CAPTIVES OF WAR

In the aftermath of the brutal Portuguese invasion into the Ndongo kingdom,
historian Manuel Bautista Soares recorded that, by September 1619, the bodies
of thousands of butchered casualties were polluting the rivers and a "great
multitude of innocent people had been captured without cause."  Professor
John Thorton writes:

   "The demographic impact of this war was starkly obvious when the
[Portuguese] campaign was
   resumed the next year [1619]; the army met no resistance in any part of
the back country [Sertao],
   these provinces having become destitute of inhabitants."

Deaf to the pleas of priests and the protests of Portuguese settlers whose
land were being ravaged, Vasconelos let the uncontrolled killing and
enslavement continue for many months.  The conduct of  rampaging Imbangala
mercernaries was chronicled by Vogado Sotomaior, the ouvidor geral de Angola.
 Sotomaior complained of the fall of the royal Ndongo city of Kabasa, that it
was "sacked in such a way that many thousands of souls were captured, killed
and eaten".  

Vasconcelos had marched into the heart of the Angola motivated by a desire
for riches from the sale of slaves.  The historian Soares rebuked
Vasconcelos, that since he placed the Imbangala at the front, "the wars were
without any danger, but with discredit to the Portuguese."  The general gave
free rein to rampaging mercenaries passing beyond the Ndongo realm into the
villages of his own African allies in Congo.  Vasconcelos stood by as
Christian converts, baggage handlers for his military train, were taken by
the Imbangala in the frantic rush for slaves.  There is evidence from
Angolans delivered to Virginia, that many of them had a long-held Christian
faith prior to their abductions by the Portuguese and Imbangala.

THE SLAVE PENS OF LUANDA

From 1618 through the spring of 1619, the slow tread of hundreds of Angolan
captives grew to a steady forced march of thousands streaming into the
Portuguese-built port of Luanda.  Tens of thousands of prisoners from the
highlands choked the capabilities of the port to hold them.  Those surviving
Ndongo who had not been slaughtered and eaten by the Imbangala, were crammed
into flimsy, hastily-built facilities which could not nearly contain them
all.  In the commotion, Angolans by the hundreds simply faded into the
forests unchallenged.

The Portuguese had not planned well for the unexpected size of their slave
harvest.  Only 36 merchant-slave ships arrived at Luanda in the fiscal year
of 1618-1619.  Each slaver was capable of holding an average of from 350-400
captives.  The turn-around time of these ships leaving Africa for Portuguese
and Spanish ports in the New World was several weeks.  The logistics of
sheltering, feeding and guarding 50,000 prisoners were woefully
underestimated.  This was one of the largest slave expeditions ever in the
history of Africa.  The Angolans waited, bound in the heat and rain for
months, as the trickle of slavers loaded them for the dangerous Atlantic
crossing to the Americas.

Never before in the slave trade had so many Africans come from so small a
place. Thousands were uprooted from the Lukala River area; so many people
taken, that the country immediately afterwards was described as deserted.  
Those first Angolans landing in Virginia in 1619, and the largest percentage
of those arriving on into the 1650s shared a common regional background,
ethnicity and language.  It may have been this shared identity which led the
Angolans of North America to easily band together in Virginia, Carolina,
Maryland and Delaware.  This sense of community can be traced to their
descendants, the Melungeons of Tennessee and Kentucky, and even later to
those settling Ohio, Louisiana and Texas.

The common regionality of the thousands of Angolan captives assembled at
Luanda differed greatly from the routine trade of smaller groups of Africans
crossing by single shiploads, perhaps from a single village, arriving in a
new country, dwarfed by the numbers already present;  their tribal identity
quickly removed on chattel plantations.  These 50,000 Angolans represented a
good part of a kingdom of many villages.  They were all neighbors and kin.
The Angolans of the 17th century came to the Americas when there were no
Africans and relatively few Europeans to subjugate them.  These first were
not swallowed up and lost.  Thorton writes:

   "In America, when Kimbundu-speaking people were able to communicate and
visit each other, a sense
   of an "Angolan Nation" emerged.  It was certainly observable in Spanish
America, if not yet at the very
   beginnings of English-speaking Virginia's reception of Africans."

