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Blockade Of AfricaPursuant to an 1807 Act of Congress which abolished the intercontinental slave trade, the United States Navy established the Blockade of Africa, which continued on until 1866. In accordance with the Webster-Ashburton Treaty, the British Navy joined the American Navy in 1842 to assist them in their efforts to halt the blackbirding slave traders. The United States Constitution of 1787 had protected slavery for twenty years; even so, the Pennsylvania Abolition Society was formed, and held its first meeting at the temporary Capital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1794. On April 7th, 1798, the fifth Congress passed an Act that imposed a three-hundred dollars per slave penalty on persons convicted of performing the illegal importation of slaves. It was an indication of the type of behavior and course of events soon to become commonplace in the Congress. On Thursday, December 12, 1805, in the ninth Congress, Senator Stephen Roe Bradley of the State of Vermont gave notice that he should, on Monday next, move for leave to bring in a bill to prohibit the importation of certain persons therein described "into any port or place within the jurisdiction of the United States, from and after the first day of January," which will be "in the year of our Lord 1808." His words would be repeated many times by the legislators in the ninth Congress. The certain persons were described as being slaves on Monday, December 16, 1805. Wary of offending the slaveholders to the least degree, the Senate amended the proposed Senatorial Act, then passed it to the House of Representatives whereat it became meticulously scrutinized and, figuratively, poked and prodded. Cautiously, ever mindful of not inciting the wrath of slaveholders, members of the House produced a bill which would explain the Senatorial Act. The two measures were binded together, with the House bill being called H R 77 and the Senate Act being called An Act to prohibit the importation of slaves into any port or place within the jurisdiction of the United States, from and after the first day of January, in the year of our Lord, 1808. The binded measure also regulated the coastwise slave trade. The binded measure was placed before President Thomas Jefferson on March 2, 1807 for his approbation. The 1807 Act of Congress was modified and supplemented by the fifteenth Congress. The importation of slaves into the United States was called "piracy" by an Act of Congress that punctuated the era of good feeling in 1819. Any citizen of the United States found guilty of such "piracy" might be given the death penalty. The role of the Navy was expanded to include patrols off the coasts of Cuba and South America. The naval activities in the western Atlantic bore the name of The African Slave Trade Patrol of 1820-61. The blockade of Africa was still being performed in the eastern Atlantic at the same time. "black ivory" The United States Navy was assigned the task of intercepting the ships which were bringing Negroes from Africa across the Atlantic ocean to the slave markets in which black ivory found numerous customers. Because the War for Independence had been costly, the General Government had not constructed new ships in the years from 1783 to 1795. The Navy Department was created on April 30th, 1798, four years after President George Washington had communicated with Congress and expressed his alarm at the outrageous behavior that the Algerian nation was doing. On March 27, 1794, following the communication with the Chief Executive, Congress authorized the purchase or construction of six frigates. The ships that were built included the first USS Constellation, which was launched on September 7, 1797 and the USS Constitution, a ship that would be employed in the African Squadron, albeit briefly. Few new ships were built in the United States after 1801 until the USS Guerriere was launched on June 20, 1814. It proved to be an effective warship in the War with the Barbary Pirates in 1815. In its early efforts to enforce the law, the Navy utilized the ports of Charleston, S.C. and Savannah, Ga. from 1808 or 1809 to 1812 as home ports for several ships patrolling the Atlantic ocean in that area; however, the USS Chesapeake sailed off the west coast of Africa early in 1813. The Navy created the African Squadron for the purpose of intercepting ships with black ivory on board, however, very few ships were operating together at any one time which meant that the blockade of Africa was ineffective. More important tasks such as the War of 1812, the ongoing troubles with the Barbary Pirates, the extermination of the pirates in the West Indies from 1819 to 1827, the protection of American shipping in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Peru in the 1830s, the War with Mexico in the 1840s, the voyages to Japan in the 1850s, and the transporting of diplomats to other nations left little capability available for use in the African Squadron. Nevertheless, some noteworthy events involving ships while they were assigned to the African Squadron did occur. The African Squadron American naval officer Matthew Calbraith Perry was the executive officer aboard the Cyane in 1819, which had escorted Elizabeth with Negro pioneers aboard who were moving from the United States to Africa. In 1821, Perry commanded Shark in the African Squadron. Alligator under the command of Lieutenant Robert F. Stockton was also in the African Squadron in 1821. She captured several slavers. Lieutenant Stockton convinced the local African Chief to relinquish the land around Cape Mesurado about which Liberia grew. Stockton became the commander of the U.S. Navy's first screw-propelled steamer, Princeton, in 1843. In 1842, aboard Somers in the African Squadron, commander Alexander Slidell Mackenzie ordered the arrest of three crewmen on November 26th and 27th who were promptly convicted of plotting to take control of the ship. The three crewmen were hanged on December 1st. The event is the only Maritime Mutiny at Law event in the history of the United States Navy. Commodore Perry was placed in command of the African Squadron in 1843. Ships which captured slavers while deployed with the African Squadron include Yorktown, Constellation, and the second Constellation, which captured Cora on September 26, 1860, with 705 Negroes on board. The first San Jacinto captured the brig Storm King on August 8, 1860, off the mouth of the Congo River, with 616 Negroes on board. In its final act, Constitution captured H.N. Gambrill in 1853. The Navy attempted to intercept slave ships from 1808 (or 1809) to 1866. More than one-hundred ships were intercepted; some of those ships were carrying Negroes destined to be sold into slavery, while other suspected ships which had none on board were captured and escorted away from the coast of Africa. External links
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