The last known intact US slave ship is too ‘broken’ and should stay underwater, a report recommends

A state-funded investigation says that Clotilde, the last known U.S. slave ship, is too broken and decayed to be extracted from the murky waters of the Alabama Gulf Coast without dismembering it. Dives revealed the confined chambers where 110 people were held remain mostly intact.

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — The last known U.S. slave ship is too “broken” and decayed to be extracted from the murky waters of the Alabama Gulf Coast without being dismembered, a task force of archaeologists, engineers and historians announced following a yearslong investigation.

The task force headed by the Alabama Historical Commission said Thursday that the Clotilda, the last ship known to transport enslaved Africans to the United States, had been broken in half by a large vessel and severely eroded by bacteria. The 500-page report says that the “responsible” way to memorialize the ship is to protect it under the water where it was discovered in 2019.

“There is no other site in the world that presents such physical evidence as the Clotilda,” said James Delgado, a lead marine archeologist on the investigation who said the priority was preserving that physical evidence. “The Clotilda is the scene of the crime, so everything we did was in that crime scene investigation manner.”

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