The Angolans in Virginia and other colonies from 1619-1660 would likely have
recognized new arrivals as fellow countrymen from the native land. Those sent
to Brazil  retained their ethnic identity and it is becoming apparent that
Angolans arriving in the British-American colonies maintained communal ties
which remain even today among their Melungeon descendants.  By the time
Africans came in later as permanent chattel slaves, the Angolans and their
mixed descendants had already become a separate free-born community in
Virginia.  Neither white nor chattel, Melungeons were a society apart from
the three dominant cultures of Indian, white, and African slaves though some
free blacks assimilated into each of those three cultures.

When persecution rose, as in the Carolinas,  Melungeons sought new frontiers,
often together in large wagon trains like the hundred-family Mayo party
rolling from the Carolinas into Louisiana and Texas in 1857.  Other mixed
descendants of free colonial blacks did not flee, but like the Lumbees stayed
and fought and won a begrudged distance from their 19th century white enemies.

NATURAL ADVANTAGES OF ANGOLANS IN THE NEW WORLD

Because of this common identity as fellow countrymen, we can see how the
Angolan ancestors of the Melungeons could succeed as a distinctive group in a
new land.  Also, Angolans coming into Virginia, found similarities in the
land itself which favored them over many urbanized English settlers.  The
Ndongo homeland was densely populated in the narrow strip of land between its
two major rivers.  One Ndongo city with its suburbs of the late 16th century,
was said to have held nearly 100,000 residents.  This was likely an
exaggerated number according to Thornton, but it gives a perception of the
populous region.  

At the same time Thorton notes the many tightly-packed towns were separated
at intervals by sections of farmland.  These Bantu were urbanized, yet they
grew crops and kept domesticated animals.  They were certainly better
equipped to face the North American wilderness than were many of their white
colonial counterparts; indentured Europeans plucked from prisons, poor
houses, alleys, brothels and taverns in large squalid urban sprawls like
London and Bristol.  The Ndongo were accustomed to markets and town life, but
they also knew how to grow sorghum and millet and keep large herds of cattle,
goats and chickens long before the Portuguese invasion.  They were well
equipped to face the hardships of the vast American wilderness.  Lerone
Bennett Jr. in "Before the Mayflower" writes:

   "There were skilled farmers and artisans among the first group of
African-Americans, and there are    
   indications in the record that they were responsible for various
innovations later credited to English
   immigrants.  An early example of this was reported in Virginia, where the
governor ordered rice to be
   planted in 1648 "on the advice of our Negroes."

And he quotes Washington Irving on the early Virginia Africans:

   "These Negroes, like the monks of the Dark Ages, engross all the
knowledge of the place, and being
   infinitely more adventurous and more knowing than their masters, carry on
all the foreign trade;
   making frequent voyages in canoes loaded with oysters, buttermilk, and
cabbages.  They are great
   astrologers, predicting the different changes of weather almost as
accurately as an almanac."

In such an environment, unhampered by the racial prejudice still decades
away, the Ndongo thrived.  By 1651 in Virginia, the Angolan transplant
Anthony Johnson owned farms and imported a number of servants, some of  them
white.  The abstract of his deed reads:

   "Anthony Johnson, 250 acres. Northampton County, 24 July 1651...at great
Naswattock Creek, by two
   small branches issuing out of the mayne Creek."  "Transfer of persons:
Tho. Bemrose, Peter Bughby,
   Antho. Cripps, Jno Gesorroro, Richard Johnson."

In 1652, his son John Johnson, owned 550 acres with 11 slaves of different
races and sexes.  Their names were listed as; John Edward, Wm. Routh, Tho.
Yowell, Fra. Maland, William Price, John Owen, Dorthy Rily, Richard Hemstead,
Law, Barnes, Row, Rith, Mary Johnson.  Along with the acquisitions of other
family members, the Johnsons, some 30 years after Portuguese slavery,
possessed over one thousand acres of land and owned no less than 20 black and
white servants in the Virginia Colony along with at least two slaves.  
Bennett adds this about early achievements:

   "Not only did pioneer blacks vote, but they also held public office.  
There was a black surety in York
    County, Virginia in the first decades of the 17th century, and a black
beadle [court crier or bailiff] in
    Lancaster County, Virginia."

