John Quincy Adams and the Amistad
Written by: Bill of Rights Institute
By the end of this section, you will:
- Explain the continuities and changes in the experience of African Americans from 1800 to 1848
Suggested Sequencing
This Narrative explores the topic of slavery and the slave trade and can be used alongside the John Quincy Adams and the Gag Rule Decision Point to explore the sixth president’s relationship with abolition.
In June 1839, a narrow Spanish ship, the Amistad, coasted along the waters of Cuba headed for a port on the northern end of the island. In its crowded, stifling cargo hold, dozens of Africans were chained together. Like the United States, Spain had banned the international slave trade, but the ban was routinely violated by illicit slave traders, who supplied the insatiable demand of the island’s sugar planters while colonial officials turned a blind eye.
Tropical storms wracked the ship, making the short voyage even more difficult for the captives chained below deck. One man named Cinque worked feverishly at his shackles and suddenly broke free while his companions watched. As quietly as possible, he set about freeing the others, who armed themselves with knives and whatever other makeshift weapons they could find. The Africans then burst on deck and killed the ship’s captain and one of the crew. The remaining crew consisted of only a black cabin boy and two frightened plantation owners who were sailing with the enslaved Africans to their plantations. The Africans now controlled the vessel, and they ordered the Spaniards to sail for Africa to return them to their homeland.
The Spanish had no choice but to comply, or so it seemed. They sailed the ship for Africa during the day but then secretly altered direction at night to thwart the Africans’ plan. After sailing for several weeks and running low on supplies, the Amistad landed near Montauk Point on New York’s Long Island in late August. The U.S. Navy seized the ship as a prize and jailed the Africans in New Haven, Connecticut, until the federal courts could render a decision about the fate of the ship and the people on board.
The Spanish government demanded the return of the ship and the slaves, and the administration of President Martin Van Buren was eager to comply. The U.S. Attorney readied arguments to that effect, while a group of wealthy abolitionists, organized by Lewis Tappan, hired a legal team led by New Haven attorney Roger Baldwin to defend the Africans in their bid for freedom.
The federal district court heard the case first, but there was no jury because it was an admiralty case. The federal government argued that the Africans should be returned to Cuba as enslaved persons because of treaty obligations with Spain going back to 1795. The defense argued that the Africans were illegally held, and that any documents holding them to be enslaved were forged.
In January 1840, the judge ruled in favor of the Africans, declaring that they were justified in resisting their illegal captivity and were free. He stated they were “natives of Africa and were born free and ever since have been and still of right are free and not slaves.” He ordered them to be returned to Africa. The government appealed the case, and the U.S. Circuit Court affirmed the lower court’s decision. The government appealed again, and the Supreme Court agreed in January 1841 to hear the case.
In the intervening months, Tappan solicited congressional representative and former president John Quincy Adams to aid in the defense. Adams was then engaged in a long struggle to oppose the “gag rule” that prevented the House from considering petitions to end slavery in Washington, DC, and to stop the annexation of Texas as a slave state. He agreed to represent the Africans to achieve justice and preserve their natural rights, including liberty.
After he accepted the case, Adams grew extremely nervous. He then made a careless mistake by losing his temper in the House during a debate over the gag rule when he ranted against Congressman Henry A. Wise of Virginia. Adams and Wise were rivals in the House and regularly attacked each other over slavery. This time, however, Adams was appalled by his own behavior and continued to lament his actions. Because of his embarrassment about the situation, he asked his colleague Roger Baldwin to make the opening statements in the Amistad case before the Supreme Court.
The prosecution and defense presented their cases on February 22 and 23, 1841. On the following day, Adams entered the Supreme Court chambers in the U.S. Capitol to deliver the closing remarks for the defense. He spoke for four and a half hours, discoursing at length on the humanity and natural rights of the slaves. He also criticized the Van Buren administration for supporting the “lawless and tyrannical” Spanish, who were engaging in the human trafficking of enslaved persons.
Unexpectedly, Justice Philip Barbour died that night, and so the Court recessed until March 1. That day, Adams spoke for an additional four hours as he continued to present his closing argument. Several times he pointed to the copy of the Declaration of Independence hanging in the chambers and asserted that the Africans were entitled to all the rights and freedoms embodied in the “Law of Nature and of Nature’s God on which our fathers placed our national existence.” He finished by appealing to the justices to follow the example set by their predecessors on the Court, such as Chief Justice John Marshall, in dispensing justice. He asked for a “fervent petition to heaven, that every member of it may go to his final ascent with as little of earthly frailty to answer for as those illustrious dead.”
