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Rescued from their Invisibility: The Afro-Puerto Ricans of Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century San Mateo de Cangrejos, Puerto Rico*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

David M. Stark*
Affiliation:
Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan

Extract

The black “root” has been systematically “uprooted” from the main “trunk” of the Puerto Rican nation.

Jorge Duany

Scholars who study Puerto Rico's past have struggled with the question of how to define the island’s national identity. Is the essence of Puerto Rican identity rooted in Spain, does it have its origins in Africa, in the legacy of the native Tainos, or is it a product of two or all three of these? This polemical question has yet to be resolved and remains a subject of much debate. The island's black past is often overlooked, and what has been written tends to focus on the enslaved labor force and its ties to the nineteenth-century plantation economy. Few works are specifically devoted to the study of the island's seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Afro-Puerto Rican population. Recent scholarship has begun to address this oversight. For example, the efforts of fugitive slaves and free black West Indian migrants making their way to Puerto Rico have been well documented. Yet, little is known about the number or identity of these runaways. How many slaves made their way to freedom in Puerto Rico, who were they, and where did they come from? Perhaps more importantly, what about their new lives on the island? How were they able to create a sense of belonging, both as individuals and as part of a community within the island's existing population and society? What follows strives to answer these questions by taking a closer look first at the number and identity of these fugitives, and second at how new arrivals were assimilated into their new surroundings through marriage and family formation while their integration was facilitated by participation in the local economy. Through their religious and civic activity Afro-Puerto Ricans were able to create a niche for themselves in San Juan and eventually a community of their own in Cangrejos. In doing so, they helped shape the island's national identity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 2007

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Footnotes

*

I wish to thank Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, Muriel Nazzari, and the anonymous reviewers for their comments on earlier drafts. I am very indebted to the late Carlos Cianchini, Gladysín Huerta-Stark, Pedro A. Morell, Dr. Rubén Nazario, Mabel Porrata, Dr. Luis Rodríguez-Medina, and Raúl Zurinaga for their assistance in the transcription of parish baptismal and marriage records used in this study. I am particularly grateful for the expertise and help kindly provided by Else Zayas León at the Archivo Diocesano in San Juan, where the San Juan and Cangrejos records are now kept. The research on which this work is based was made possible by a grant from the Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Puerto Rico y el Caribe.

References

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10 “Relación de los siete pueblos fundados por el gobernador Muesas,” Archivo General de Indias, Santo Domingo, 2361, folio 5v. Unfortunately, the document officially recognizing Cangrejos as a community does not list the names of the 55 heads of household who sought the official recognition of Cangrejos. For information on Pedro Cortijo, see Picó, Fernando, Vivir en Caimito (Río Piedras: Ediciones Huracán, 1989), pp. 4546.Google Scholar

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16 Surviving death records for Cangrejos begin in 1854 and were not consulted for this study.

17 Loíza is located to the east of Cangrejos and was first settled in the 1630s; it was officially designated as a community in 1692. The population of Loíza is primarily of African origin and it is likely that fugitive slaves figured prominently among the community’s early inhabitants. Parish registers for Loíza were not consulted since the oldest, surviving ones date from 1792.

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22 See Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 66.Google Scholar Spanish religious sanctuary policy varied by location and over time. Fugitive slaves in Florida were initially granted their freedom only after serving a four-year labor requirement. Later, the labor requirement was rescinded. Conversion to Catholicism and marriage within the church were also a prerequisite for obtaining freedom. See TePaske, , “The Fugitive Slave,” p. 6.Google Scholar

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29 Cantos, López, Los puertorriqueños, p. 32.Google Scholar Although López Cantos maintains that the ermita was established about 1720, the first mention that I have seen of its existence was 1737. See Archivo Histórico Diocesano [hereafter AHD], Libro cinco de bautismos para pardos y esclavos en San Juan, 1735–1739, folio 40v.