However, even by this early date, some Africans were already held as chattel
slaves in the British-American colonies and within a few decades, legislation
would begin curtailing the liberties of even free blacks.  After 1720, the
growth of the free black population depended mostly on births alone since all
Africans arriving in the southern colonies by ship after that date usually
passed directly into chattel slavery.  The cradlehood of free Melungia in
North America lasted from about 1620 to about 1720.  By the time hostile laws
began to menace the mixed free-born children of the Angolans, the Melungeons
were strong enough and wise enough to survive on their own.

THE PORTUGUESE INFLUENCE IN ANGOLA BEFORE 1619

Europeans and their customs were not entirely alien to Angolan-Africans
before coming to colonial Virginia.  By the 16th century, the Portugal had
already made contact with people of the Congo immediately north of Angola.  
During this time, Ndongo was a vassal state, subject to Congo rulers.  King
Alphonso, [1509-42] of Congo willingly opened his nation to Catholic
missionaries and Iberian merchants.  The Angolans had bartered with European
Christians in a common trade language for many decades.

Portugal was unlike other colonial powers in that it regarded its colonies
like "states" and, according to "Brittanica", Angola was the largest state of
Portugal.  Catholic Portugal required all hostile African captives to be
baptized and converted to Christianity before they were shipped west to the
New World.  But not all baptisms were forced. By 1619, Kimbundu-speaking
Christians were already worshipping in Angola.  Jesuit priests who came in
1575 had produced catechismal literature in the language spoken by the
Ndongo.  Professor Thornton notes of the impact of Christian ritual even on
those captured in war:

      "Such a rudimentary instruction was probably oriented to the syncretic
practice of the Angolan
      church, which followed patterns, already a century old, from the Kongo
church that had originally
      fertilized it. Thus, early 17th century Spanish Jesuits, conducting an
investigation of the state of
      knowledge of the Christian religion among newly arrived slaves, found
that, for all the problems they
      noted, the Angolan slaves seem to have adequate understanding of the
faith by the time they arrived."

Many Angolans bound for Mexican mines before free-booters diverted them to
Virginia, had at the very least, a basic education in Christianity before
arriving.  In the colonies and later in the states, a number of Melungeons
argued they were Portuguese Christians and on that basis they insisted they
should be exempted from life-long chattel slavery.  In 1667 in Lower Norfolk,
Virginia, an African slave named Fernando sued in court for freedom insisting
that he was a Christian.  He presented documents in "Portuguese or some other
language" which the county court could not read and his suit was denied.  
Thorton and Heywood have found that in the early American colonies:

   "People with a Spanish/Portuguese last name that is also a first name
like John Francisco or John Pedro
   (on the 1625 census) are following an Angolan naming pattern.  The source
of the Iberian names, in
   our opinion, is not the forced baptism given by the Portuguese in Luanda.
 In our opinion, whatever
   names people might have received in those circumstances would probably
have been either forgotten
   or rejected when circumstances changed.  Rather we think these names were
taken voluntarily in Africa
   long before their owners were enslaved when the people were baptized.  

   In Kongo, the Christian  Church goes back to 1491 and was so well
established by the 17th century that
   virtually everyone had a  "Portuguese" name, but it was not so well
established in Kimbundu-speaking
   areas.  On the other hand the bishop of Angola did complain that during
the 1619-20 campaign, the
   rampaging armies of Mendes de Vasconcelos captured some 4,000 Christian
porters and sold them into
   slavery.  In 1621, the campaigns went deep into Kongo, and thousands were
also captured at the battle
   of Mbumbi at the very end of the year.  These would all have been
Christian, indeed, probably third or
   fourth generation Christian.  Since they took the Christian names
voluntarily, they would make these
   names known to their new masters in Virginia.  The many people who are
not listed with any names in
   the census of 1624 and 1625 and in the headright documents, might be, in
our opinion, the non-
   Christians from the Kimbundu-speaking areas"

The first African-Americans called themselves "Portuguese" after the official
religion of the ruling
colonial power in their native homeland.  From New York to Carolina they had
surnames like Big Manuel, Rodriggus, Manuel de Gerrit de Rens, Anthony
Portuguese, Isabella, John Pedro and Antonio, reflecting their
Portuguese-African heritage.  They also had more telling names like Paul d'
Angola and Simon Congo.

