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Robert Adams (sailor)

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411:"In our last number we published a notice of this book, to gether with a similar narrative, which was taken at Cadiz several months previously to this, expressing at the same time our suspicion, that the whole of that part, which related to the interiour, and particularly to the city of Tombuctoo, was a fabrication. We propose now to examine the subject more at large, and to bring forward such reasons as have in duced us from the beginning to regard the story as a fiction, and a gross attempt to impose on the credulity of the publick. To us, indeed, this has appeared so obvious, that we should not think it worthy of any serious examination, had it not excited so much interest, and gained universal belief in England...We have not time to pursue Adams through all the im probabilities, inconsistencies, and contradictions of his story. We have mentioned some of the more important only, and such as could not possibly arise from defect of memory or observation..." 397:"In Adams we find an individual relating travels and adventures, which are indeed singular and extraordinary, but are told with the utmost simplicity and bear strong internal marks of truth. Placed in a wide and untravelled region, where a mere narrator of fables might easily persuade himself that no one would trace or detect him, we find Adams resisting the temptation (no slight one for an ignorant sailor) of exciting the wonder of the credulous, or the sympathy of the compassionate, by filling his story with miraculous adventures, or overcharged pictures of suffering. In speaking of himself he assumes no undue degree of importance. He is rather subordinate to the circumstances of the story, than himself the prominent feature of it; and almost every part of his Narrative is strictly in nature, and unpretending." 20: 307:, King of the Empire of Mali, set out in the year 1324 on a hajj, or journey to Mecca, showering gold on everyone he met. Ibn Battuta, a famed Moroccan traveler, visited Mali for several months from 1352 to 1353 and confirmed that there was abundant gold in the kingdom. These accounts spread throughout Africa and Europe, with many European countries coveting gold from the Malian city. The only people not looking for Timbuktu were the Americans because the United States was such a young country then. 182:
survive and avoid dehydration. Eventually, the Moors reached a village of tents, where Adams was put to work for several months tending goats and sheep. At some point during this phase of his enslavement, Adams' master had promised to take him to Mogador and trade him to the British consul, thus helping him attain freedom. However, his master later went back on his word, and Adams rebelled as a result, refusing to care for the animals. This angered his master, who later sold him to someone else.
178:, 18-year-old John Stevens, were taken to Timbuktu around July 1812. Adams never provides any parameters for Stevens' captivity but expresses that they were treated as honored guests of the king rather than as enslaved people and were free to move about as they pleased within the city. They were considered an exotic oddity by the locals, and Adams later recounts that people used to come from far-off lands to stare at them. 242:, who had been led to him by a traveler who recognized Adams from Cadiz. Intrigued by the prospect of speaking to someone who had been to Timbuktu, Cock brought Adams to the company's office. There, Adams agreed to recount his story in exchange for finances and security to travel home to New York. Cock and company questioned Adams and assembled a narrative of this account; it was published as 380:
noted holes in Adams' story. For example, there is no reason why he was allowed to roam Timbuktu freely for six months. It is also noted that Adams was induced, by Simon Cock, to answer questions about the region that had stumped Europeans for generations. He had an answer to every question the Europeans asked him.
789:"The Narrative of Robert Adams, An American Sailor, who was wrecked on the western coast of Africa, in the year 1810, and was detained three years in slavery by the Arabs of the Great Desert. He was the first White Man who ever visited the great city of Tombuctoo, where he resided several months." In 464:
Sparks, Jared (1817). "Art. IX. The Narrative of Robert Adams, a sailor, who was wrecked on the western coast of Africa, in the year 1810, was detained three years in slavery by the Arabs of the great Desert, and resided several months in the city of Tombuctoo. With a map, notes, and an appendix, pp.