30 For information on Cangrejos role in provisioning San Juan, see Brau, pp. 170–71; Torres, Gilberto Aponte, San Mateo de Cangrejos (Comunidad Cimarrona en Puerto Rico: Notas para su historia (San Juan 1985), p. 11;Google Scholar Picó, Fernando, Historia general de Puerto Rico (Río Piedras: Ediciones Huracán, 1986), p. 70 Google Scholar and Vivir en Caimito, p. 22; and Scarano, , Puerto Rico, p. 278.Google Scholar Various works discuss the role of Cangrejos militia companies in the island’s defense against the 1797 English invasion, including Torres, Aponte, San Mateo de Cangrejos, pp. 30–1;Google Scholar and Giusti Cordero, Juan A., “Piñones sí se acuerda: 200 años de la participación negra en la victoria sobre la invasión inglesa (1797–1997),” Revista de genealogía puertorriqueña 1:2 (octubre 2000), pp. 3341.Google Scholar

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32 See Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 54.Google Scholar

33 Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” pp. 6163.Google Scholar

34 Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 56.Google Scholar

35 See note 8.

36 Debien, Gabriel, “Marronage in the French Caribbean,” in Price, Richard, ed., Maroon Societies: Rebel Slave Communities in the Americas (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979), p. 130.Google Scholar

37 A phrase I borrow from the title of Chinea's article “A Quest for Freedom.”

38 For a more thorough discussion of push and pull factors contributing to the arrival of fugitives to Puerto Rico, see Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” pp. 57, 67 and 76.Google Scholar

39 This was precisely the case with Spanish colonial Florida. See Landers, , Black Society, p. 25.Google Scholar Hispaniola also welcomed the arrival of fugitive slaves with a community—San Lorenzo de la Minas— established by the island’s governor on unoccupied lands three miles from the capital in 1675. See Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 63.Google Scholar

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42 Nistal Moret, Benjamín, Esclavos, prófugos y cimarrones: Puerto Rico, 1770–1870 (Río Piedras: Editorial de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1984), p. 29.Google Scholar

43 Torres, Aponte, San Mateo de Cangrejos, p. 27.Google Scholar Interestingly, the first clause of the Spanish-Dutch agreement signed in 1791 addressed the flight of fugitive slaves from Saint Eustatius to Puerto Rico, as well as fugitives from Curaçao to Coro (Venezuela) Esequibo to Orinoco (Venezuela) as well as from Demerrara, Berbice, and Surinam. Torres, Aponte, San Mateo de Cangrejos, p. 27.Google Scholar The religious sanctuary policy in Spanish Florida remained in effect until 1790, when Spain bowed to pressure from the United States and abrogated the policy. Landers, , “Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose,” p. 30.Google Scholar

44 Angel López Cantos affirms that the number of fugitives was lower than others have claimed. He identified 102 legally documented arrivals. See Cantos, López, Los puertorriqueños, p. 26 note 51.Google Scholar Also, see Alvarez Nazario, Manuel, El elemento afronegroide en el español de Puerto Rico (San Juan, 1974), p. 76,Google Scholar who contends that the number of fugitive slaves arriving in Puerto Rico totaled 42 in 1747 and 19 in 1748 fleeing Saint Croix, 57 in 1765 fleeing from Dominica, and 28 that same year fleeing from Martinique. Overall, Alvarez Nazario was able to document 146 arrivals. Relying upon the dispatches of Spanish governors and treasury officials of Puerto Rico, Jorge Chinea was able to identify 346 reported cases of slave flight to Puerto Rico in the years 1656 through 1795. Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 56.Google Scholar

45 Baptismal entries were illegible for the following periods: July thru December 1716 and April 1727 thru August 1729. The baptismal register spanning the period from August 1729 thru July 1735 is also illegible.

46 Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 56.Google Scholar

47 Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 56.Google Scholar

48 The problem of water-damaged, insect-ravaged source material is particularly acute in Puerto Rico, where the tropical climate has accelerated the process of deterioration. This helps to explain the paucity of scholarly studies that concentrate on slave or free black societies of seventeenth and eighteenth century Puerto Rico.

49 Chinea, , “A Quest for Freedom,” p. 56.Google Scholar

50 The number of fugitive slaves documented would have undoubtedly been much higher if parish registers from Loíza still existed. This community was located to the east of San Juan along the coast; as such it was the easternmost community on the island and the closest in proximity to the non-Hispanic Caribbean.

