FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Andi Martin, Marketing and Public
Relations Manager
andi.martin@ahc.alabama.gov, 334-230-2680
July 16, 2020
State of Alabama Commits $1 Million
to Clotilda
Preservation
(Montgomery,
AL) For more than twenty years, the Alabama Historical
Commission – the State Historic Preservation Office – has been supporting the
effort to find the Clotilda, issuing permits and grant funding to
archaeologists and firms since 1997. Now that the vessel has been identified by
scientific experts contracted by the Alabama Historical Commission and National
Geographic Society, the agency has been focused on being methodical and
deliberate with all considerations for its preservation. Thanks to the support
and funding from Governor Kay Ivey and the Alabama State Legislature, AHC will move forward with the
next stage of preservation beginning October 2020.
In the FY 2021
budget, the State of Alabama through the Governor and Alabama State
Legislature appropriated $1 Million to the Alabama Historical Commission
to begin Phase 3 of preservation efforts for the Clotilda. This
multifaceted phase includes targeted
artifact excavation with industrial dive efforts supporting environmental and
structural assessment of the site and an engineering study of the riverbed to
inform stability. The environmental study will examine the composition of the
sediment around the wreck, monitor water movement, and contain a biological
review of the species that have colonized the wreck area. A structural
assessment will appraise the level of deterioration and condition of the wood,
creating an evidence-based plan for long term preservation. Finally, the
engineering study will evaluate what is needed for site protection as well as
the integrity of the riverbed for consideration of erecting a memorial on
site.
“The
Clotilda is a priceless and significant artifact very much deserving of
our respect and remembrance. Protecting this resource is imperative,” said
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey. “The Alabama Historical Commission has been
devoted to carrying out their mandate of guardianship, acting with the ship’s
best interests,” said Ivey. “By preserving the Clotilda, Alabama has the
opportunity to protect a piece of history, and I look forward to Alabama
carrying out that responsibility.”
“Africatown exists because of
the Clotilda,” said Alabama State Senator Vivian Davis
Figures. “It is paramount that the story of the men, women and
children who were brought here from Africa for the purpose of slavery, be told
and passed on by their descendants. With the confirmation of the vessel, there
is no denying the brutality they suffered, and the reality of how they survived
and built a community in Alabama in spite of all the things they endured.”
“I
appreciate the Alabama Historical Commission for all its efforts to preserve
this vessel and the General Fund Chairmen of our legislature for their
leadership in making this significant investment saving the Clotilda,” said
Alabama State Senator Arthur Orr. “The Clotilda admittedly
represents a tragic and painful part of our state’s history but one that
nonetheless must be told to succeeding generations of Alabamians all in answer
to the familiar question of ‘how did our state and its citizens come to be
where they are today’.”
“I
am honored to work with the Historical Commission as the House General Fund
Chairman as they strive to protect and preserve the Clotilda,” said Alabama
Representative Steve Clouse. “It is important this piece of Alabama history
be around for generations to come.”
The Alabama Historical
Commission is charged with protecting, preserving and interpreting
Alabama’s historic places. This responsibility also includes abandoned
shipwrecks, or the remains of those ships, and all underwater archeological
artifacts embedded in or on lands belonging to the State of Alabama. This
mandate is set forth in the Abandoned Shipwrecks Act and
the Alabama Underwater Cultural Resources Act.
“The
Alabama Historical Commission has a vital role as the legal guardian of
the Clotilda,” said Lisa D. Jones, State Historic Preservation Officer and Executive Director of AHC. . “It is our tremendous duty to ensure
that this historic artifact survives so that the world never forgets what transpired
during the Transatlantic slave trade. We are deeply appreciative to Governor
Kay Ivey and the Alabama State Legislature for supporting this effort and preserving
this story for the world.”
“During
this period of deep reflection on the shared history of all Alabamians, the
Alabama Historical Commission is grateful for the opportunity to move forward
with work to provide additional protection and preservation of the last-known
slave ship Clotilda,” said Eddie Griffith, Alabama Historical
Commission Chairman. “Through this effort, we will investigate an
appropriate way to memorialize the shipwreck and the people brought to our
state against their will and enslaved, but who nevertheless built a lasting
community where proud descendants still live today. Alabamians have
overwhelmingly supported the protection and interpretation of this discovery
and we appreciate the generous funding provided through Governor Ivey and the
Alabama legislature.”
In the archaeological report released May 2019, the wreckage of the Clotilda is
described as being in a fragile state; the vessel was scuttled and burned in
July 1860 in an effort to conceal and terminate evidence of the premeditated
crime of human trafficking by co-conspirators Captain William Foster and
Timothy Meaher. According to oral histories by locals familiar
with Mobile’s maritime history, Clotilda’s remains were
dynamited in the 1940s or 1950s, possibly to salvage materials from the ship,
or as an attempt to further destroy the wreckage.
