Samaná Americans

{{Short description|Ethnic group descended from African Americans who settled on the Samaná Peninsula}}

{{Infobox ethnic group

| native_name = Americanos de Samaná

| population = 8,000

| languages = Samaná English, Dominican Spanish, Spanglish

| religions = Christianity, Dominican Vudú

| related_groups = African Americans, Afro-Dominicans

}}

Image:FrederickDouglassInSamana.jpg addressing a crowd of Samaná Americans in Samaná, January 28, 1871. He stands on a pulpit borrowed from a nearby Catholic church.]]

{{African American topics sidebar}}

The Samaná Americans ({{langx|es|Americanos de Samaná}}) are a minority cultural sub-group of African American descendants who inhabit the Samaná Province in the eastern region of Dominican Republic.[https://www.afrocubaweb.com/samana-dr.html The Samaná Americans: African Americans in the Dominican Republic]

History

Most of the Samaná Americans are descendants of African Americans who, beginning in 1824, immigrated to Hispaniola—then under Haitian occupation—benefiting from the Haitian emigration policy facilitated, in part, by the mulatto president Jean Pierre Boyer. Jonathas Granville traveled to the U.S. in May–June 1824 in response to a letter that Loring D. Dewey had sent to Boyer. While in the U.S., Granville met with other abolitionists, like Richard Allen, Samuel Cornish, and Benjamin Lundy to organize the campaign for what was coined the Haitian emigration. The result was successful, as more than 6,000 of emigrants responding in less than a year. After that, however, the settlements met with multiple problems and many returned. However, many stayed, and between the 1840s and 1860s, they even joined the Dominican independence struggles against Haiti and Spain in the Independence and Restoration wars, respectively.{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?si=aP18BySdJVul3sD_&v=UG9aCw90XiI&feature=youtu.be |title=Los afro-americanos en Samaná: el origen del 'Samaná English' |date=2019-03-12 |last=Kiskeya Life |access-date=2025-02-07 |via=YouTube}} Additionally, among those who stayed, enclaves in Puerto Plata and Santo Domingo were clearly evident by the time of Frederick Douglass's visit in 1871. But the most distinct of all the enclaves was the one in Samaná, which has survived until today. They constitute a recognizable and sizable cultural enclave and a few of its members are native Samaná English speakers. Aware of its distinctive heritage, the community, whose peculiar culture distinguishes them from the rest of Dominicans, refers to itself as Samaná Americans, and is referred to by fellow Dominicans as los americanos de Samaná.[https://www.penn.museum/sites/expedition/the-samana-americans/ THE SAMANA AMERICANS]

Cultural distinctiveness

Crucially, they maintain many elements of 19th-century African American culture, such as their variety of African American English, cuisine, games, and community services associations. Cultural exchanges with other groups in the area, like the Samaná Haitian communities and the Spanish-speaking majority, have been inevitable. But for most of its history, the English-speaking enclave has kept to itself, favoring, instead, intermarriages and reciprocal relations with other Black immigrant groups that are also Protestant and English-speakers, like the so-called cocolos. This is due to the relative isolation of the community, which until the 20th century was accessible only by boat due to the lack of roads connecting them to the rest of the island. Most follow the African Methodist Episcopal and Wesleyan denominations that their ancestors brought with them to the island.{{cite book | url=https://www.academia.edu/567462 | title=From North America to Hispaniola: First Free Black Emigration and Settlements in Hispaniola | publisher=Ph.D. dissertation, Central Michigan University | author=Hidalgo, Dennis R. | year=2001 | location=Mt. Pleasant, MI | pages=1–28}}

Present day

While it is difficult to estimate the number of Samaná Americans today due to exogamy and emigration from the peninsula, the number of Samaná English speakers was once estimated to be around 8,000.[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=eng Ethnologue report for English]; Samaná English is described under the heading "Dominican Republic" Such numbers have decreased considerably as the linguists doing research in the community relate; a difficulty in finding SE speakers even among the elderly.{{cite journal | url=http://www.bagn.academiahistoria.org.do/boletines/boletin129/BAGN_2011_No_129-09.pdf | title=La historia de los inmigrantes afro-americanos y sus iglesias en Samaná según el reverendo Nehemiah Willmore | author=Davis, Martha Ellen | author-link=Martha Ellen Davis (ethnomusicologist) | journal=Boletín del Archivo General de la Nación | year=2007 | volume=159 | pages=237–245 | access-date=2014-06-17 | archive-date=2015-12-25 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151225030905/http://www.bagn.academiahistoria.org.do/boletines/boletin129/BAGN_2011_No_129-09.pdf | url-status=dead }} No monolingual English speakers remain; all Samaná Americans who speak English also speak Spanish. As a result of the influence of mainstream Dominican culture (including compulsory Spanish-language education), many markers of their culture appear to be in decline.Soraya Aracena, Los inmigrantes norteamericanos de Samaná. (Santo Domingo: Helvetas Asociación Suiza para la Cooperación Internacional, 2000)

See also

References

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