51 For more information on Tari, see Law, Robin, “Problems of Plagiarism, Harmonization and Misunderstanding in Contemporary European Sources: Early (pre–1680) Sources for the ‘Slave Coast’ of West Africa,” in Jones, Adam and Heintze, Beatrix, eds., European Sources for Sub-Saharan Africa before 1900: Use and Abuse (Stuttgart, 1987), pp. 351–2. Reference kindly supplied to the author by John K. Thornton.Google Scholar

52 It is not clear how terms such as moreno and negro were used by the priest, though my own sense is that they were used interchangeably.

53 Dookhan, , A History of the Virgin Islands, pp. 57.Google Scholar

54 Dookhan, , A History of the Virgin Islands, pp. 73.Google Scholar

55 Dookhan, , A History of the Virgin Islands, p. 72.Google Scholar

56 Dookhan, , A History of the Virgin Islands, pp. 89.Google Scholar

57 According to Joseph C. Miller, the meaning of the term ‘Congo’ “changed through time and varied from European nation to European nation.” In general it referred to lands south of the Zaire (Congo) River, whereas the Loango Coast referred to lands north of this river. Miller contends that captives taken from Loango by English and Dutch slavers were often forest peoples from modern southern Gabon. Miller, Joseph C., “Central Africa During the Era of the Slave Trade, c. 1490s–1850s,” in Hey-wood, Linda M., ed., Central Africans and Cultural Transformations in the American Diaspora, pp. 2169 (Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press, 2002), pp. 41 and 56.Google Scholar

58 Landers, , Black Society, p. 30.Google Scholar

59 Miller, Joseph C., “Retention, Reinvention, and Remembering: Restoring Identities through Enslavement in Africa and under Slavery in Brazil,” in Curto, José C. and Lovejoy, Paul E., eds., Enslaving Connections: Changing Cultures of Africa and Brazil during the Era of Slavery, pp. 81121 (Amherst, NY: Humanity Books, 2004), p. 83.Google Scholar

60 See Lewis, Maureen Warner, Central Africa in the Caribbean: Transcending Time, Transforming Cultures (Kingston: University of the West Indies Press, 2003), pp. 14 and 39.Google Scholar Also, see Miller, Joseph C., “Retention,” pp. 8488.Google Scholar

61 See Thornton, John K., “Religious and Ceremonial Life in the Kongo and Mbundu Areas,” in Heywood, Linda M., ed., Central Africans and Cultural Transformations in the American Diaspora, pp. 7190 (Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press, 2002), p. 83.Google Scholar

62 See Schuler, Monica, “Alas, Alas, Kongo,” (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980), p. 86.Google Scholar

63 Miller, , “Retention,” p. 91.Google Scholar

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68 Pitt-Rivers, , The Fate of Shechem, p. 59.Google Scholar

69 Prior to their baptism adults needed to know the following: the Apostles Creed or the articles of faith, the Lord’s Prayer, the Ten Commandments, and the seven sacraments. de Haro, López, Sínodo, Constitución 34, p. 48.Google Scholar

70 AHD, Libro cinco de bautismos para pardos y esclavos, 1735–1739, folios 11 v. and 20.

71 Landers, , Black Society, p. 119.Google Scholar

72 Landers, , Black Society, pp. 113, 124, and 127.Google Scholar

73 The oldest marriage register for nonwhites in San Juan spans the years 1748 through 1777. Of the 611 entries, only 457 or 75 percent are legible. Of course, not everybody who was not from Puerto Rico was indeed a fugitive slave; some may have been former slaves who had been manumitted or had acquired their freedom by means of self-purchase. Entries in the marriage register duly noted if the bride or groom’s were not from the city.

74 Landers, , Black Society, p. 125.Google Scholar

75 AHD, Libro tres de matrimonies para pardos y esclavos, 1748–1777, num. 37.

76 AHD, Libro tres de matrimonies para pardos y esclavos, 1748–1777, num. 52. Of course, it may well have been that the marriage of Antonio and Manuela was not the result of Antonio choosing to marry into a established free black family, rather it may indicate preference for a spouse of a similar skin color.

77 There is no way to know if the free adults baptized in Cangrejos from 1773 through 1810 were in fact fugitives since the entry in the parish baptismal register makes no mention of this. However, it is likely that they were fugitives given that they did settle in Cangrejos, where other runaways lived.

