History

The tragic yet resilient story of Igbo slaves who committed mass suicide off U.S. coast in 1803

The stories of slave resistance, many of us know, have to do with bloodshed, violence, and destruction. But there are other acts of resistance whose stories are worth being told. Take that of ‘The Igbo Landing’ also called the Ibo Landing, Ebo Landing, or Ebos Landing.

The Igbo Landing is a historic site at Dunbar Creek on St. Simons Island, Glynn County, Georgia. It is the site of one of the largest mass suicides of enslaved people in history. Historians say Igbo captives from modern-day Nigeria, purchased for an average of $100 each by slave merchants John Couper and Thomas Spalding, arrived in Savannah, Georgia, on the slave ship the Wanderer in 1803.

Igbo Landing site

The chained slaves were then reloaded and packed under the deck of a coastal vessel, the York, which would take them to St. Simons where they were to be resold. During the voyage, approximately 75 Igbo slaves rose in rebellion. They drowned their captors and caused the grounding of the ship in Dunbar Creek. The Igbo were known by planters and slave owners of the American South to be fiercely independent and more resistant to chattel slavery.

According to Professor Terri L. Snyder, “the enslaved cargo “suffered much by mismanagement,” “rose” from their confinement in the small vessel, and revolted against the crew, forcing them into the water where they drowned”. Led by their chief, the Africans then marched ashore, singing. At their chief’s direction, they walked into the marshy waters of Dunbar Creek, committing mass suicide.

Roswell King, a white overseer on a nearby plantation called Pierce Butler plantation, is the first to have recorded the incident. He and another man identified only as Captain Patterson recovered thirteen bodies. The others remained missing, and some are believed to have survived the suicide episode.

For centuries, some historians have cast doubt on the event, suggesting that the entire incident was more folklore than fact. But a post-1980 research verified the accounts Roswell King and others provided at the time using “modern scientific techniques to reconstruct the episode and confirm the factual basis of the longstanding oral accounts”.

The site was designated as a holy ground by the St. Simons African American community in September 2012. The Igbo Landing is also now a part of the curriculum for coastal Georgia schools.

The Igbo Landing has come to occupy great symbolic importance in local African American folklore. The mutiny and subsequent suicide by the Igbo people have been called the first freedom march in the history of the United States and local people claim that the Landing and surrounding marshes in Dunbar Creek were haunted by the souls of the dead Igbo slaves.

There are myths of “the water walking Africans”: “Heard about the Ibo’s Landing? That’s the place where they bring the Ibos over in a slave ship and when they get here, they ain’t like it and so they all start singing and they march right down in the river to march back to Africa, but they ain’t able to get there. They gets drown,” one Floyd White, an elderly African-American interviewed by the Federal Writers Project in the 1930s, said.

There is also the “myth of the Flying Africans” where people report that the Igbos flew to Africa. Wallace Quarterman, an African-American born in 1844 who was interviewed in 1930 about the Igbo Landing said, “Ain’t you heard about them? Well, at that time Mr. Blue he was the overseer and . . . Mr. Blue he go down one morning with a long whip for to whip them good. . . . Anyway, he whipped them good and they got together and stuck that hoe in the field and then . . . rose up in the sky and turned themselves into buzzards and flew right back to Africa. . . . Everybody knows about them”.

So powerful is this story of resistance that it is often referred to in African American literature. Writer Alex Haley recounts it in his high acclaimed book, Roots, and it was the basis for Nobel laureate, Toni Morrison’s, novel, Song of Solomon. Visual artists have also paid tribute to the Igbos who endured this event. Below is Jamaican artist, Donovan Nelson’s illustrations paying tribute to the event. They are on display at the Valentine Museum of Art.

Contemporary artists like Beyonce have also depicted and paid homage to the Igbo Landing in their work. In the recent wildly acclaimed Marvel comic film, Black Panther, Killmonger, played by actor Michael B Jordan, refers to this event, saying, “Bury me in the ocean with my ancestors who jumped from ships, ’cause they knew death was better than bondage”.

Bridget Boakye

Bridget Boakye is a writer, activist, and entrepreneur based in Accra, Ghana. Raised in both Ghana and the U.S., she is particularly interested in issues that draw on the experiences, insights, and values from both Africa and the African Diaspora. She is currently an Amplify Africa Fellow and member of the Global Shapers Accra Hub. You can find her on Instagram at @boakyeb

Recent Posts

Ghanaian American Ohemaa Nyanin named general manager of WNBA Golden State

Ohemaa Nyanin has been named the general manager of the WNBA Golden State team. Nyanin,…

1 hour ago

Allen Onyema: Meet the peaceful man who left law to start Nigeria’s leading airline, Air Peace

Meet Allen Onyema; he is the founder of Nigeria’s largest carrier, Air Peace. The Nigerian…

4 hours ago

The story behind Alicia Keys’ Broadway musical Hell’s Kitchen nominated for 13 Tonys

Alicia Keys has reached a new milestone with her musical "Hell's Kitchen" as it has…

5 hours ago

Simone Biles admits she blacked out at her wedding party

Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles decided to commemorate her first wedding anniversary to NFL star…

7 hours ago

‘God jammed the gun’ – Man arrested after attempting to shoot pastor during service livestream

Authorities in Pennsylvania have arrested and charged a 26-year-old man who was seen allegedly attempting…

7 hours ago

British darts player Deta Hedman explains why she declined to play against transgender opponent

British female darts player Deta Hedman withdrew from the Denmark Open over the weekend after…

8 hours ago

New York-based Ghanaian couple accused of fatally beating 5-year-old son sentenced

A New York-based Ghanaian couple accused of fatally beating their 5-year-old son was on May…

8 hours ago

Former Miss Nevada to finally meet her biological mom 44 years after being abandoned in airport

Former beauty queen Elizabeth Hunterton, who was abandoned in an airport as a newborn in…

8 hours ago

9-year-old’s decision to give his only dollar to tycoon he assumed was homeless earns him free shopping spree

It was an act of goodwill with no intended expectation in mind. Donating his only…

21 hours ago

Meet Goldfields’ Catherine Kuupol, who is now the first woman general manager in Ghana’s mining history

Get to know Ms. Catherine Kuupol, a mineral engineer who has provided metallurgical technical services…

22 hours ago

Haitian-American teen gets accepted into 17 colleges with over $1 million in scholarships

Yves-Ann Comeau, 18, is gaining attention for her recent accomplishment of being accepted into 17…

1 day ago

Solicitor says he was pinned down by court guards in ‘George Floyd manner’: ‘I was just trying to do my job’

Lawyers say they are considering a boycott of a court following an incident where up…

1 day ago

Larry Demeritte becomes first Caribbean trainer at Kentucky Derby despite cancer battle

Larry Demeritte is the first Caribbean trainer to participate in the Kentucky Derby and the…

1 day ago

Beyoncé’s name is regarded as a noun in French dictionary …here is why

She is celebrated globally for her groundbreaking work across the music and movie industry. But,…

1 day ago

Aspiring medical doctor left brain-dead after allegedly being pushed into lake by friend

The family of an aspiring medical doctor is seeking justice after he was left brain-dead…

1 day ago