Slave ship Clotilda 5 quick facts ahead of Netflix documentary Descendant
Slave ship Clotilda 5 quick facts ahead of Netflix documentary Descendant Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Approve Reject & ban Delete Logout
Thursday, May 5, The Resolve dive team continued picking up disarticulated timbers from outside the wreck. The maritime archaeological team continued measuring and recording all the items that were recovered before submerging the timbers in the tank on the barge. According to sources, Clotilda was initially designed for the lumber trade by Timothy Meaher, a wealthy Mobile shipyard owner and steamboat captain. The Captain of Clotilda, William Foster, worked for Meaher when he carried out the assignment and brought the enslaved people to the United States. Moreover, the story of Clotilda allegedly began with a bet after Meaher bet several Northern businessmen a thousand dollars that he could smuggle a group of enslaved people into the United States under the nose of federal officers.
Slave ship Clotilda 5 quick facts ahead of Netflix documentary Descendant
Clotilda's shipwreck (Image via AP) Netflix's upcoming documentary about the slave ship Clotilda, titled , is set to premiere on October 21, 2022. The Margaret Brown-directed film will center around Clotilda, the last recorded vessel to bring enslaved people into the United States in 1860. The ship was discovered in a remote arm of Alabama's Mobile River after a year of intense search by marine archaeologists. Clotilda was captained by shipbuilder William Foster and brought about 110 African men, women, and children to Mobile from Benin in Africa. After the discovery of the ship, the Alabama Historical Commission said in a statement: "Residents of Africatown have carried the memory of their ancestors who were forcefully and violently migrated from Africa to the shores of Alabama. Since then, the final chapter of the Clotilda story has been shrouded in mystery." Margaret Brown’s Descendant, out on Netflix this Friday, affirms the powerful capacity of the documentary form in its rectification of Black erasure by white America, through reclamation of Black history by descendants of the oppressed and silenced in Africatown, Alabama.Margaret Brown’s Descendant, out on Netflix this Friday, affirms the powerful capacity of the documentary form in its rectification of Black erasure by white America, through reclamation of Black history by descendants of the oppressed and silenced in Africatown, Alabama. Descendant aims to rewrite the history of the community, which vehemently protested to reclaim its culture and show it in a new light. Ahead of the release, here are five quick facts about the slave ship Clotilda.Five facts about the slave ship Clotilda
1 Clotilda was initially designed for the lumber trade
Thursday, May 5, The Resolve dive team continued picking up disarticulated timbers from outside the wreck. The maritime archaeological team continued measuring and recording all the items that were recovered before submerging the timbers in the tank on the barge.Thursday, May 5, The Resolve dive team continued picking up disarticulated timbers from outside the wreck. The maritime archaeological team continued measuring and recording all the items that were recovered before submerging the timbers in the tank on the barge. According to sources, Clotilda was initially designed for the lumber trade by Timothy Meaher, a wealthy Mobile shipyard owner and steamboat captain. The Captain of Clotilda, William Foster, worked for Meaher when he carried out the assignment and brought the enslaved people to the United States. Moreover, the story of Clotilda allegedly began with a bet after Meaher bet several Northern businessmen a thousand dollars that he could smuggle a group of enslaved people into the United States under the nose of federal officers.