to Africa for their slaves, but simply captured slavers
and sold their cargoes into the United States.
This Galveston nest had, in 1817, eleven armed vessels
to prosecute the work, and “the most shameful
violations of the slave act, as well as our revenue
laws, continue to be practised."[83] Cargoes of as
many as three hundred slaves were arriving in Texas.
All this took place under Aury, the buccaneer governor;
and when he removed to Amelia Island in 1817 with
the McGregor raid, the illicit traffic in slaves,
which had been going on there for years,[84] took
an impulse that brought it even to the somewhat deaf
ears of Collector Bullock. He reported, May 22,
1817: “I have just received information
from a source on which I can implicitly rely, that
it has already become the practice to introduce into
the state of Georgia, across the St. Mary’s
River, from Amelia Island, East Florida, Africans,
who have been carried into the Port of Fernandina,
subsequent to the capture of it by the Patriot army
now in possession of it ...; were the legislature
to pass an act giving compensation in some manner to
informers, it would have a tendency in a great degree
to prevent the practice; as the thing now is, no citizen
will take the trouble of searching for and detecting
the slaves. I further understand, that the evil
will not be confined altogether to Africans, but will
be extended to the worst class of West India slaves."[85]
Undoubtedly, the injury done by these pirates to the regular slave-trading interests was largely instrumental in exterminating them. Late in 1817 United States troops seized Amelia Island, and President Monroe felicitated Congress and the country upon escaping the “annoyance and injury” of this illicit trade.[86] The trade, however, seems to have continued, as is shown by such letters as the following, written three and a half months later:—
PORT OF DARIEN, March 14, 1818.
... It is a painful duty, sir, to express to you, that I am in possession of undoubted information, that African and West India negroes are almost daily illicitly introduced into Georgia, for sale or settlement, or passing through it to the territories of the United States for similar purposes; these facts are notorious; and it is not unusual to see such negroes in the streets of St. Mary’s, and such too, recently captured by our vessels of war, and ordered to Savannah, were illegally bartered by hundreds in that city, for this bartering or bonding (as it is called, but in reality selling,) actually took place before any decision had [been] passed by the court respecting them. I cannot but again express to you, sir, that these irregularities and mocking of the laws, by men who understand them, and who, it was presumed, would have respected them, are such, that it requires the immediate interposition of Congress to effect a suppression of this traffic; for, as things are, should a faithful officer