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Collection Reference Number GLC00722.43
From Archive Folder William McBlair collection 
Title John S. Cunningham to William McBlair regarding the capture of the American schooner "Angeline" by a British ship
Date 1 January 1859
Author Cunningham, John S. (d. 1894)  
Recipient McBlair, William  
Document Type Correspondence; Military document
Content Description Reports on the capture of the American schooner "Angeline" by a British ship. Relates a conversation he had with William Kerr, a sailor on the "Angeline," regarding its capture. States that forces from the British steamer "Conflict" captured the "Angeline," despite the fact that she was flying the American flag and had American papers. The British forced the captain to surrender, took the ship and left its crew in Africa. Says the "Angeline" was not a slave ship and wonders why, if the ship was supposedly a slave trader, the British members of the crew were not sent to trial, as they should have been under English law. Hints that the crew of the "Conflict" may have been motivated by profit in their actions. Written on board the U.S.S. "Dale" while at sea. British records show that the HMS "Conflict," commanded by Richard W. Courtenay, detained the "Angeline of Prospect" on June 11, 1858. According to Courtenay, the papers of the "Angeline," which had been flying the American colors, were suspect and the captain threw the papers and flag overboard after the ship's detention. It was later found that the"Angeline" had a false deck and was fully fitted out as a slave ship. She was condemned as such by British courts.
Subjects Navy  Maritime  Africa  African American History  African Squadron  Global History and Civics  Finance  Corruption and Scandal  Military History  Slave Trade  Smallpox  
People Cunningham, John S. (d. 1894)  McBlair, William (d. 1863)  
Theme Naval & Maritime; African Americans; Foreign Affairs; Slavery & Abolition
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859
Additional Information William McBlair was a United States naval officer in command of the ship "Dale," responsible for catching illegal slave trading ships off the coast of Africa. Later served in the Confederate Navy. John S. Cunningham was a purser in the United States Navy, later rose to paymaster.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859