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Robert Adams' tale of his visit to Timbuktu was highly significant for two reasons: (1) it is a tale of a Westerner finally managing to arrive at the famed city, long coveted for its supposed wealth and extensive reserves of gold, and (2) because he was said to have arrived there by accident, and not
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is reminiscent of Barbary slave narratives, which were written by other shipwrecked sailors who had been taken captive and enslaved in Northern Africa (Barbary corsairs did not capture him, and he spent his captivity in the Sub-Saharan region south of the Barbary coast). The one notable difference in
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Eventually, Adams' stay as a guest ended, and he was traded to a group of Moors who sold tobacco. Several days after making their trade, Adams set off farther east and eventually north with his third group of captors. Adams suffered his second great desert crossing, once again drinking camel urine to
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Lending to doubts in Adams' story was also that he had no firm national, racial, personal, language, or name identity, allowing him to pass through his own story unnoticed. For example, he was both "Robert Adams" and "Benjamin Rose," and he spoke English, Arabic, and "Negro." There are also various
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Adams claimed that Captain Horton fell ill and was killed with a sword by the Moors, who were frustrated that they could not communicate with him despite having the Frenchman as a translator. Robert Adams said that, across three years of being enslaved in northern Africa, he passed through the hands
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As day broke, Adams claims the entire crew was surrounded by a group of about 35 Moors, who imprisoned them. Luckily, the Moors also had an imprisoned Frenchman who was able to communicate with Captain Horton, who also spoke French. The crew, according to Adams, was stripped naked and forced to dig
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Adams stated that his fourth master was a man with two wives. Adams was given to one of the wives as her personal slave. The second wife later enlisted Adams' assistance to care for her goats. In payment, she allowed Adams to "rest" in her tent. This relationship continued for months, and upon his
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At one point in the journey, Stevens says that his group of Moors was overtaken by a larger group of black Africans, who took the Moors and the enslaved people as prisoners, including Adams. They again traveled great distances, first to the Africans' village. According to Adams' account, he and an
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At the time, Timbuktu was a major center of trading, focusing on salt, books, and gold, which were all very in demand at the time. Goods coming from the Mediterranean shores and salt from Tegaza in the north were traded in Timbuktu for gold, which came from the immense gold mines of the Boure and
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Critics paint Adams as a "found narrator" who is not only unable to narrate a "continuous and straight-forward story" but who also could only answer questions put to him, first by Dupuis in 1810 in Africa, and then in 1815–16 in London, meaning the editors constructed his "story" from fragments.
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wrote of such narratives when he linked the history of writing history to the legitimization of political power, a practice found in "Western" cultures, which used the act of writing as a tool of colonialism; writing histories while minimizing or eradicating the traditions of native peoples. For
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After about 12 days, Adams said that the Moors divided the prisoners among themselves, with Adams and Newsham being assigned to about twenty Moors who traveled on foot, with four camels. He said they traveled southwest, crossing the desert at an estimated rate of 15–20 miles a day, under great
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Raising more doubt is the manner in which Cock "found" Adams, a then destitute beggar, wandering the streets of London in 1815, and how an illiterate person, who learned nothing from books, knew the exact number of days of his journeys, the precise number of miles he traveled each day, and the
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Adams sailed home in December 1815, omitting much of his payment, as well as his royalties from the book, but promising to return in the spring. Due to the dangerous nature of trans-Atlantic crossings in the winter, he gave Cock the "particulars of his family" to verify claims on his earnings.
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After three weeks at sea, Adams said he overheard two older crew members, Newsham and Matthews, who had been on the coast before, state that the captain was lost. For eight or nine days after that, the ships fought heavy winds until, on October 11, around 3:00 am, the ship struck some reef in
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No trace of either Adams or his family has ever been found. No family of his name was known in the Hudson, nor had Adams ever been heard of in the area. In addition, the collector of New York, who certified ships, verified that no vessel resembling Adams' description of the
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Adams stated that, after 26 days, the ship arrived at Gibraltar, where the cargo was discharged. There, the crew added another crewman, Unis Nelson. According to Adams, the ship sat in Gibraltar for about a month and proceeded after Captain Horton decided to go to the
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Banbuk. The city's prosperity attracted black African and Arab scholars, merchants, and traders from North Africa. The fact that the city was a major center for trading goods for gold only increased its fame, and this very trade made the city enormously wealthy.
360:. However, given that he was stated to be a mulatto in his tale, given that there is no record accounting for him or his family on either side of the Atlantic, and due to numerous other discrepancies in his tale, his story is accepted as having been fabricated. 384:
precise directions of all his travels on foot. It is notable that it was a well-established fact that no wrecks occurred south of Cape Bajado at that time. Adams' illiteracy is at odds with the fact that sailors were substantially literate during this period.
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Dupuis wrote that Adams left America to avoid being prosecuted for refusing to legitimize his relationship with a young woman. However, nothing else is known of his early life until 1810 when, under the name "Benjamin Rose," he signed onto the ship
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he exclusively went by the name "Robert Adams" after his release from slavery. It is unknown which of these names was his real one, though, at the time, it was not uncommon for sailors, especially "distressed seamen", to change their names.
86:"The appearance, features, and dress of this man...so perfectly resembled those of an Arab, or rather a Shilluh, his head being shaved and his beard being scanty and black, that I had difficulty at first in believing him to be a Christian." 57:
Because his story was sanctioned by some of the most distinguished men in England, including members of government, who had a noted financial interest in Africa, his narrative(s) gained credibility despite "its most glaring absurdities."
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in May 1817, with an introductory note from editor Jared Sparks. In July 1817, Sparks reviewed the African Company's version, noting the discrepancies between the Cadiz account and the London version and calling Adams' tale a "fiction."
