Untangling slavery鈥檚 roots: the yearslong search for 鈥楢ngela鈥
Jamestown archaeologists are searching for 鈥淎ngela.鈥 Four hundred years ago, she became the first known person sold into slavery in the 13 colonies.
Jamestown archaeologists are searching for 鈥淎ngela.鈥 Four hundred years ago, she became the first known person sold into slavery in the 13 colonies.
Her name, as written down for the first time in a 17th-century muster, was Angelo.
She is now known to history as Angela, one of 鈥20 ... odd鈥 twice-captured Angolans who became the first enslaved people in British North America 400 years ago this summer.
Just behind the fallen Ambler Mansion here on Jamestown Island, a group of archaeologists with T-shirts rolled up to their shoulders are feathering away dust from what appears to be a trash heap 鈥 deer bones, broken wine bottles, jar shards. They are searching for evidence of the first African woman to be sold into slavery in the 13 British colonies.
Before arriving in what became Virginia, Angela, whose name also appears in the 1624 and 1625 censuses, survived war, capture, a forced march, and a harrowing trans-Atlantic voyage in which she and others were captured by pirates. After her arrival, she survived slavery, a Powhatan attack that killed hundreds of colonists, and famine. But there the record stops. If they can find her remains, archaeologists say, they can bring her life more vividly to the historical record: How old was she? Did she have children? How did she die?
Overlooking the pit, Jim Horn, the president of Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation聽and lead historian on the project, acknowledges that little may be found that can be tied directly to Angela. So far, a few beads potentially of African origins have been found.
She is here, somewhere.
Her arrival marked a seminal American moment: the simultaneous beginnings of democracy and chattel slavery in the New World.
鈥淚t was a symbolic year, to say the least,鈥 says Mr. Horn, author of 鈥1619:聽Jamestown and the Forging of American Democracy.鈥
The two-year-long search for Angela on one of America鈥檚 oldest historic grounds is intended not just to challenge Eurocentric founding myths, but to bring humanity to the first of the ultimately 12.5 million Africans who were brought to the Americas by 1867.
The digging is also part of a broader reexamination across the United States of a potent mixture of liberty and prejudice, established stateside at Jamestown, that remains a stubborn fixture of American life.
鈥淭hrough 400 years the questions of slavery and then of race [have] flowed from [Angela鈥檚 arrival],鈥 says David Blight, author of this year鈥檚 Pulitzer-Prize winning 鈥淔rederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom.鈥 Just as important, he adds, is the story of the first black people in Jamestown, 鈥渢hese Africans who with time and generations, through slavery and all kinds of migrations, the Americanization process, the 海角大神ization process, and then on into freedom 鈥 that鈥檚 where their lives here started.
鈥淚t was a harbinger of things to come, yet nothing was perfectly inevitable,鈥 says Professor Blight, a historian at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.
To be sure, the import of Jamestown on the American experiment is significant, but sometimes overstated.
Trans-Atlantic slavery had been going on for more than 150 years by the time Angela disembarked at Point Comfort, or present-day Hampton, Virginia. And according to Roman聽Catholic Church records, a black child was born in Spanish St. Augustine, Florida, 13 years before Angela arrived.
鈥淚n some ways drilling down too deeply just into 1619 underestimates the transnational horror of what was going on for much longer through the broader Atlantic world,鈥 says Michael Guasco, author of 鈥淪laves and Englishmen.鈥
鈥淏ut if we tell the story of 1619 the right way, it鈥檚 a way of remembering that the United States at its origins in the early Colonial period is as much African as it is European,鈥 says Professor Guasco, a historian at聽North Carolina's聽Davidson College. 鈥淸That means] we can look at Jamestown as a starting point 鈥 and in some ways not simplifying, but complicating things from that point.鈥
On Jamestown Island, ospreys screech for attention while oaks whisper in the breeze. A statue of John Smith stands next to the spot where John Rolfe is said to have married Pocahontas. The graves of settlers are marked with thin crosses. The remains of a Civil War fort overlook the James River.
In the public discourse, Jamestown is often framed as a disastrous outing, as opposed to Plymouth, which largely owns America鈥檚 origin story. (Next year, the 400th anniversary of Thanksgiving will shift the focus to the Bay State.)
Yet what happened at Jamestown, historians say, cuts close to what America eventually became. The idea, according to instructions from the Virginia Company of London for a first general assembly, was to improve the human condition through locally crafted laws that provided 鈥渇or happy guiding and governing of the people.鈥 But the company and its colonists had another clear motive (aside from survival): to make profits for shareholders.
鈥淗istorians know that when you look at the origins of how something is formed, you don鈥檛 go too far from its foundation,鈥 says Cassandra Newby-Alexander, author of 鈥淏lack America Series: Portsmouth, Virginia.鈥 鈥淲e鈥檙e in this circle ... where we keep looping back to inequality, keep looping back to racism, keep looping back to unfair treatment, and it鈥檚 because we are not looking clearly and honestly at our origins and how those foundations were laid. Four hundred years later, people are realizing it is time to start a new arc.鈥
Not far from the Angela site archaeologists have uncovered the original Jamestowne Fort and its church, including a choir pew located at 鈥渢he exact spot where representative government begins only a few weeks before the Africans arrive,鈥 says Historic Jamestowne historian Mark Summers before taking a seat in a newly installed pew.
When Angela arrived, she was purchased by Capt. Bill Pierce. She likely served as a house servant. It is not known whether she married or bore children, although her remains might hold clues to the latter.
What is clear is that the Angolans came as prisoners, not immigrants. In the ensuing years there was little talk about rights for the enslaved. Instead, according to Mr. Horn, the policing of Africans occupied lawmakers.
The year 1619 is the time 鈥渇reedom stumped its toe ... [at] Jamestown,鈥 as Langston Hughes writes in the poem 鈥淎merican Heartbreak.鈥
Four hundred years later, on average, black families have only a tenth of the net worth of white families ($17,000 versus $170,000). Disparities in education funding, property wealth, and health outcomes mean that white wealth is growing three times faster than black wealth.
As historians delve deeper into the lives of the first African Americans, 鈥渨e should not hesitate but to also consider what happens with black family life 400 years later,鈥 says Norfolk State historiographer Colita Fairfax, co-chair of the 1619 Commemorative Commission in Hampton, Virginia. 鈥淲hy do we see similar and often identical economic situations for black people 400 years later?鈥
At the same time, historians like Mr. Summers say they are seeing growing interest in understanding the full nature of America鈥檚 origins.
In bids to take historical propaganda out of the public sphere, controversial Civil War statues are falling and Confederate flags are being put into museums. Institutions like Georgetown University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and others are acknowledging the role of slavery and racism in their foundations amid questions of why black people on campus are still more likely to be janitors instead of students. The policing of black men especially remains at the forefront of debate over the role of prejudice in policy.
For Angie Towery-Tomasura, one of the archaeologists, the search for Angela has become a personal mission.
鈥淗er story is written in the dirt,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e are driven to find it. We want to give Angela a voice.鈥