Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society and Museum in Key West, Florida
Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society and Museum in Key West, Florida

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HENRIETTA MARIE QUOTES 

Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society and Museum in Key West, Florida Exhibitions

"A Slave Ship Speaks: 
The Wreck of the Henrietta Marie"

Exhibit organizers, including a panel of the nation’s leading African-American scholars, spent more than three years determining the best way to present the Henrietta Marie within a larger historical context. Their impressions of the shipwreck, its artifacts, and its implications follow.  Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society and Museum in Key West, Florida Henrietta Marie Bell

“The story ends in 1700 for this particular ship, but the story of what the ship represented continues today. The importance of the Henrietta Marie is that it is an essential part of the recovery process—the process of recovering the black experience—symbolically, metaphorically, and in reality.”

                                                            —Dr. Colin Palmer, Professor of History, CUNY Graduate Center; author of Human Cargoes

“I was struck by the weight of the shackles when I picked them up. I thought about it not so much in terms of a physical encumbrance, but almost in metaphoric terms—like feeling the encumbrance of the historical inequities. I also thought, metaphorically, ‘look what has happened with the removal of these shackles.’”

                                                            —Dr. Gwendolyn Robinson, former Executive Director, DuSable Museum

“The Henrietta Marie is considered the world’s biggest source of tangible objects representing the early period of the actual trading of enslaved Africans. When you uncover something like this, it gives you a sacred trust to be more aware—and to make as many other people aware as you can.”

                                                            —Dr. Madeleine Burnside, Executive Director, Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society

“In studying the Henrietta Marie and ships like her—and the African diaspora and the transatlantic slave trade in general—you really get back to the roots of just exactly why we have the problems that we have today. If we can show people that, if we can illustrate that sort of thing for people, then perhaps that will create a better understanding between the races.”

                                                            —David Moore, 
Head Project Archaeologist Henrietta Marie Excavation

“These artifacts have such a sense of immediacy. It’s not just a matter of reading something in a book or hearing about it. The shackles would move almost anybody. You can see them. That, I think, is important.”

                                                            —Dr. James Rawley,
Professor Emeritus of History, University of Nebraska

“A lot of blacks don’t want to talk about slavery because they feel personally ashamed by having been so debased. A lot of whites don’t want to talk about it because they feel that they are the legatees of a vicious thing. If there’s no vehicle to help them bring it out, they go into denial because the pain is too much to keep conscious. This exhibit may furnish an occasion for continuing to understand—and presumably, after sufficient understanding, there will be some healing.”

                                                            —Dr. Russell Adams, Chairman, Department of Afro-American Studies, Howard University

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Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society and Museum
200 Greene Street, Key West, Florida 33040
305/294-2633

 

Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society and Museum in Key West, Florida

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