784:, a sailor, who was wrecked on the western coast of Africa, in the year 1810, was detained three years in slavery by the Arabs of the Great Desert, and resided several months in the city of Tombuctoo. With a map, notes, and an appendix. 256:
Two versions of Adams' story were published. The Company of Merchants Trading to Africa (the African Company) published the first version based on interviews held with Adams at their London offices. This version was titled
216:, Spain, where he hoped to connect with a ship headed for the United States. Unfortunately, he arrived two days late. He recounted his story to the American Samuel A. Storrow, who published this "Cadiz Narrative" in 1817. 263:
and included an introduction, notes, and other supporting material. Simon Cock was its primary editor, and Joseph Dupuis added notes based on his encounter with Adams. The book was published by John Murray in 1816. The
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The Narrative of Robert Adams, A Sailor, Who was Wrecked on the Western Coast of Africa, in the Year 1810, Was Detained Three Years in Slavery By The Arabs of the Great Desert and Resided Several Months in the City of
277:, much coveted by Europeans then. Adams was the first Westerner ever to give a complete account of Timbuktu. As Frank T. Kryza writes, "No European explorer had been there and returned since the Middle Ages." 209:, where Adams stayed for nearly seven months. He first appeared in the historical record here, with the date October 6, 1813. He was sent north to Tangier to the American Consul-General, James Simpson. 804:
Being a singular and most animated account of an illiterate American sailor, taken as a slave in the great Zahara and, after trials and tribulations aplenty, reaching London where he narrated his tale
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Robert Adams was an American of mixed black and white ancestry. It was written that he was "born up the river of New York, where his father lived when he quitted America;" and that his mother was a
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Adams' story was deemed fabricated, to the point that it was denounced in the North American Review in 1817, which delivered its critique only after assessing both narratives. The critique stated:
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This, argues critics, was done to the point in which Cock brought in a group of "scientific and respectable gentlemen" to interview Adams to verify details and geographical descriptions of Africa.
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The second version, known as the "Cadiz Narrative", was written up by Samuel A. Storrow, a "gentleman of Boston" whom Adams met in Cadiz. This version was published as "Interiour of Africa" in the
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However, the Company of Merchants Trading to Africa's records do not show any money was ever paid to, or held for, Adams or his family. From this point, Adams vanishes from the historical record.
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Robinson Crusoe's Own Book; or, the voice of adventure, from the civilized man cut off from his fellows, by force, accident, or inclination, and from the wanderer in strange seas and lands
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to reach the city, though his narrative is dubious. Upon his stated liberation and return to Europe, Adams' story was published in two heavily edited and divergent accounts, most notably
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Along with Adams, the crew included Stephen Dolbie (mate), Thomas Williams, Martin Clarke, Unis Newsham, Nicholas (a Swede), John Stephens, John Matthews, and James Davison.
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on June 17, 1810 (or May 7, 1810, as he recounted in Cadiz), led by captain John Horton. The ship, carrying flour, rice, and salted provisions, was bound for Gibraltar.
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was deemed a triumph for British science and exploration. Though Adams was said to have been an American, his tale was told in England, and it was there that the
338:. They all failed in one way or another, primarily by disappearing in the middle of the expedition or dying before reaching the city. Most did not return home. 65:, today, both accounts are widely known to have been fabrications, lending to the dismissal of Adam's story within general history discussions and recordings. 189:
His fifth master took him farther north to a village settlement where he met other Westerners, including some of his former companions from the
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One of the white men had already renounced his Christian faith to attain freedom and, shortly after, two of his sailing companions from the
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Also lending doubt to Adams' story is the "artlessness," considered necessary for poor storytellers, often giving them a sense of truth.
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Despite its discrepancies, it is surmised that Adams' story found an audience due to "sympathy and curiosity of Africa" at the time."
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also renounced their faith. Not long after, the British consul, Joseph Dupuis, ransomed Adams, thus securing his freedom.
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for salt. However, it soon became clear that the captain was going on a trading voyage down the coast instead.
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Wolfe, Stephen F. (2012). "Robert Adams in Transatlantic Review: Archiving the Barbary Captive and Traveller".
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hardship, with scarcity of food and water. He claimed they were often forced to drink a mix of water and
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Adams's account does not match what is now known of Timbuktu and is regarded as a probable fabrication.
