Bunce Island

Photo by Vera Viditz-Ward
“I am an American…but
today, I am something more. I am an
African too. I feel my roots here in this continent”
Colin Powell - After visiting Bunce Island, April 1992
A Gullah family with a direct link to Sierra Leone will make
its own historic homecoming in 2005. The Martin Family of
Charleston, South Carolina are the 7th generation descendants
of a 10-year old girl, named “Priscilla,” brought
on the slave ship “Hare” from Sierra Leone to
Charleston in 1756.
Historical Summary
by Joseph Opala, Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study
of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition
Yale University
Download/View as PDF Document
Bunce Island was the largest British slave
castle on the Rice Coast of West Africa. Founded around 1670,
it exported tens of thousands of African captives to North
America and the West Indies until the British Parliament finally
closed it down in 1808. During its long and tragic history,
Bunce Island was operated by four London-based companies:
the Gambia Adventurers; the Royal African Company of England
(which had official recognition from the British Crown); and
the private firms of Grant, Oswald & Company and John
& Alexander Anderson.
During
the 1750s Richard Oswald, Bunce Island’s
principal owner, forged a strong business and personal relationship
with Henry Laurens, one of the richest rice planters and slave
dealers in the Colony of South Carolina. Rice planters in
coastal South Carolina and Georgia were willing to pay high
prices for people brought from the Rice Coast of West Africa
where farmers had been growing rice for hundreds of years
and were experts at its cultivation.
African rice-growing know-how was essential
to the prosperity of the American rice industry. Henry
Laurens acted as Bunce Island’s business agent
in Charleston, receiving the castle’s human cargoes
from Sierra Leone and advertising and selling the African
captives at auction. Laurens took a 10% commission on each
sale, returning the profits to Oswald in London, often in
the form of rice paid by South Carolina planters.
Bunce Island’s history illustrates the complex economic
relationship between the West African Rice Coast and Great
Britain’s Southern Colonies. Its records show that Henry
Laurens sent his own ships directly to Bunce Island to obtain
slaves for his newly opened rice plantations in coastal Georgia,
paying for them with ship-building supplies made from Carolina
pine. The Bunce Island’s records also show that Henry
Laurens helped his British business partner, Richard Oswald,
open up new plantations near St. Augustine, and that Oswald
dispatched a number of his skilled African workers directly
from Bunce Island to build his plantations in Florida.
Bunce Island also illustrates the slave trade’s political
impact in North America. During
the American Revolutionary War the French, jealous of Bunce
Island’s commercial success, took the opportunity of
their alliance with the American colonists to attack and destroy
the castle in 1779. Thus, a battle of the American
Revolution was actually fought on Bunce Island. But
even more important, Henry Laurens, who had grown rich from
the trade in African slave labor, became President of the
Continental Congress and later US envoy to Holland. Captured
by the British and imprisoned in the Tower of London, he was
bailed out of jail by his friend Richard Oswald.
Later, Laurens and Oswald sat across the table from one another
at the Paris negotiations that led to American independence.
Thus, US independence was negotiated, in part, between Bunce
Island’s British owner and his long-time agent for the
sale of Rice Coast Africans in South Carolina.
Bunce Island also illustrates the enduring
family ties between the Gullah people -- African Americans
living today in coastal South Carolina and
Georgia -- and their Rice Coast cousins.
In recent years Gullah people have made two
well-publicized pilgrimages to Bunce Island. In 1989, Emory
Campbell, Director of Penn Center on St. Helena Island, South
Carolina, led a group of Gullahs to Bunce Island in a tearful
journey memorably recorded in the PBS documentary “Family
Across the Sea.” In 1997, Mary Moran and her family
from Harris Neck, Georgia visited Bunce Island on their trip
to Sierra Leone to meet the Mende people who share an ancient
African song they have retained in their family for generations
here in America. Mrs. Moran’s visit is recorded in the
documentary, “The Language You Cry In.”