On March 9, the Court issued a resounding 7-1 opinion agreeing with Adams. The justices affirmed the lower courts’ decisions and freed the Africans, allowing them to return to their homes. A group of abolitionists raised money privately to fund the voyage, which left for Africa in November. Adams’s valiant fight for justice did not end there – the man who hired him to assist in the case never received a bill for Adams’s services.
The mutiny on the Amistad was an example of slave resistance against the oppressive institutions of slavery and the international slave trade. The captives fought courageously against the injustice and eventually won their freedom. John Quincy Adams and others took up their cause and ensured that justice was done.
Review Questions
1. The Amistad was a ship
- used to legally bring captured Africans to the Americas as enslaved persons
- used to transport freed slaves back to Africa
- forced by pirates to transport slaves
- used to smuggle Africans into Spanish colonies as slaves
2. At first, the U.S. government’s official position in regard to The Amistad was that
- the United States had a right to keep the ship and its cargo and would use the ship in normal commerce
- the United States had a right to ownership of the cargo on the ship, and the captives would be sent to the Deep South
- the United States agreed with the Spanish government and intended to return the ship to Spain
- the United States agreed to let the ship and the captives go to Cuba
3. In his presentation before the Supreme Court, John Quincy Adams used all the following as part of his argument except
- the 1795 U.S. treaty with Spain
- the Declaration of Independence
- the Law of Nature and of Nature’s God
- the example set by their predecessors on the Court, such as Chief Justice John Marshall
4. In The Amistad case, Lewis Tappan was
- the prosecutor in favor of the Spanish government
- a well-known abolitionist who financed the defense of the Africans
- the chief defender of the Africans in the Supreme Court
- the captain of the Amistad
5. The founding principle on which John Quincy Adams based his argument before the Supreme Court was
- federalism, which required that national law and treaties take precedence over New York law
- checks and balances, which gave the Supreme Court the final jurisdiction over the case
- that all humans possess natural and inalienable rights
- freedom of contract, which protected the rights of the ship owners
6. While making the arguments before the Supreme Court, John Quincy Adams also served as
- president of the United States
- secretary of state
- a member of the House of Representatives
- minister to Russia
Free Response Questions
- Explain how the growing abolitionist movement responded to the Amistad case.
- Explain how John Quincy Adams used ideas of democracy and freedom in his arguments in the Amistad case before the U.S. Supreme Court.
AP Practice Questions
“The Africans . . . did not bring the vessel into our waters themselves, but were brought here against their will, by the two Spaniards, by stratagem and deception. Now, if this court should consider, as the courts below have done, that the original voyage from Lomboko, in Africa, was continued by the Spaniards in the Amistad, and that pursuing that voyage was a violation of the laws of the United States, then the Spaniards are responsible for that offence. The deed begun in Africa was not consummated according to its original intention, until the negroes were landed at their port of final destination in Porto Principe. The clandestine landing in Havana, the unlawful sale in the barracoons, the shipment on board the Amistad, were all parts of the original transaction. And it was in pursuit of that original unlawful intent that the Spaniards brought the vessel by stratagem into a port of the United States. . . .
If any part of the article was applicable to the case it was in favor of the Africans. They were in distress, and were brought into our waters by their enemies, by those who sought, and who are still seeking, to reduce them from freedom to slavery.”
John Quincy Adams, Argument before the U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. v. Cinque, et al.
March 1, 1841
1. The argument presented in the excerpt is relevant to
- the emerging national argument for the abolition of slavery
- the Africans’ right to freedom of the seas
- the necessity of slavery for the free market system to survive
- the unimpeded growth of the American economy
2. Which of the following American leaders would most strongly agree with the sentiments expressed in the excerpt?
- Andrew Jackson
- John C. Calhoun
- William Lloyd Garrison
- Henry Clay
Primary Sources
Adams, John Quincy. “Argument of John Quincy Adams, before the Supreme Court of the United States: in the Case of the United States, Appellants, vs. Cinque, and Others, Africans, Captured in the Schooner Amistad, by Lieut. Gedney; 1841.” https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/amistad_002.asp
“The Amistad Case.” https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/amistad#documents
Suggested Resources
Cooper, William J. The Lost Founding Father: John Quincy Adams and the Transformation of American Politics. New York: Norton, 2017.
Howe, Daniel Walker. What God Hath Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.
Jones, Howard. Mutiny on the Amistad: The Saga of a Slave Revolt and Its Impact on American Abolition, Law, and Diplomacy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987.
Kaplan, Fred. John Quincy Adams: American Visionary. New York: Harper, 2014.
Nagel, Paul C. John Quincy Adams: A Public Life, a Private Life. New York: Knopf, 1997.
Rediker, Marcus. The Amistad Rebellion: An Atlantic Odyssey of Slavery and Freedom. New York: Viking, 2012.
Traub, James. John Quincy Adams: Militant Spirit. New York: Basic Books, 2016.