In the eighteenth century, the English city of Liverpool
became prosperous through the so-called “ships of shame” which transported
millions of black African slaves to America and the West Indies. The rapidly
growing colonies of the New World were in need of a massive labour force, and
the vile businessmen of England thought that the black men, women and children
of Africa could fulfill the demand for workers. Around 10 million African
slaves were shipped across the Atlantic in appalling conditions. Each slave was
confined to a space in the ship’s hold which had less room than a coffin. They
were shackled to one another, and therefore had to wallow in each other’s dirt
for months on end. Not surprisingly, fever, dysentery and a high mortality rate
were commonplace on the slave ships during the hazardous voyage from Africa to
the western side of the Atlantic. Sick and dying slaves were regarded as a dead
loss to the slave sellers, so many of the kidnapped Africans suspected of being
ill were thrown overboard to be eaten by the sharks. In November 1781, a
Captain Collingwood of the slave ship called the Zong ordered his men to take
turns in throwing 133 slaves into the ocean. Just a few of the poor souls
jettisoned into the shark-infested waters were ill, but Captain Collingwood
thought the cruel measure would be an effective way to conserve the ships’s
fresh water reservoir.
The master of the Amelia, Captain Mallard, was enraged, and
he had the protesting slavbes brought uo a deck, where they were subjected to lengthy
flogging sessions. The thirteen-year-old boy Abu was also flogged, and fainted.
His uncle Obah threw himself over the boy and begged the captain to give the
child water. Obah struggled to explain who the boy was, and through an
interpreter, he stated that young Abu was prone to strange fits which gave him
visions. The child was the only son of his tribe’s witch doctor, and that if he was not taken
back to Nigeria; a terrible curse would fall upon the captain of the Amelia.
When Captain Mallard heard this, he grabbed the boy by his ankles and started
to swing him around. The boy screamed, and his elderly uncle cried out and
tried to attack the captain. Suddenly, Mallard let go of the child and he went
headfirst over the ship’s rail and plunged into the waves. There was an uproar
of protest from the slaves below deck who had witnessed the captain’s cowardly
and callous act. The murmuring below continued for a while, and angry eyes full
of hatred stared up through the slits in the deck’s barricade. The old man Obah
sobbed, and was promptly taken down into the hold and chained up again. As the
shackles were put on him, the old man pointed an accusing finger at Captain
Mallard and said, “Curse you! Curse you captain and family!”
Ten months later, all the slaves from the Amelia had been
sold; all except the half-blind slave Obah. Old slaves were almost impossible
to sell, and old slaves who could hardly see could not be given away. Obah,
therefore, was taken toLiverpool and offered to anyone who would have him. He
was put on exhibition on the steps of the Liverpool Custom House. Obah was
adopted by a well-to-do couple from the Calderstones district of Liverpool,
named George and Catherine Hughes. The couple looked after Obah until he died
ten years later from a fever.
Not long after Captain Mallard’s return to the port of
Liverpool, bad luck and weird occurrences seemed to haunt him and his family.
His eldest son Matthew, who had a cottage overlooking the shore at Formby, went
insane after telling his wife that an enormous black dog with glowing red eyes
had stalked him during his evening walk through the sand dunes. The hound was
jet black and left no tracks in the sand as it chased after him. Matthew’s wife
watched him turn into a shambling nervous wreck over the next few days, and
ended up deserting him. Matthew Mallard was later committed to a lunatic
asylum.
Weeks later, Captain Mallard was awakened in the middle of
the night at his Duke Street home when he heard a strange drum beating in the
distance. Even his neighbours heard the strange thumping sound, but no one
could tell where the noise was coming from. Three nights later, the infuriating rhythm of the drum ceased
abruptly that his elderly mother in Frederick Street had died at that exact
time after screaming out once in her sleep.
A month later, the same eerie drumbeat disturbed the sleep
of Captain Mallard once more. This time he awoke in his four-poster bed to find
his wife lying in a pool of blood beside him. She had suffered a
life-threatening miscarriage and almost died as a result.
Then something chilling took place one Sunday after Mallard
had been entertaining a Captain Slater at his Duke Street home. Mrs. Mallard
found a strange object on the mantelpiece of the drawing room. She thought it
was a doll’s head, but when she picked it up and inspected it, she saw that it
was too lifelike and had a hideous quality about it. She screamed and threw it
in the fire. Captain Mallard retrieved the object from the glowing coals with a
pair of tongs, and saw to his horror that it was the shriveled head of a real
human. It was one of the so-called shrunken heads, which are allegedly used by
shamen and witch doctors as a black magic talisman. Mallard thought Captain
Slater had planted the head in his drawing room, but Slater swore that he had
never set eyes on the shrunken head before.
Mrs. Vaughan, the maid-of-all-work in the Mallard household,
later reported hearing the sound of the strange drum again, and said that she
had been having vivid nightmares about a black man’s grinning face painted with
white stripes.
Captain Mallard decided to go back to sea in an attempt to
get away from the ghostly goings-on at his Duke Street home.
Mallard captained a vessel called the Moonrise which was
bound for Littleton, New Zealand. Mallard was to bring back a consignment of
wool and frozen mutton from New Zealand, but his ship later vanished without a
trace. Twenty-six years later, a British ship called the Horizon caught sight
of a large sailing vessel drifting off the coast of Chile. As the ship drew
nearer, the crew of the Horizon could see that the vessel was apparently
unmanned, but stranger still, the masts and ragged sails of the ship were
covered with thick deposits of a green mold. On the prow, faded with the weather
and the passage of time, the crew of the Horizon could see the name Moonrise. A
boarding party from the Horizon investigated the apparently abandoned ship, and
when one man jumped onto the deck, the timbers had decayed to such an extent,
they crumbled beneath him. The other men hauled their colleague out of the hole
and walked carefully around the deck. In the captain’s cabin, a skeleton in
ragged clothes was found, and the atmosphere had an intense putrid smell.
Thirteen more skeletons were found elsewhere on the Moonrise; they had all
presumably died from some sickness long ago. The captain of the Horizon
inspected the damp, mouldy pages of the ship’s
logbook to examine the last entries but theink had become too blurred by
the moisture to be legible.
Suddenly, a loud groaning noise echoed down the length of
the Moonrise, followed by a loud crack. The captain and his men hastened onto
the deck and watched in horror as the main mast crashed down onto the waters.
In a state of panic, the men rushed back to the lifeboat and rowed like mad. As
the boat moved away, the ship with the ‘skeleton crew’ started to break up. The
remaining two masts toppled onto the Moonrise and within seconds, the rotting
ship started to sink at the stern. The men of the Horizon rowed away just in
time to avoid being sucked down with the rapidly sinking vessel.
When news of the strange discovery of the long-lost ship
reached the ears of Captain Mallard’s wife, who was now in her 60s, she took a
turn and fainted. She told the doctor treating her that her husband had been
cursed to death for killing a witch doctor’s son, then became incoherent. The
doctor administered laudanum, but Mrs. Mallard broke out in a sweat and her
eyes rolled about. At the minute of her death, which came at 3 o’clock in the
morning, seven people attending her sickbed heard the howl of a dog out in the
street.
The strange tale was reported in the local newspaper, and
when Mr. and Mrs. Hughes – th ecouple who had looked after the old slave Obah –
read about the discovery of Captain Mallard’s old ship and the ensuing sudden
death of his wife, they knew that the witch doctor’s curse had done its work.
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