78 Spain’s enemies responded to the Spanish religious sanctuary policy by granting slaves fleeing from Spanish dominions their freedom if they embraced the Protestant religion. Though the number of slaves who fled Puerto Rico is not known, there probably were not many who did so. For example, López Cantos discusses the flight of 23 slaves from a plantation owned by Miguel Enríquez, just outside San Juan, to Saint Thomas in 1728, however, most if not all of these slaves had themselves been acquired through raids undertaken by Enríquez against slave owners in Saint Thomas. See Cantos, López, Miguel Enríquez, p. 109 Google Scholar and Los puertorriqueños, p. 27, note 54. For information on the infrequency of slaves fleeing Puerto Rico see Westergaard, Waldemar, The Danish West Indies under Company Rule, 1671–1754 (New York: MacMillan, 1917), pp. 160–61.Google Scholar

79 Guinea was a vague term applied to slaves from African cultural groups located along the West Central coast. According to Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, in Portuguese and Spanish usage until 1650 at least, “Guinea” was practically synonymous with Upper Guinea (Sierra Leone). (Personal communication on 20 October 2001.) Thereafter, Guinea most likely came to mean lands comprising present-day Guinea-Bissau, where the commercial entrepots of Bissau and Cacheu were located. For further information on Guinea-Bissau as a source of slaves, see Hawthorne, Walter, Planting Rice and Harvesting Slaves (Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, 2003).Google Scholar

80 See Stark, David M., “Surviving Slavery: Marriage Strategies and Family Formation Patterns among the Eighteenth-Century Puerto Rican Slave Population,” in Clark Hine, Dartene and McLeod, Jacqueline, eds., Crossing Boundaries: Comparative History of Black People in Diaspora, pp. 246–81 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999), pp. 260–61.Google Scholar

81 See Landers, , Black Society, p. 158.Google Scholar

82 Archivo Parroquial San Mateo de Cangrejos [hereafter cited as APSMC], Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folios 4 and 35.

83 Several of the founders of Guaynabo later turn up as residents of Cangrejos. See Muñoz, Generoso Morales, “Fundación del pueblo de San Pedro de Guaynabo, 1764–1768,” Boletín de Historia Puertorriqueña 1:12 (noviembre 1949), pp. 354–9;Google Scholar and Stark, David M., “The Founders of Guaynabo: 1764–1768,” Hereditas 5:2 (2004), pp. 5461.Google Scholar

84 In 1775, sugar cultivation totaled just 9 acres in Cangrejos out of 1,059 acres cultivated in the San Juan area, while coffee production was limited to 1,160 palos, or trees. Only Loíza had fewer coffee trees. Estado general de la Isla de Puerto Rico, microfilm collection at the Centro de Investigaciones Históricas, Facultad de Humanidades, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Río Piedras, Puerto Rico.

85 Abbad y Lasierra, Fray Agustín Iñigo, Historia geográfica, civil y natural de la Isla de San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico, Estudio preliminar de Isabel Gutiérrez de Arroyo, reprint of third edition (Río Piedras: Editorial Universitaria, 1979), p. 119.Google Scholar

86 Scarano, , Puerto Rico, p. 278.Google Scholar

87 For more information on the construction of military fortifications and the labor demands associated with it, see Lizardi Pollock, Jorge L., “Palimpsestos y heterotopias: El espacio y sus prácticas en el Viejo San Juan,” Revista Mexicana del Caribe 8 (1999), pp. 90127, pp. 110–12.Google Scholar

88 See Landers, , “Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose,” p. 18.Google Scholar

89 The censuses for 1775 and 1795 form part of the microfilm collection at the Centro de Investigaciones Históricas, Facultad de Humanidades, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Río Piedras, Puerto Rico.

90 In 1775, there were no pardos libres, 11 slaves, and only 7 white inhabitants out of a total population of 436. In 1795, there were 48 pardos libres, 208 slaves, and 83 white inhabitants out of a total population of 1,280.

91 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 21v.

