Shipwreck As Adams recounts in his
Narrative, the ship sailed from
New York City on June 17, 1810 (or May 7, 1810, as he recounted in
Cádiz), led by captain John Horton. 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 holes in the sand to sleep, so they could keep cool. 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 of at least five different owners. His first owners were the Moors, who captured the shipwrecked sailors of the
Charles. 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 hardship, with scarcity of food and water. He claimed they were often forced to drink a mix of water and
camel urine to stay alive in the arid conditions. 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 enslaved
Portuguese, 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. 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 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. 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 master's knowledge of the affair, Adams was traded for blankets and dates. His fifth master took him farther north to a village settlement where he met other Westerners, including some of his former companions from the
Charles. One of the white men had already renounced his Christian faith to attain freedom and, shortly after, two of his sailing companions from the
Charles also renounced their faith. Not long after, the British consul, Joseph Dupuis, ransomed Adams, thus securing his freedom.
Freedom After trading for Adams, the British consul Dupuis took him first to Agadir, then to
Mogador, 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. After this, Adams sailed to
Cádiz, 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. Subsequently, Adams went to
Gibraltar, where he was able to travel by ship to
Holyhead on the
Isle of Anglesey,
Wales. Adams later ended up in London, where he survived as a beggar. In November 1815, Adams was sought out by Simon Cock of the
Company of Merchants Trading to Africa, who had been led to him by a traveler who recognized Adams from Cádiz. 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
The Narrative of Robert Adams in 1816. ==Narratives==