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The following explorers attempted many failed expeditions to the remote city of Timbuktu: the American
819: 335: 19: 869: 425: 327: 323: 290: 81:, the British Consul in Mogador who eventually ransomed Adams, wrote of Adams' appearance: 8: 331: 764:
The View from the Masthead: Maritime Imagination and Antebellum American Sea Narratives
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After trading for Adams, the British consul Dupuis took him first to Agadir, then to
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for three years, from 1810 to 1814. During this time, he claimed to have visited
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Despite the controversy regarding the veracity of Adams' story, publishing his
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His first owners were the Moors, who captured the shipwrecked sailors of the
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seaman. While he used the name "Benjamin Rose" leading up to his time on the
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master's knowledge of the affair, Adams was traded for blankets and dates.
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The Unvarnished Truth: Personal Narratives in Nineteenth-Century America
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The Narrative of Robert Adams, A Barbary Captive: A Critical Edition
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In contemporary times, Adams' tale is often cited as an example of
274: 224: 41: 235:. Adams later ended up in London, where he survived as a beggar. 74: 505:(Spring). European Association for American Studies: 144–146. 353:
was published, granting an international victory to England.
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In November 1815, Adams was sought out by Simon Cock of the
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is that Adams describes his visit to the legendary city of
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The Race for Timbuktu: In Search of Africa's City of Gold
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holes in the sand to sleep, so they could keep cool.
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Adams, Robert (2005). Charles Hansford Adams (ed.).
793:, by Charles Ellms. Boston: Joshua V. Pierce, 1946. 638: 616:. London: Readers Union Cassell. pp. 20–22. 303:The legends of the gold of Timbuktu spread after 811: 742: 740: 738: 736: 734: 732: 730: 473:(15). University of Northern Iowa: 204–224. 727: 576: 574: 572: 681: 607: 605: 603: 601: 599: 597: 595: 593: 496: 494: 492: 490: 488: 223:, where he was able to travel by ship to 668:"Morocco: Hunt for Djinns and Sorcerers" 645:. New York: HarperCollins. pp. xi. 581:Adams, Robert (1817). Simon Cock (ed.). 569: 546: 544: 542: 540: 538: 536: 534: 532: 459: 457: 455: 453: 451: 449: 447: 445: 443: 441: 280:According to Cock's introduction to the 18: 630: 611: 530: 528: 526: 524: 522: 520: 518: 516: 514: 512: 465:200. Boston, Wells & Lilly. 1817". 812: 746: 710: 704: 590: 485: 463: 240:Company of Merchants Trading to Africa 170:to stay alive in the arid conditions. 44:, which would have made him the first 766:. University of North Carolina Press. 659: 636: 580: 550: 500: 438: 761: 755: 509: 503:European Journal of American Studies 158:of at least five different owners. 13: 774: 665: 342:through an organized exploration. 148: 14: 881: 830:American male non-fiction writers 751:. University of California Press. 692:. Timbuktu Educational Foundation 687: 850:19th-century American memoirists 376:had ever left his stated port. 298: 711:Baxter, Joan (15 April 2002). 555:. Cambridge University Press. 363: 61:Widely cited as an example of 1: 782:The Narrative of Robert Adams 431: 392:example, Dick said of Adams: 260:The Narrative of Robert Adams 251: 245:The Narrative of Robert Adams 68: 51:The Narrative of Robert Adams 30: 835:People from Hudson, New York 806:London: Secretum Mundi, 2012 713:"Timbuktu - City of Legends" 219:Subsequently, Adams went to 212:After this, Adams sailed to 113: 108: 7: 860:Hoaxes in the United States 690:"History of Timbuktu, Mali" 419: 10: 886: 200: 786:London: John Murray, 1816 586:. Boston Wells and Lilly. 271:Narrative of Robert Adams 118:As Adams recounts in his 637:Kryza, Frank T. (2006). 336:Johann Ludwig Burckhardt 825:American travel writers 614:The Quest for Timbuctoo 612:Gardner, Brian (1968). 122:, the ship sailed from 414: 400: 89: 23: 16:American travel writer 762:Blum, Hester (2012). 467:North American Review 426:James Riley (captain) 408: 394: 324:Major Daniel Houghton 291:North American Review 83: 22: 747:Fabian, Ann (2002). 865:19th-century hoaxes 845:History of Timbuktu 840:Shipwreck survivors 332:Frederick Hornemann 855:Propaganda legends 24: 715:. 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Index


North Africa
Timbuktu
Westerner
The Narrative of Robert Adams
white slavery
Mulatto
Joseph Dupuis
merchant
New York City
Isle of May
Cape Blanco
camel urine
Portuguese
Mogador
Cadiz
Gibraltar
Holyhead
Isle of Anglesey
Wales
Company of Merchants Trading to Africa
The Narrative of Robert Adams
The Narrative of Robert Adams
Timbuktu
North American Review
Mansa Musa
John Ledyard
Simon Lucas
Major Daniel Houghton
Mungo Park

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