Wreck Of Portuguese Slave Ship Discovered Off Coast Of Cape Town

Slave Ship Wreck Discovered Off Coast Of Cape Town
This handout photo provided by the US National Park Service shows underwater archaeology researchers on the site of the São José slave ship wreck near the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa. The Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture will display objects from a slave ship that sank off the coast of Cape Town in 1794. (Susanna Pershern/US National Park Service via AP)
This handout photo provided by the US National Park Service shows underwater archaeology researchers on the site of the São José slave ship wreck near the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa. The Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture will display objects from a slave ship that sank off the coast of Cape Town in 1794. (Susanna Pershern/US National Park Service via AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture will display objects from a slave ship that sank off the coast of Cape Town in 1794.

The museum was to make the announcement Monday.

The artifacts were retrieved this year from the wreck site of a Portuguese slave ship that sank on its way to Brazil while carrying more than 400 enslaved Africans from Mozambique. Objects recovered from the ship, called the São José-Paquete de Africa, include iron ballasts used to weigh the ship down and copper fastenings that held the structure of the ship together.

Lonnie G. Bunch III, the director of the African American history museum, said in a statement that the ship "represents one of the earliest attempts to bring East Africans into the trans-Atlantic slave trade."

slave wreck

"This discovery is significant because there has never been archaeological documentation of a vessel that foundered and was lost while carrying a cargo of enslaved persons," he said.

The National Museum of African American History and Culture is currently under construction in Washington and scheduled to be completed in the fall.

slave ship

The objects from the slave ship are to be on a long-term loan to the Smithsonian from the Iziko Museums of South Africa. Officials have known the site of the wreck for a number of years and suspected the ship was a slave ship, but research only recently confirmed it.

About half of the people on board the ship died when it sank. Others made it to shore but were sold back into slavery, according to the Smithsonian.

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