92 Hanger, Kimberly S., Bounded Lives, Bounded Places: Free Black Society in Colonial New Orleans, 1769–1803 (Durham: Duke University Press, 1997), p. 95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

93 Landers, , Black Society, p. 125.Google Scholar

94 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 17v. Dionicia was the natural child of Joaquina Andino (deceased), a morena libre, whose ancestors had most likely belonged either to the island’s governor Gaspar Martínez de Andino (1683–5), or one of his numerous descendants who remained on the island following his term of office.

95 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folios 25v and 20v.

96 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 11 v. Domingo and Manuela had four children and the baptismal register clearly records the couple's civil status. Domingo is listed as white and, in one instance as a blanco español, or white Spaniard, while Manuela is listed as morena libre.

97 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 5v.

98 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 62.

99 Because there were few white citizens in Cangrejos, I was only able to determine the age at first marriage for one spouse.

100 The age at first marriage among Puerto Rico’s eighteenth-century free population has not been studied. Nevertheless, scholars who study the island's colonial past speculate that the age at first marriage was young owing to the relatively easy access to land. See Picó, , Historia, p. 105.Google Scholar

101 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 92v.

102 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folios 28v and 97.

103 APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folios 35 and 144v.

104 For example, the average age at first marriage among 23 slave grooms in Coamo (1755–1798) was 25 years 5 months, while among 31 slave brides it was 23 years 0 months. Stark, Family Life, p. 187.1 should point out that my calculations of the average age at first marriage are limited by the observation period in this study. With my data, the oldest possible age for a bride or groom would be 37 years old. However, in several cases I was able to ascertain the age at marriage for inhabitants of Cangrejos using data from nearby communities to identify spouses older than 37. For example, one male named Manuel de Jesús Clemente was 39 years and 5 months old when he married María Gregoria on 7 July 1778. APSMC, Primer libro de matrimonios en Cangrejos, 1773–1840, folio 9. The age difference between spouses among Puerto Rico’s white population has not been studied.

105 Parish registers from nearby communities such as Loíza and Río Piedras were consulted to account for migration in and out of Cangrejos. Moreover, Cangrejos was under the jurisdiction of Río Piedras prior to its official recognition as a separate community in 1773.

106 My calculations are derived from the number of infants whose baptisms are recorded in the baptismal registers for Cangrejos and the nearby communities of Río Piedras and Loíza. However, they do not take into account the unbaptized infants whose deaths are recorded in the death register. Although the death registers for Cangrejos do not exist prior to 1854, I did include a handful of unbaptized infants whose deaths were recorded in Río Piedras.

107 Archivo Parroquial Nuestra Señora del Pilar Río Piedras [hereafter APNSPRP], Primer libro de bautismos en Río Piedras, 1763–1771, folio 6v. Petrona and José Apolinario were married on 7 February 1782. Their first child was born seven and a half months later. Subsequent children were born at regular two to three year intervals, except for a six year period between the third and fourth child when Petrona may have had one or more miscarriages, stillbirths, and/or given birth to a(n) unbaptized infant(s) who died.

108 Scholars have long alluded to but been unable to quantify the African contribution to Puerto Rico’s eighteenth-century population increase. See Cantos, López, Los puertorriqueños, p. 25.Google Scholar

109 For example, Gutman, Herbert G., The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1770–1925 (New York, 1976), p. 260;Google Scholar and Morgan, Philip D., Slave Counterpoint: Black Culture in the Eighteenth- Century Chesapeake (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1998), p. 497.Google Scholar

110 I observed the following proportion of nuptial births: 85.8 percent in Arecibo (1708–1757); 87.5 percent in Caguas (1730–1765); 87.3 percent in Coamo (1701–1722) and 89.3 in Coamo (1755–1800); and 87.0 percent in Yauco (1751–1776). See Stark, , Family Life, p. 211.Google Scholar

111 I observed the following proportion of nuptial births: 30.2 percent in Arecibo (1708–1757); 30.5 percent in Caguas (1730–1765); 23.1 percent in Coamo (1701–1722) and 39.4 percent in Coamo (1755–1800); and 27.8 percent in Yauco (1751–1776). See Stark, , Family Life, p. 210.Google Scholar

112 Sweet, James H., Recreating Africa: Culture, Kinship, and Religion in the African-Portuguese World, 1441–1770 (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2003), p. 36.Google Scholar

113 Duany, , The Puerto Rican Nation, p. 279.Google Scholar