As part of AHC’s calculated oversight of
the vessel, the agency implemented a strategy to maintain ongoing documentation
of the vessel throughout all phases of project. SEARCH Inc., contracted
by the Alabama Historical Commission, has continued to scan the area
of the Mobile River near Twelvemile Island where
the vessel identified as the Clotilda is located, documenting the
infamous slaver as well as the many other vessels in the vicinity abandoned in a
ship graveyard. This ongoing observation has proved to be a crucial step in
assessing the overall integrity of the ship as the agency moves into the next
phase of preservation. The Alabama Historical Commission has
released new sonar images of the Clotilda wreck.
The newly
released images of the vessel (taken March 2020) reveal that the full form of
the ship is now clearly visible and
exposed. In March, the river levels were lower than when documented in September 2019 and with little current. These
prime conditions allowed for a slower set of
continual sidescan sonar passes near the vessel, yielding
the clearer images of the wreck.
The ship’s interior is of critical
archaeological importance as it could retain considerable archaeological and
forensic evidence of the slave trade voyage of Clotilda and
the illegal transportation of 110 African human trafficking victims who were
brought to Mobile, AL for the purpose of enslavement.
“Phase
3 archaeological investigations will provide important information that sheds
more light on the stories of those who were captured and transported aboard the
Clotilda,” said Stacye Hathorn, State Archaeologist. “It will
also inform us regarding the condition of the wreck itself and help us to make
the most responsible and best decisions about how to preserve and memorialize
the vessel.”
Tandem to AHC’s charge to preserve the Clotilda,
the agency has a mission to protect the artifact. In doing so, the AHC filed an Admiralty Claim on
the Clotilda in July 2019 along with a motion seeking a final order from
the Court in September 2019 to confirm the State of Alabama’s ownership of the
vessel so that the State can exercise all rights associated with ownership. In
April 2020, Federal District Judge Kristi Dubose awarded ownership of
the Clotilda to the Alabama Historical Commission.
Through
the Federal Court’s maritime jurisdiction, a key benefit of pursuing an
Admiralty Claim involves the retrieval of any artifacts that have been taken
from the Clotilda. This authority is a strategic effort to also
prevent against future attempts of “salvagers” who may defame the ship, or its
artifacts, by taking from it. Per the enforcement of the Admiralty Claim, the
Federal Court will be able to retain jurisdiction in the event assistance is
needed for further orders, or to preside over legal issues that could arise
during work to preserve, protect, and promote the artifact.
The
Alabama Historical Commission continues to assess security needs and the most
effective way to meet them. The AHC holds this artifact as an irreplaceable
cultural treasure and will prosecute any tampering or encroachment to the
fullest extent of the law.
The site of the
Clotilda is now protected by a “Boats Keep Out” zone authorized under
regulation 220-6-.19 of the Administrative Code of Alabama. Only vessels and
persons authorized by the Alabama Historical Commission may access the site.
ALEA State Troopers assigned to the Marine Patrol Division regularly patrol the
area, and violators will be cited.
Since the
announcement of the identification of the Clotilda, droves
of visitors have traveled to Alabama – specifically Africatown – to pay their
respects to the 110 individuals aboard the ship and to honor the nearly 12.5
million Africans who were forcibly migrated during the transatlantic slave trade. The Clotilda is significant to Alabama and is also
internationally relevant. Preserving the ship is of critical cultural importance for our entire
nation.
Centers
of education across the country have ushered in millions of visitors seeking to
learn more about the complex and under shared history of African Americans in
the United States. In March 2020, AHC announced a partnership
with the History Museum of Mobile, Mobile County Commission,
Africatown community members, and the City of Mobile to support a Clotilda
exhibit at a new facility – the Africatown Heritage House – which will
be located in the heart of Africatown. The exhibit will feature items from the History
Museum of Mobile’s collection, an area for Africatown community stories, and
will display Clotilda artifacts on loan from the Alabama Historical
Commission.
About the
Alabama Historical Commission
Located in historic downtown Montgomery at 468 S. Perry
Street, the Alabama Historical Commission is the state historic preservation
agency for Alabama. The agency was created by an act of the state legislature
in 1966 with a mission to protect,
preserve and interpret Alabama’s historic places. AHC works to accomplish its
mission through two fields of endeavor: Preservation and promotion of
state-owned historic sites as public attractions; and, statewide programs to
assist people, groups, towns, and cities with local preservation activities.
For a complete list of programs and properties owned and operated by the AHC,
hours of operation, and admission fees please visit ahc.alabama.gov.