1762
Spain enters
the Seven Years' War. Cuba becomes a key military objective for the British,
and is invaded. Once occupied, the Port of Havana opens to free trade with
Great Britain. Trade blossoms, including the slave trade: over the 10-month
period of British occupation from 1762-63, 10,000 slaves are carried into
Havana. Commercial links develop between Cuba and North America. Spain subsequently
reacquires the colony and reimposes tight commercial restrictions.
1789
Spain opens the
slave trade to Havana, and a royal decree authorizes shipbuilding in the port
-- part of a general program of imperial reform under the Bourbon monarchy
loosening colonial commercial restrictions in Cuba. From this point, imperial
policies fluctuate, but periodically permit the strengthening of the sugar
industry on the island and commercial ties with the United States.
1791
August 21: A slave uprising erupts near Le Cap in St. Domingue (Santo Domingo),
and spreads like wildfire -- the beginning of the end of slavery in the French
colony.
1794
The French National Convention emancipates French colonial slaves.
1795
Pinckney's Treaty establishes commercial relations between U.S. and Spain.
(On the basis of this treaty Spanish officials will eventually demand return
of the Amistad and the slaves it carried.)
1796-98
A massive English invasion force takes back some lesser Antilles colonies,
but fails to recapture Santo Domingo.
1800
After several years of growth in the midst of the Napoleonic Wars, the number
of American ships putting in at Cuba has swollen to 600.
1802
A French invasion force led by Leclerc tries to retake Santo Domingo. Revolutionary
leader Touissant Louverture is arrested and dies in prison. But the invasion
bogs down, and French soldiers die in droves during 1802-1803, eventually
forcing the French to withdraw.
1804
January 1: The independent Republic of Haiti is proclaimed.
1815
At the Congress of Vienna, Britain compels Spain, Portugal, France and the
Netherlands to abolish the slave trade (though Spain and Portugal are permitted
a few years of continued slaving to replenish labor supplies).
1817
September 23: Great Britain and Spain sign a treaty prohibiting the slave
trade: Spain agrees under intense British pressure to end the slave trade
north of the equator immediately, and south of the equator in 1820. The agreement
gives British naval vessels the right to search suspected slavers. Still,
loopholes in the treaty undercut its goals and the slave trade flows strongly
into Cuba.
1818
Spain opens Cuba to world trade.
1819
The Adams-Onis Treaty formally renews commercial ties between the U.S. and
Spain.
1820
Legal slave trade into Cuba abolished by terms of 1817 treaty with England.
1886
Slavery abolished in Cuba.
1822
Responding to rife piracy near Cuba and Puerto Rico as competing royalist
and revolutionary Latin American privateers fight for control over Caribbean
commerce, the U.S. Navy establishes a West India Squadron. The 'mosquito fleet'
patrols the inlets of the Cuban coast, cleaning out pirates.
1826
The Spanish government proclaims free any slave managing to prove he had been
illegally imported, and implements new regulations requiring captains of vessels
arriving from Africa to turn their logbooks over to port authorities to be
inspected for evidence of illegal slaving. British officials complain that
the new measures are paper-thin. And indeed in August, when British naval
officers try to prosecute the Spanish schooner Minerva for landing
six boatloads of slaves in Havana at night, General Francisco Dionisio, the
captain-general of Cuba, refuses to let the case be brought before the court
of mixed commission, on the grounds the incident had not occurred on the high
seas -- one of a series of incidents in which Cuban authorities block British
efforts to curb illegal slaving.
1827
A census of Cuba reveals a slave population of 287,000, most of them working
on some 1,000 ingenios (sugar plantation-mill complexes).
1831
A slave revolt breaks out in the British colony of Jamaica, which is brutally
repressed by colonial authorities.
1833
Great Britain passes the Abolition of Slavery Act, providing for emancipation
in the British West Indies -- set to take effect August 1834. Most British
colonies replace slavery with a period of enforced "apprenticeship."
1834
In a trade war between the U.S. and Spain, both nations raise duties and restrict
imports, strangling the Cuban carrying trade.
1835
June 28: The Anglo-Spanish agreement on the slave trade is renewed with tightened
enforcement. British cruisers are authorized to arrest suspected Spanish slavers
and bring them before mixed commissions established at Sierra Leone and Havana.
Vessels carrying specified 'equipment articles' (extra mess gear, lumber,
foodstuffs) are declared prima-facie to be slavers.
1836
Spain appoints a consul in Jamaica, to report on abolitionist activity
there. Over the next few years, this office reports on a series of (largely
imagined) plots to send agents and propaganda to Cuba to foment a slave insurrection.
The British government dispatches a Superintendent of Liberated Africans to Havana to oversee the disposition of Africans freed from captured slavers.
1837
Cuban Captain-General Miguel Tacon orders the imprisonment of all foreign
black seamen while their ships are in port in Havana.
H.M.S. Romany
arrives in Havana to take on a load of freed slaves, carrying a regiment
of black soldiers. In a tense standoff, Cuban authorities refuse to allow
these men to land in Havana, and the British refuse to withdraw the vessel.
After over a year, the Spanish government grudgingly gives ground.
1838
In the British West Indies, colonial assemblies dismantle the system of apprenticeship
that has replaced slavery. Laws against vagrancy and squatting attempt to
keep the social and labor system of the plantation economy intact, with varying
results.
1839
August 27: The Amistad is seized off Long Island and taken to New London.
September 6: Spanish officials demand the return of the 'assassins' and 'mutineers'.
1841
Nicholas Trist is dismissed as U.S. Consul in Havana, amid allegations he
connived at the illegal sale of U.S. vessels to Spanish slave traders.
1849
The first in a series of Cuban filibustering expeditions launches from the
American South, attempting to seize the colony for the U.S.
1888
Slavery abolished in Brazil, ending slavery in the Americas.
