 y
Love is is a state… kermi… 6 y
All Comments (340)

Blog Entries (12 of 1929):
The Caste War - Slaves  3 y
The '20-5-3' Rule  3 y
Ponder the path that you are…  3 y
Absolute Truth Some Wisdom a…  3 y
COVID-19 Myths Webinar   3 y
Human or Spirit?  3 y
The ageing mind  3 y
Learn to walk with the wise …  3 y
Students of French  3 y
Developing a Clear Vision - #2  3 y
What is really happening?  3 y
2018 study of birthrates in …  3 y
All Entries (1929)

Blogs by kerminator (6):
My Quest for the Truth of Lif…  2 y  (310)
Absolute Truth Some Wisdom an…  3 y  (291)
Ya’ think??  3 y  (275)
Brain Boot Camp or Mindset Ma…  29 mon  (224)
Southern Etiquette or life in…  3 y  (212)
Forgotten Words!  30 mon  (120)

Similar Blogs (10 of 185):
My News  by DetLew  10 mon
IT-blog  by DetLew  13 mon
WordPress plugins  by HowdyT  14 mon
Interesting Facts  by AnnaGerman  14 mon
Henry Blogs  by henryjonas59  15 mon
free credit score  by kaviharshu99  19 mon
Relationships in th…  by ExpertOK  19 mon
what does online pr…  by johnmike12  21 mon
Here is What You Ne…  by NoahCarr123  24 mon
Children’s health, …  by ExpertOK  24 mon
All Blogs (1,019)

Back to blog!
 

Black Walnut Tincture
Hulda Clark Cleanse Kits