Another Gullah family with a direct link to Sierra Leone
will make its own historic
homecoming in 2005. The Martin Family of Charleston,
South Carolina are the 7th generation descendants of a 10-year
old girl, named “Priscilla,” brought on the slave
ship “Hare” from Sierra Leone to Charleston in
1756. Edward Ball discovered this family link while doing
research for his award-winning book Slaves in the Family (1998).
A descendant of South Carolina planters, Ball chronicled the
history of his own family’s slaves. He discovered that
one of his ancestors purchased Priscilla, and through family
records he was able to link the little girl to her modern
descendants. The Sierra Leone Government recently invited
the Martin Family to visit their country and make a pilgrimage
to Bunce Island.
Bunce
Island is so strongly linked to North America,
though, that its connections go well beyond South Carolina,
Georgia, and Florida. Recent historical research has shown
that slave ships based in Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Massachusetts
stopped at Bunce Island regularly in the 1750s and 1760s.
New England slave merchants sailed the human cargoes they
purchased at Bunce Island to Charleston and to various ports
in the West Indies. Anne Farrow, a reporter at the Hartford
Courant newspaper recently discovered the log of a slave
ship that was based in New London, Connecticut in
the 1750s. Farrow is now retracing the ship’s route
from New England, to Sierra Leone, to St. Kitts in the West
Indies.
Today, Bunce Island is a national historic
site under the protection of Sierra Leone’s Ministry
of Tourism and Monuments and Relics Commission. There are
substantial ruins on the island, including the factory house,
fortification, slave prison, watchtowers, dormitories, storerooms,
and power magazine. In 1989, a US Park Service team visited
Bunce Island and issued a management plan for its preservation.
In 1992, Herb Cables, Deputy Director of the Park Service,
visited the site and held discussions with the Sierra Leone
Government. Sierra Leone’s civil war interrupted cooperation
with NPS, but with the war’s end, preservation efforts
have been renewed.
The US Park Service survey team suggested that Bunce Island’s
ruins be stabilized with unobtrusive engineering supports,
and that each building be interpreted with an all-weather
display containing text, drawings and facsimile documents.
The NPS team also suggested that a museum on Bunce Island’s
history be constructed in Freetown, Sierra Leone’s capital
city, which tourists can visit before leaving by boat for
the island. But Bunce Island is already a tourist destination
in Sierra Leone. Trained Ministry of Tourism guides tour visitors
through the ruins, emphasizing the site’s historic
links to the Gullah people in the United States. 
Bunce Island can also be linked to a cultural preservation
program in the Gullah region currently being planned by the
US National Park Service. Books and pamphlets on Bunce Island
can be made available at heritage sites in South Carolina
and Georgia, and materials on Gullah history and culture can
be sold at the Bunce Island museum in Sierra Leone. The
Gullah people are remarkable for being the African
American community that has preserved more of its African
cultural heritage than any other, so it is appropriate that
a link to an African heritage site (or sites) be made a part
of any cultural preservation program in their region.
Here in the US, the Charles Pinckney National Historic
Site in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina may be the best
venue for highlighting Bunce Island’s link to the US.
Charles Pinckney was a South Carolina delegate to the Constitutional
Convention, but he was also the son-in-law of Henry Laurens,
Bunce Island’s agent in Charleston. Thus, Africans from
Bunce Island were very likely present on Pinckney’s
plantation. The site of the slave dwellings at Charles Pinckney
NHS has been located, and there are plans for its excavation.
Pinckney’s rice plantation would provide an excellent
place to highlight Bunce Island and the crucial role played
by Rice Coast Africans in building the rice industry in South
Carolina and Georgia.
Some
visitors to Charles Pinckney NHS and other Gullah heritage
sites who learn about Bunce Island will undoubtedly want to
visit Sierra Leone to observe the Gullahs’ roots
on the Rice Coast first-hand. When Bunce Island is
preserved and news stories appear in the US media, we can
expect a steady stream of visitors.
Many African Americans are already touring the slave castles
at Goree (Senegal) and Elmina (Ghana). But those sites, though
historically important for other reasons, do not have Bunce
Island’s many direct links to the United
States.
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