These claims of Portuguese nationality have often been misinterpreted as
attempts by early Angolan-Americans and their mixed children, to escape
slavery by denying their African blood.  This is untrue.  Children of Angolan
parents claimed that their forebears had been voluntarily baptised as
Christians before slavers had stolen them and sent the to Virginia.  English
custom of the era frowned on the practice of white Christians taking other
Christians.  Legally, to be a documented Portuguese citizen was to be a
baptised Christian exempt from slavery.  However to keep their slaves, many
Virginia, Maryland and Carolina slave-owners would be inclined to deny or
conceal evidence of  Portuguese baptisms.

Sometimes the Melungeons were awarded their claims, sometimes they were not.  
This people stubbornly maintained their Portuguese nationality for more than
two centuries, passing it down by word-of-mouth when they were forbidden as
people of color, access to white schools.  To the early Melungeons,
"Portuguese" did not mean they were not African.  It meant that as voluntary
Christians, they had a legal right to share civil freedoms in Christian
lands.  Only after about 1830 did Melungeons use the claim of "Portuguese"
nationality to deny African blood in their frantic bid to escape slavery.  By
then, any protection from slavery based on being a "Christian" had vanished
in many states.

SLAVES AND SERVANTS IN 17TH CENTURY VIRGINIA

When the first Angolan-Africans, the famous "20 and odd Negroes" from the
Dutch man-o-war in 1619 landed in Virginia, they were not the first slaves in
the colonies.  The first slaves of Virginia were white Englishmen, and this
is an important observation to make about the early American colonies.  There
was very little practical distinction between the words "servant" and "slave"
in the 17th century, though much has been made of the documented use of the
former title in regards to the status of Africans at that time.  Servants
were temporary slaves. Many white Europeans were often forced to enter the
colonies like the Africans; with little or no choice.  Hundreds of English
citizens were kidnapped outright,  for not many were eager to face the raw
American challenge in the 1600s.  The premature mortality rate in Virginia
before 1620 was an incredibly high 50%, and for the period of 1620-22, some
have argued convincingly that the death rate was even higher.

Men, women and children from England, Scotland and Ireland were coerced into
coming to America because they were either orphans, or bound servants, or
poor, or jailed felons, or religious dissenters, or prostitutes or the
riotous ne'er-do-well sons of gentlemen.  The earliest European middle
passage, though not as terrible as the African passage, could be a
frightening ordeal.  Crammed aboard ships usually already overloaded with
rancid food supplies and swarming with disease-carrying vermin, sometimes
they were quarantined offshore to rot.   Those whites who survived,  were
sold to the highest bidder, often by the ships' captains who had abducted
them from the streets of London.  White or black, indentured servants were
totally at the mercy of masters who could injure and even kill them without
legal repercussion.  Colonial servitude was so harsh, and certain masters so
hated, that white and black servants joined in groups to flee into the
wilderness or strike out in desparation for other colonies.

But should the servant survive the term of the indenture, precious freedom
was the reward for whites and many blacks in 17th century Virginia.  Lerone
Bennett Jr writes about the founders of African-America:

   "In Virginia, then, as in other colonies, the first black settlers fell
into a well-established socio-
   economic groove which carried with it no implications of racial
inferiority.  That came later.  But in the
   interim, a period of forty years or more, the first black settlers
accumulated land, voted, testified in
   court and mingled with whites on a basis of equality.  They owned other
black servants and certain
   blacks imported and paid for white servants whom they apparently held in
servitude."